Declaration on Procured Abortion (1974)
Issued by the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
(Sacra
congregatio christiano nomini propagando)
The problem of procured abortion and
of its possible legal liberalization has become more or less everywhere the
subject of impassioned discussions. These debates would be less grave were
it not a question of human life, a primordial value, which must be protected
and promoted. Everyone understands this, although many look for reasons,
even against all evidence, to promote the use of abortion. One cannot but be
astonished to see a simultaneous increase of unqualified protests against
the death penalty and every form of war and the vindication of the
liberalization of abortion, either in its entirety or in ever broader
indications. The Church is too conscious of the fact that it belongs to her
vocation to defend man against everything that could disintegrate or lessen
his dignity to remain silent on such a topic. Because the Son of God became
man, there is no man who is not His brother in humanity and who is not
called to become a Christian in order to receive salvation from Him.
In many countries the public
authorities which resist the liberalization of abortion laws are the object
of powerful pressures aimed at leading them to this goal. This, it is said,
would violate no one's conscience, for each individual would be left free to
follow his own opinion, while being prevented from imposing it on others.
Ethical pluralism is claimed to be a normal consequence of ideological
pluralism. There is, however, a great difference between the one and the
other, for action affects the interests of others more quickly than does
mere opinion. Moreover, one can never claim freedom of opinion as a pretext
for attacking the rights of others, most especially the right to life.
Numerous Christian lay people,
especially doctors, but also parents' associations, statesmen, or leading
figures in posts of responsibility have vigorously reacted against this
propaganda campaign. Above all, many episcopal conferences and many bishops
acting in their own name have judged it opportune to recall very strongly
the traditional doctrine of the Church.[1] With a striking convergence these
documents admirably emphasize an attitude of respect for life which is at
the same time human and Christian. Nevertheless, it has happened that
several of these documents here or there have encountered reservation or
even opposition
Charged with the promotion and the
defense of faith and morals in the universal Church,[2] the Sacred
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith proposes to recall this teaching
in its essential aspects to all the faithful. Thus in showing the unity of
the Church, it will confirm by the authority proper to the Holy See what the
bishops have opportunely undertaken. It hopes that all the faithful,
including those who might have been unsettled by the controversies and new
opinions, will understand that it is not a question of opposing one opinion
to another, but of transmitting to the faithful a constant teaching of the
supreme Magisterium, which teaches moral norms in the light of faith.[3] It
is therefore clear that this declaration necessarily entails a grave
obligation for Christian consciences.[4] May God deign to enlighten also all
men who strive with their whole heart to "act in truth" (Jn. 3:21).
"Death was not God's doing, he takes
no pleasure in the extinction of the living" (Wis. 1:13).
Certainly God has created beings who have only one lifetime and physical
death cannot be absent from the world of those with a bodily existence. But
what is immediately willed is life, and in the visible universe everything
has been made for man, who is the image of God and the world's crowning
glory (cf. Gen. 1:26-28). On the human level "it was the devil's envy that
brought death into the world" (Wis. 2:24) Introduced by sin, death remains
bound up with it: death is the sign and fruit of sin. But there is no final
triumph for death. Confirming faith in the Resurrection, the Lord proclaims
in the Gospel: "God is God, not of the dead, but of the living" (Mt. 22:32).
And death like sin will be definitively defeated by resurrection in Christ
(cf. 1 Cor. 15:20-27). Thus we understand that human life, even on this
earth, is precious. Infused by the Creator,[5] life is again taken back by
Him (cf. Gen. 2:7, Wis. 15:11). It remains under His protection: man's blood
cries out to Him (cf. Gen. 4:10) and He will demand an account of it, "for
in the image of God man was made" (Gen. 9:5-6). The commandment of God is
formal: "You shall not kill" (Ex. 20:13). Life is at the same time a gift
and responsibility. It is received as a "talent" (cf. Mt. 25:14-30); it must
be put to proper use. In order that life may bring forth fruit, many tasks
are offered to man in this world and he must not shirk them. More important
still, the Christian knows that eternal life depends on what, with the grace
of God, he does with his life on earth.
