New threats to human life
3. Every
individual, precisely by reason of the mystery of the Word of God who was made
flesh (cf. Jn
1:14), is entrusted to the maternal care of the Church. Therefore
every threat to human dignity and life must necessarily be felt in the Church's
very heart; it cannot but affect her at the core of her faith in the Redemptive
Incarnation of the Son of God, and engage her in her mission of proclaiming the
Gospel of life in all the world and to every creature (cf. Mk 16:15).
Today this proclamation is especially pressing because
of the extraordinary increase and gravity of threats to the life of individuals
and peoples, especially where life is weak and defenceless. In addition to the
ancient scourges of poverty, hunger, endemic diseases, violence and war, new
threats are emerging on an alarmingly vast scale.
The Second Vatican Council, in a passage which retains
all its relevance today, forcefully condemned a number of crimes and attacks
against human life. Thirty years later, taking up the words of the Council and
with the same forcefulness I repeat that condemnation in the name of the whole
Church, certain that I am interpreting the genuine sentiment of every upright
conscience: "Whatever is opposed to life itself, such as any type of
murder, genocide, abortion, euthanasia, or wilful self-destruction, whatever
violates the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation, torments
inflicted on body or mind, attempts to coerce the will itself; whatever insults
human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment,
deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women and children; as well
as disgraceful working conditions, where people are treated as mere instruments
of gain rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others
like them are infamies indeed. They poison human society, and they do more harm
to those who practise them than to those who suffer from the injury. Moreover,
they are a supreme dishonour to the Creator".5
4.
Unfortunately, this disturbing state of affairs, far from decreasing, is
expanding: with the new prospects opened up by scientific and technological
progress there arise new forms of attacks on the dignity of the human being. At
the same time a new cultural climate is developing and taking hold, which gives
crimes against life a new and - if possible - even more sinister character,
giving rise to further grave concern: broad sectors of public opinion justify
certain crimes against life in the name of the rights of individual freedom,
and on this basis they claim not only exemption from punishment but even
authorization by the State, so that these things can be done with total freedom
and indeed with the free assistance of health-care systems.
All this is causing a profound change in the way in
which life and relationships between people are considered. The fact that
legislation in many countries, perhaps even departing from basic principles of
their Constitutions, has determined not to punish these practices against life,
and even to make them altogether legal, is both a disturbing symptom and a
significant cause of grave moral decline. Choices once unanimously considered
criminal and rejected by the common moral sense are gradually becoming socially
acceptable. Even certain sectors of the medical profession, which by its
calling is directed to the defence and care of human life, are increasingly
willing to carry out these acts against the person. In this way the very nature
of the medical profession is distorted and contradicted, and the dignity of
those who practise it is degraded. In such a cultural and legislative
situation, the serious demographic, social and family problems which weigh upon
many of the world's peoples and which require responsible and effective
attention from national and international bodies, are left open to false and
deceptive solutions, opposed to the truth and the good of persons and nations.
The end result of this is tragic: not only is the fact
of the destruction of so many human lives still to be born or in their final
stage extremely grave and disturbing, but no less grave and disturbing is the
fact that conscience itself, darkened as it were by such widespread
conditioning, is finding it increasingly difficult to distinguish between good
and evil in what concerns the basic value of human life.
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