The Church Stands for
Life
30. The
teaching of the Church in our day is placed in a social and cultural context
which renders it more difficult to understand and yet more urgent and
irreplaceable for promoting the true good of men and women.
Scientific
and technical progress, which contemporary man is continually expanding in his
dominion over nature, not only offers the hope of creating a new and better
humanity, but also causes ever greater anxiety regarding the future. Some ask
themselves if it is a good thing to be alive or if it would be better never to
have been born; they doubt therefore if it is right to bring others into life
when perhaps they will curse their existence in a cruel world with unforeseeable
terrors. Others consider themselves to be the only ones for whom the advantages
of technology are intended and they exclude others by imposing on them
contraceptives or even worse means. Still others, imprisoned in a consumer
mentality and whose sole concern is to bring about a continual growth of
material goods, finish by ceasing to understand, and thus by refusing, the
spiritual riches of a new human life. The ultimate reason for these mentalities
is the absence in people's hearts of God, whose love alone is stronger than all
the world's fears and can conquer them.
Thus an
anti-life mentality is born, as can be seen in many current issues: one thinks,
for example, of a certain panic deriving from the studies of ecologists and
futurologists on population growth, which sometimes exaggerate the danger of
demographic increase to the quality of life.
But the
Church firmly believes that human life, even if weak and suffering,
is always a splendid gift of God's goodness. Against the pessimism and
selfishness which cast a shadow over the world, the Church stands for life: in
each human life she sees the splendor of that "Yes," that
"Amen," who is Christ Himself.(84) To the
"No" which assails and afflicts the world, she replies with this
living "Yes," thus defending the human person and the world from all
who plot against and harm life.
The
Church is called upon to manifest anew to everyone, with clear and stronger
conviction, her will to promote human life by every means and to defend it
against all attacks, in whatever condition or state of development it is found.
Thus the
Church condemns as a grave offense against human dignity and justice all those
activities of governments or other public authorities which attempt to limit in
any way the freedom of couples in deciding about children. Consequently, any
violence applied by such authorities in favor of contraception or, still worse,
of sterilization and procured abortion, must be altogether condemned and
forcefully rejected. Likewise to be denounced as gravely unjust are cases
where, in international relations, economic help given for the advancement of
peoples is made conditional on programs of contraception, sterilization and
procured abortion.(85)
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