The tradition of the Church has always
held that human life must be protected and favored from the beginning, just
as at the various stages of its development. Opposing the morals of the
Greco-Roman world, the Church of the first centuries insisted on the
difference that exists on this point between those morals and Christian
morals. In the Didache it is clearly said: "You shall not kill by abortion
the fruit of the womb and you shall not murder the infant already born."[6]
Athenagoras emphasizes that Christians consider as murderers those women who
take medicines to procure an abortion; he condemns the killers of children,
including those still living in their mother's womb, "where they are already
the object of the care of divine Providence." [7] Tertullian did not always
perhaps use the same language; he nevertheless clearly affirms the essential
principle: "To prevent birth is anticipated murder; it makes little
difference whether one destroys a life already born or does away with it in
its nascent stage. The one who will be a man is already one."[8]
In the course of history, the Fathers
of the Church, her Pastors and her Doctors have taught the same
doctrine--the various opinions on the infusion of the spiritual soul did not
introduce any doubt about the illicitness of abortion. It is true that in
the Middle Ages, when the opinion was generally held that the spiritual soul
was not present until after the first few weeks, a distinction was made in
the evaluation of the sin and the gravity of penal sanctions. Excellent
authors allowed for this first period more lenient case solutions which they
rejected for following periods. But it was never denied at that time that
procured abortion, even during the first days, was objectively grave fault.
This condemnation was in fact unanimous. Among the many documents it is
sufficient to recall certain ones. The first Council of Mainz in 847
reconsidered the penalties against abortion which had been established by
preceding Councils. It decided that the most rigorous penance would be
imposed "on women who procure the elimination of the fruit conceived in
their womb."[9] The Decree of Gratian reported the following words of Pope
Stephen V: "That person is a murderer who causes to perish by abortion what
has been conceived."[10] St. Thomas, the Common Doctor of the Church,
teaches that "abortion is a grave sin against the natural law." [11] At the
time of the Renaissance Pope Sixtus V condemned abortion with the greatest
severity.[12] A century later, Innocent XI rejected the propositions of
certain lax canonists who sought to excuse an abortion procured before the
moment accepted by some as the moment of the spiritual animation of the new
being.[13] In our days the recent Roman Pontiffs have proclaimed the same
doctrine with the greatest clarity. Pius XI explicitly answered the most
serious objections.[14] Pius XII clearly excluded all direct abortion, that
is, abortion which is either an end or a means.[15] John XXIII recalled the
teaching of the Fathers on the sacred character of life "which from its
beginning demands the action of God the Creator."[16] Most recently, the
Second Vatican Council, presided over by Paul VI, has most severely
condemned abortion: "Life must be safeguarded with extreme care from
conception; abortion and infanticide are abominable crimes."[17] The same
Paul VI, speaking on this subject on many occasions, has not bee afraid to
declare that this teaching of the Church "has not changed and it is
unchangeable." [18]
Respect for human life is not just a
Christian obligation. Human reason is sufficient to impose it on the basis
of the analysis of what a human person is and should be. Constituted by a
rational nature, man is a personal subject capable of reflecting on himself
and of determining his acts and hence his own destiny: he is free. He is
consequently master of himself; or rather, because this takes place in the
course of time, he has the means of becoming so: this is his task. Created
immediately by God, man's soul is spiritual and therefore immortal. Hence
man is open to God, he finds his fulfillment only in Him. But man lives in
the community of his equals; he is nourished by interpersonal communication
with men in the indispensable social setting. In the face of society and
other men, each human person possesses himself, he possesses life and
different goods, he has these as a right. It is this that strict justice
demands from all in his regard.
Nevertheless, temporal life lived in
this world is not identified with the person. The person possesses as his
own a level of life that is more profound and that cannot end. Bodily life
is a fundamental good, here below it is the condition for all other goods.
But there are higher values for which it could be legitimate or even
necessary to be willing to expose oneself to the risk of losing bodily life.
In a society of persons the common good is for each individual an end which
he must serve and to which he must subordinate his particular interest. But
it is not his last end and, from this point of view, it is society which is
at the service of the person, because the person will not fulfill his
destiny except in God. The person can be definitively subordinated only to
God. Man can never be treated simply as a means to be disposed of in order
to obtain a higher end.
