Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Bishops of Chile oppose bill lifting abortion restrictions

The Bishops’ Conference of Chile recently expressed opposition to a bill that would legalize abortion in some cases. 

The bishops explained that the procedure can never be justified medically because it directly harms the dignity of the human person.

In a statement released Dec. 28, the bishops responded to a bill that would legalize abortion to save the life of the mother, in cases or rape, or allow the procedure in cases of fetal deformity.

“Situations like these, while rare, are a source of anguish, uncertainty and sorrow that must not be met with indifference,” they said.

Abortion has been against the law in Chile since 1989.

However, they continued, it is not licit to take the life of the unborn even in these circumstances.  

“Neither the life of the mother nor that of the child can be the object of a direct act of elimination. There is only one option for both one and the other: every effort must be made to save both lives, that of the mother and that of the child,” the bishops said.

“This does not signify opposition, however, to licit therapeutic actions to cure the mother of some illness, even if that implies a certain risk—even lethal—to the unborn child.  A therapeutic action that benefits the mother and that unintentionally puts the life of the unborn in danger should not be confused with the direct elimination of the unborn child,” the bishops added.

A developing unborn child is not part of a woman’s body, but rather is a distinct and separate being, the bishops emphasized.  While the mother’s feelings are deserving of care and respect, they noted, “no feeling must given more importance than the right to life of every human being, whether healthy or sick.

“This is the first of all human rights without which no others exist,” they said.

The bishops urged society to provide “psychological, social, economic and spiritual help” to mothers.  “The level of development of a community is measured by its capacity to care for the weak and the sick,” they added.

“A society that eliminates them allows violence to become the way in which conflicts are resolved, thus becoming a dictatorship in which the strongest end up deciding the fate of the weakest. No one has the right to assume the power of deciding who deserves to live and who doesn’t,” the bishops concluded.

SIC: CNA/INT'L

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