In regard to the mutual rights and
duties of the person and of society, it belongs to moral teaching to
enlighten consciences; it belongs to the law to specify and organize
external behavior. There is precisely a certain number of rights which
society is not in a position to grant since these rights precede society;
but society has the function to preserve and to enforce them. These are the
greater part of those which are today called "human rights" and which our
age boasts of having formulated.
The first right of the human person is
his life. He has other goods and some are more precious, but this one is
fundamental-- the condition of all the others. Hence it must be protected
above all others. It does not belong to society, nor does it belong to
public authority in any form to recognize this right for some and not for
others: all discrimination is evil, whether it be founded on race, sex,
color or religion. It is not recognition by another that constitutes this
right. This right is antecedent to its recognition; it demands recognition
and it is strictly unjust to refuse it.
Any discrimination based on the
various stages of life is no more justified than any other discrimination.
The right to life remains complete in an old person, even one greatly
weakened; it is not lost by one who is incurably sick. The right to life is
no less to be respected in the small infant just born than in the mature
person. In reality, respect for human life is called for from the time that
the process of generation begins. From the time that the ovum is fertilized,
a life is begun which is neither that of the father nor of the mother, it is
rather the life of a new human being with his own growth. It would never be
made human if it were not human already.
To this perpetual evidence--perfectly
independent of the discussions on the moment of animation [19]--modern
genetic science brings valuable confirmation. It has demonstrated that, from
the first instant, there is established the program of what this living
being will be: a man, this individual man with his characteristic aspects
already well determined. Right from fertilization is begun the adventure of
a human life, and each of its capacities requires time--a rather lengthy
time--to find its place and to be in a position to act. The least that can
be said is that present science, in its most evolved state, does not give
any substantial support to those who defend abortion. Moreover, it is not up
to biological sciences to make a definitive judgment on questions which are
properly philosophical and moral such as the moment when a human person is
constituted or the legitimacy of abortion. From a moral point of view this
is certain: even if a doubt existed concerning whether the fruit of
conception is already a human person, it is objectively a grave sin to dare
to risk murder. "The one who will be a man is already one."[20]
Divine law and natural reason,
therefore, exclude all right to the direct killing of an innocent man.
However, if the reasons given to justify an abortion were always manifestly
evil and valueless the problem would not be so dramatic. The gravity of the
problem comes from the fact that in certain cases, perhaps in quite a
considerable number of cases, by denying abortion one endangers important
values to which it is normal to attach great value, and which may sometimes
even seem to have priority. We do not deny these very great difficulties. It
may be a serious question of health, sometimes of life or death, for the
mother; it may be the burden represented by an additional child, especially
if there are good reasons to fear that the child will be abnormal or
retarded; it may be the importance attributed in different classes of
society to considerations of honor or dishonor, of loss of social standing,
and so forth. We proclaim only that none of these reasons can ever
objectively confer the right to dispose of another's life, even when that
life is only beginning. With regard to the future unhappiness of the child,
no one, not even the father or mother, can act as its substitute--even if it
is still in the embryonic stage--to choose in the child's name, life or
death. The child itself, when grown up, will never have the right to choose
suicide; no more may his parents choose death for the child while it is not
of an age to decide or itself. Life is too fundamental a value to be weighed
against even very serious disadvantages.[21]
The movement for the emancipation of
women, insofar as it seeks essentially to free them from all unjust
discrimination, is on perfectly sound ground.[22] In the different forms of
cultural background there is a great deal to be done in this regard. But one
cannot change nature. Nor can one exempt women, any more than men, from what
nature demands of them. Furthermore, all publicly recognized freedom is
always limited by the certain rights of others.
The same must be said of the claim to
sexual freedom. If by this expression one is to understand the mastery
progressively acquired by reason and by authentic love over instinctive
impulse, without diminishing pleasure but keeping it in its proper
place--and in this sphere this is the only authentic freedom--then there is
nothing to object to. But this kind of freedom will always be careful not to
violate justice. If, on the contrary, one is to understand that men and
women are "free" to seek sexual pleasure to the point of satiety, without
taking into account any law or the essential orientation of sexual life to
its fruits of fertility,[23] then this idea has nothing Christian in it. It
is even unworthy of man. In any case it does not confer any right to dispose
of human life--even if embryonic--or to suppress it on the pretext that it
is burdensome.
Scientific progress is opening to
technology--and will open still more--the possibility of delicate
interventions, the consequences of which can be very serious, for good as
well as for evil. These are achievements of the human spirit which in
themselves are admirable. But technology can never be independent of the
criterion of morality, since technology exists for man and must respect his
finality. Just as there is no right to us nuclear energy for every possible
purpose, so there is no right to manipulate human life in every possible
direction. Technology must be at the service of man, so as better to ensure
the functioning of his normal abilities, to prevent or to cure his
illnesses, and to contribute to his better human development. It is true
that the evolution of technology makes early abortion more and more easy,
but the moral evaluation is in no way modified because of this.
We know what seriousness the problem
of birth control can assume for some families and for some countries. That
is why the last Council and subsequently the encyclical "Humanae vitae" of
July 25, 1968, spoke of "responsible parenthood."[24] What we wish to say
again with emphasis, as was pointed out in the conciliar constitution "Gaudium
et spes," in the encyclical "Populorum progressio" and in other papal
documents, is that never, under any pretext, may abortion be resorted to,
either by a family or by the political authority, as a legitimate means of
regulating births.[25] The damage to moral values is always a greater evil
for the common good than any disadvantage in the economic or demographic
order.
The moral discussion is being
accompanied more or less everywhere by serious juridical debates. There is
no country where legislation does not forbid and punish murder. Furthermore,
many countries had specifically applied this condemnation and these
penalties to the particular case of procured abortion. In these days a vast
body of opinion petitions the liberalization of this latter prohibition.
There already exists a fairly general tendency which seeks to limit, as far
as possible, all restrictive legislation, especially when it seems to touch
upon private life. The argument of pluralism is also used. Although many
citizens, in particular the Catholic faithful, condemn abortion, many others
hold that it is licit, at least as a lesser evil. Why force them to follow
an opinion which is not theirs, especially in a country where they are in
the majority? In addition it is apparent that, where they still exist, the
laws condemning abortion appear difficult to apply. The crime has become too
common for it to be punished every time, and the public authorities often
find that it is wiser to close their eyes to it. But the preservation of a
law which is not applied is always to the detriment of authority and of all
the other laws. It must be added that clandestine abortion puts women, who
resign themselves to it and have recourse to it, in the most serious dangers
for future pregnancies and also in many cases for their lives. Even if the
legislator continues to regard abortion as an evil, may he not propose to
restrict its damage?
These arguments and others in addition
that are heard from varying quarters are not conclusive. It is true that
civil law cannot expect to cover the whole field of morality or to punish
all faults. No one expects it to do so. It must often tolerate what is in
fact a lesser evil, in order to avoid a greater one. One must, however, be
attentive to what a change in legislation can represent. Many will take as
authorization what is perhaps only the abstention from punishment. Even
more, in the present case, this very renunciation seems at the very least to
admit that the legislator no longer considers abortion a crime against human
life, since murder is still always severely punished. It is true that it is
not the task of the law to choose between points of view or to impose one
rather than another. But the life of the child takes precedence over all
opinions. One cannot invoke freedom of thought to destroy this life.
The role of law is not to record what
is done, but to help in promoting improvement. It is at all times the task
of the State to preserve each person's rights and to protect the weakest. In
order to do so the State will have to right many wrongs. The law is not
obliged to sanction everything, but it cannot act contrary to a law which is
deeper and more majestic than any human law: the natural law engraved in
men's hearts by the Creator as a norm which reason clarifies and strives to
formulate properly, and which one must always struggle to understand better,
but which it is always wrong to contradict. Human law can abstain from
punishment, but it cannot declare to be right what would be opposed to the
natural law, for this opposition suffices to give the assurance that a law
is not a law at all.
It must in any case be clearly
understood that whatever may be laid down by civil law in this matter, man
can never obey a law which is in itself immoral, and such is the case of a
law which would admit in principle the liceity of abortion. Nor can he take
part in a propaganda campaign in favor of such a law, or vote for it.
Moreover, he may not collaborate in its application. It is, for instance,
inadmissible that doctors or nurses should find themselves obliged to
cooperate closely in abortions and have to choose between the law of God and
their professional situation.
On the contrary, it is the task of law
to pursue a reform of society and of conditions of life in all milieux,
starting with the most deprived, so that always and everywhere it may be
possible to give every child coming into this world a welcome worthy of a
person. Help for families and for unmarried mothers, assured grants for
children, a statute for illegitimate children and reasonable arrangements
for adoption--a whole positive policy must be put into force so that there
will always be a concrete, honorable and possible alternative to abortion.
Following one's conscience in
obedience to the law of God is not always the easy way. One must not fail to
recognize the weight of the sacrifices and the burdens which it can impose.
Heroism is sometimes called for in order to remain faithful to the
requirements of the divine law. Therefore, we must emphasize that the path
of true progress of the human person passes through this constant fidelity
to a conscience maintained in uprightness and truth; and we must exhort all
those who are able to do so to lighten the burdens still crushing so many
men and women, families and children, who are placed in situations to which,
in human terms, there is no solution.
A Christian's outlook cannot be
limited to the horizon of life in this world. He knows that during the
present life another one is being prepared, one of such importance that it
is in its light that judgments must be made.[26] From this viewpoint there
is no absolute misfortune here below, not even the terrible sorrow of
bringing up a handicapped child. This is the contradiction proclaimed by the
Lord: "Happy those who mourn: they shall be comforted" (Mt. 5:5). To measure
happiness by the absence of sorrow and misery in this world is to turn one's
back on the Gospel.
But this does not mean that one can
remain indifferent to these sorrows and miseries. Every man and woman with
feeling, and certainly every Christian, must be ready to do what he can to
remedy them. This is the law of charity, of which the first preoccupation
must always be the establishment of justice. One can never approve of
abortion; but it is above all necessary to combat its causes. This includes
political action, which will be in particular the task of the law. But it is
necessary at the same time to influence morality and to do everything
possible to help families, mothers and children. Considerable progress in
the service of life has been accomplished by medicine. One can hope that
such progress will continue, in accordance with the vocation of doctors,
which is not to suppress life but to care for it and favor it as much as
possible. It is equally desirable that, in suitable institutions, or, in
their absence, in the outpouring of Christian generosity and charity every
form of assistance should be developed.
There will be no effective action on
the level of morality unless at the same time an effort is made on the level
of ideas. A point of view--or even more, perhaps a way of thinking--which
considers fertility as an evil cannot be allowed to spread without
contradiction. It is true that not all forms of culture are equally in favor
of large families. Such families come up against much greater difficulties
in an industrial and urban civilization. Thus in recent times the Church has
insisted on the idea of responsible parenthood, the exercise of true human
and Christian prudence. Such prudence would not be authentic if it did not
include generosity. It must preserve awareness of the grandeur of the task
of cooperating with the Creator in the transmission of life, which gives new
members to society and new children to the Church. Christ's Church has the
fundamental solicitude of protecting and favoring life. She certainly thinks
before all else of the life which Christ came to bring: "I have come so that
they may have life and have it to the full" (Jn. 10:10). But life at all its
levels comes from God, and bodily life is for man the indispensable
beginning. In this life on earth sin has introduced multiplied and made
harder to bear suffering and death. But in taking their burden upon Himself,
Jesus Christ has transformed them: for whoever believes in Him, suffering
and death itself become instruments of resurrection. Hence Saint Paul can
say: "I think that what we suffer in this life can never be compared to the
glory, as yet unrevealed, which is waiting for us" (Rom. 8:18). And, if we
make this comparison we shall add with him: "Yes, the troubles which are
soon over, though they weigh little, train us for the carrying of a weight
of eternal glory which is out of all proportion to them" (2 Cor. 4:17).
The Supreme Pontiff Pope Paul VI, in an
audience granted to the undersigned Secretary of the Sacred Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith on June 28, 1974, has ratified this Declaration on
Procured Abortion and has confirmed it and ordered it to be promulgated.
Given in Rome, at the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, on
November 18, the Commemoration of the Dedication of the Basilicas of Saints
Peter and Paul, in the year 1974.
Franciscus Card. SEPER
Prefect
+ Hieronymus HAMER
Titular Archbishop of Lorium
Secretary
Endotes
1. A certain number of bishops' documents
are to be found in Gr. Caprile, "Non Uccidere, Il Magistero della Chiesa
sull'aborto." Part II, pp. 47-300, Rome, 1973.
2. "Regimini Ecclesiae Universae," III, 1, 29. Cf. ibid., 31 (AAS 59 [1967],
p. 897). On the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith depend all
the questions which are related to faith and morals or which are bound up with
the faith.
3. "Lumen gentium," 12 (AAS 57 [1965], pp. 16-17). The present Declaration
does not envisage all the questions which can arise in connection with
abortion: it is for theologians to examine and discuss them. Only certain
basic principles are here recalled which must be for the theologians
themselves a guide and a rule, and confirm certain fundamental truths of
Catholic doctrine for all Christians.
4. "Lumen Gentium," 25 (AAS 57 [1965], pp. 29-31).
5. The authors of Scripture do not make any philosophical observations on when
life begins, but they speak of the period of life which precedes birth as
being the object of God's attention: He creates and forms the human being,
like that which is moulded by His hand (cf. Ps. 118:73). It would seem that
this theme finds expression for the first time in Jer. 1:5. It appears later
in many other texts. Cf. Is. 49:1-5; 46:3; Jb. 10:8-12; Ps. 22:10; 71:6;
139:13. In the Gospels we read in Luke 1:44: "For the moment your greeting
reached my ears, the child in my womb l leapt for joy."
6. "Didache Apostolorum," edition Funk, "Patres Apostolici," V, 2. "The
Epistle of Barnabas," IX, 5 uses the same expressions (cf. Funk, l.c., 91-93).
7. Athenagoras, "A plea on behalf of Christians," 35 (cf. PG. 6, 970: S.C. 3,
pp. 166-167). One may also consult the "Epistle to Diogentus" (V, 6 Funk, o.c.,
I 399: S.C. 33), where it says of Christians: "They procreate children, but
they do not reject the foetus."
8. Tertullian, "Apologeticum" (IX. 8 PL. 1, 371-372: Corp. Christ. 1, p. 103,
1, 31-36).
9. Canon 21 (Mansi, 14, p. 909). Cf. Council of Elvira, canon 63 (Mansi, 2, p.
16) and the Council of Ancyra, canon 21 (ibid., 519). See also the decree of
Gregory III regarding the penance to be imposed upon those who are culpable of
this crime (Mansi 13, 292, c. 17).
10. Gratian, "Concordantia Discordantium Canonum," c. 20, C. 2, q.[2]. During
the Middle Ages appeal was often made to the authority of St. Augustine who
wrote as follows in regard to this matter in "De Nuptiis et Concupiscentiis,"
c. 15: "Sometimes this sexually indulgent cruelty or this cruel sexual
indulgence goes so far as to procure potions which produce sterility. If the
desired result is not achieved, the mother terminates the life and expels the
foetus which was in her womb in such a way that the child dies before having
lived, or, if the baby was living already in its mother's womb, it is killed
before being born." (PL 44, 423-424: CSEL 33, 619. Cf. the "Decree of Gratian"
q. 2, C. 32, c. 7.)
11. "Commentary on the Sentences," book IV, dist. 31, exposition of the text.
12. Constitution "Effraenatum" in 1588 ("Bullarium Romanum," V, 1, pp. 25-27;
"Fontes Iuris Canonici," I, no. 165, pp. 308-311).
13. Dz-Sch. 1184. Cf. also the Constitution "Apostolicae Sedis" of Pius IX (Acta
Pii IX, V, 55-72; AAS 5 [1869], pp. 305-331; "Fontes Iuris Canonici," III, no.
552, pp. 24-31).
14. Encyclical "Casti Connubii," AAS 22 (1930), pp. 562-565; Dz- Sch. 3719-21.
15. The statements of Pius XII are express, precise and numerous; they would
require a whole study on their own. We quote only this one from the Discourse
to the Saint Luke Union of Italian Doctors of November 12, 1944, because it
formulates the principle in all its universality: "As long as a man is not
guilty, his life is untouchable, and therefore any act directly tending to
destroy it is illicit, whether such destruction is intended as an end in
itself or only as a means to an end, whether it is a question of life in the
embryonic stage or in a stage of full development or already in its final
stages" (Discourses and Radio-messages, VI, 183ff.).
16. Encyclical "Mater et magistra," AAS 53 (1961), p. 447.
17. "Gaudium et spes," 51. Cf. 27 (AAS 58 [1966], p. 1072; cf. 1047).
18. The speech, "Salutiamo con paterna effusione," December 9, 1972, AAS 64
(1972), p. 737. Among the witnesses of this unchangeable doctrine one will
recall the declaration of the Holy Office, condemning direct abortion (Denzinger
1890, AAS 17 [1884], p. 556; 22 [1888-1890], 748; Dz-Sch 3258).
19. This declaration expressly leaves aside the question of the moment when
the spiritual soul is infused. There is not a unanimous tradition on this
point and authors are as yet in disagreement. For some it dates from the first
instant; for others it could not at least precede nidation. It is not within
the competence of science to decide between these views, because the existence
of an immortal soul is not a question in its field. It is a philosophical
problem from which our moral affirmation remains independent for two reasons:
(1) supposing a belated animation, there is still nothing less than a human
life, preparing for and calling for a soul in which the nature received from
parents is completed, (2) on the other hand, it suffices that this presence of
the soul be probable (and one can never prove the contrary) in order that the
taking of life involve accepting the risk of killing a man, not only waiting
for, but already in possession of his soul.
20. Tertullian, cited in footnote 8.
21. Cardinal Villot, Secretary of State, wrote on October 19, 1973, to
Cardinal Dopfner, regarding the protection of human life: "(Die Kirche) kann
jedoch sur Behebung solcher Notsituationen weder empfangnisverhutende Mittel
noch erst recht nicht die Abtreibung als sittlich erlaubt erkennen" ("L'Osservatore
Romano," German edition, October 26, 1973, p. 3). 22. Encyclical "Pacem in
terris." AAS 55 (1963), p. 267. Constitution "Gaudium et spes," 29. Speech of
Paul VI, "Salutiamo," AAS 64 (1972), 779.
23. "Gaudium et spes," 48: "Indole autem sua naturali, ipsum institutum
matrimonii amorque coniugalis ad procreationem et educationem prolis
ordinantur, iisque veluti suo fastigio coronantur." Also paragraph 50: "Matrimonium
et amor coniugalis indole sua ad prolem procreandam et educandam ordinantur."
24. "Gaudium et spes," 50-51. Paul VI, Encyclical "Humanae vitae," 10 (AAS 60,
[1968], p. 487).
25. "Gaudium et spes," 87. Paul VI, Encyclical "Populorum progressio," 31:
Address to the United Nations, AAS 57 (1965), p. 883. John XXIII, "Mater et
magistra," AAS 53 (1961), pp. 445-448). Responsible parenthood supposes the
use of only morally licit methods of birth regulation. Cf. "Humanae
vitae,"[14] (ibid., p. 490).
26. Cardinal Villot, Secretary of State, wrote to the World Congress of
Catholic Doctors held in Barcelona, May 26, 1974: "Por lo que a la vida humana
se refiere, esta non es ciertamente univoca, mas bien se podria decir que es
un haz de vidas. No se puede reducir, sin mutilarlas gravemente, las zonas de
su ser, que, en su estrecha dependencia e interaccion estan ordenadas las unas
a las otras: zona corporal, zona afectiva, zona mental, y ese transfondo del
alma donde la vida divina, recibida por la gracia, puede desplegarse mediante
los dones del Espiritu Santo" ("L'Osservatore Romano," May 29, 1974).
__________________________
Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington, DC 20017-1194 (202) 541-3070
June 03, 2003 Copyright © by United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops