ENCYCLICAL LETTER
EVANGELIUM VITAE
ADDRESSED BY THE SUPREME PONTIFF
JOHN PAUL II
TO THE BISHOPS
PRIESTS AND DEACONS
MEN AND WOMEN RELIGIOUS
LAY FAITHFUL
AND ALL PEOPLE OF GOOD WILL
ON THE VALUE AND INVIOLABILITY
OF HUMAN LIFE
INTRODUCTION
1. The Gospel of life is at the heart of Jesus' message. Lovingly received
day after day by the Church, it is to be preached with dauntless fidelity
as "good news" to the people of every age and culture.
At the dawn of salvation, it is the Birth of a Child which is proclaimed
as joyful news: "I bring you good news of a great joy which will come
to all the people; for to you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour,
who is Christ the Lord" (Lk 2:10-11). The source of this "great
joy" is the Birth of the Saviour; but Christmas also reveals the full
meaning of every human birth, and the joy which accompanies the Birth of
the Messiah is thus seen to be the foundation and fulfilment of joy at
every child born into the world (cf. Jn 16:21).
When he presents the heart of his redemptive mission, Jesus says: "I
came that they may have life, and have it abundantly" (Jn 10:10).
In truth, he is referring to that "new" and "eternal"
life which consists in communion with the Father, to which every person
is freely called in the Son by the power of the Sanctifying Spirit. It
is precisely in this "life" that all the aspects and stages of
human life achieve their full significance.
The incomparable worth of the human person
2. Man is called to a fullness of life which far exceeds the dimensions
of his earthly existence, because it consists in sharing the very life
of God. The loftiness of this supernatural vocation reveals the greatness
and the inestimable value of human life even in its temporal
phase. Life in time, in fact, is the fundamental condition, the initial
stage and an integral part of the entire unified process of human existence.
It is a process which, unexpectedly and undeservedly, is enlightened by
the promise and renewed by the gift of divine life, which will reach its
full realization in eternity (cf. 1 Jn 3:1-2). At the same time,
it is precisely this supernatural calling which highlights the relative
character of each individual's earthly life. After all, life on earth
is not an "ultimate" but a "penultimate" reality; even
so, it remains a sacred reality entrusted to us, to be preserved
with a sense of responsibility and brought to perfection in love and in
the gift of ourselves to God and to our brothers and sisters.
The Church knows that this Gospel of life, which she has received
from her Lord,1 has a profound and persuasive echo in the heart of every
person�believer and non-believer alike�because it marvellously fulfils
all the heart's expectations while infinitely surpassing them. Even in
the midst of difficulties and uncertainties, every person sincerely open
to truth and goodness can, by the light of reason and the hidden action
of grace, come to recognize in the natural law written in the heart (cf.
Rom 2:14-15) the sacred value of human life from its very beginning
until its end, and can affirm the right of every human being to have this
primary good respected to the highest degree. Upon the recognition of this
right, every human community and the political community itself are founded.
In a special way, believers in Christ must defend and promote this right,
aware as they are of the wonderful truth recalled by the Second Vatican
Council: "By his incarnation the Son of God has united himself in
some fashion with every human being".2 This saving event reveals to
humanity not only the boundless love of God who "so loved the world
that he gave his only Son" (Jn 3:16), but also the incomparable
value of every human person.
The Church, faithfully contemplating the mystery of the Redemption,
acknowledges this value with ever new wonder.3 She feels called to proclaim
to the people of all times this "Gospel", the source of invincible
hope and true joy for every period of history. The Gospel of God's love
for man, the Gospel of the dignity of the person and the Gospel of life
are a single and indivisible Gospel.
For this reason, man�living man�represents the primary and fundamental
way for the Church.4
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.
In communion with all the Bishops of the world
5. The Extraordinary Consistory of Cardinals held in Rome on
4-7 April 1991 was devoted to the problem of the threats to human life
in our day. After a thorough and detailed discussion of the problem and
of the challenges it poses to the entire human family and in particular
to the Christian community, the Cardinals unanimously asked me to reaffirm
with the authority of the Successor of Peter the value of human life and
its inviolability, in the light of present circumstances and attacks threatening
it today.
In response to this request, at Pentecost in 1991 I wrote a personal
letter to each of my Brother Bishops asking them, in the spirit of
episcopal collegiality, to offer me their cooperation in drawing up a specific
document.6 I am deeply grateful to all the Bishops who replied and provided
me with valuable facts, suggestions and proposals. In so doing they bore
witness to their unanimous desire to share in the doctrinal and pastoral
mission of the Church with regard to the Gospel of life.
In that same letter, written shortly after the celebration of the centenary
of the Encyclical Rerum Novarum, I drew everyone's attention to
this striking analogy: "Just as a century ago it was the working classes
which were oppressed in their fundamental rights, and the Church very courageously
came to their defence by proclaiming the sacrosanct rights of the worker
as a person, so now, when another category of persons is being oppressed
in the fundamental right to life, the Church feels in duty bound to speak
out with the same courage on behalf of those who have no voice. Hers is
always the evangelical cry in defence of the world's poor, those who are
threatened and despised and whose human rights are violated".7
Today there exists a great multitude of weak and defenceless human beings,
unborn children in particular, whose fundamental right to life is being
trampled upon. If, at the end of the last century, the Church could not
be silent about the injustices of those times, still less can she be silent
today, when the social injustices of the past, unfortunately not yet overcome,
are being compounded in many regions of the world by still more grievous
forms of injustice and oppression, even if these are being presented as
elements of progress in view of a new world order.
The present Encyclical, the fruit of the cooperation of the Episcopate
of every country of the world, is therefore meant to be a precise and
vigorous reaffirmation of the value of human life and its inviolability,
and at the same time a pressing appeal addressed to each and every
person, in the name of God: respect, protect, love and serve life, every
human life! Only in this direction will you find justice, development,
true freedom, peace and happiness!
May these words reach all the sons and daughters of the Church! May
they reach all people of good will who are concerned for the good of every
man and woman and for the destiny of the whole of society!
6. In profound communion with all my brothers and sisters in the faith,
and inspired by genuine friendship towards all, I wish to meditate upon
once more and proclaim the Gospel of life, the splendour of truth which
enlightens consciences, the clear light which corrects the darkened gaze,
and the unfailing source of faithfulness and steadfastness in facing the
ever new challenges which we meet along our path.
As I recall the powerful experience of the Year of the Family, as if
to complete the Letter which I wrote "to every particular family
in every part of the world",8 I look with renewed confidence to every
household and I pray that at every level a general commitment to support
the family will reappear and be strengthened, so that today too�even amid
so many difficulties and serious threats�the family will always remain,
in accordance with God's plan, the "sanctuary of life".9
To all the members of the Church, the people of life and for life,
I make this most urgent appeal, that together we may offer this world
of ours new signs of hope, and work to ensure that justice and solidarity
will increase and that a new culture of human life will be affirmed, for
the building of an authentic civilization of truth and love.
CHAPTER I
THE VOICEOF YOUR BROTHER'S BLOOD
CRIES TO ME FROM THE GROUND
PRESENT-DAY THREATS TO HUMAN LIFE
"Cain rose up against his brother Abel, and killed him"
(Gen 4:8): the roots of violence against life
7. "God did not make death, and he does not delight in the death
of the living. For he has created all things that they might exist ...
God created man for incorruption, and made him in the image of his
own eternity, but through the devil's envy death entered the world,
and those who belong to his party experience it" (Wis 1:13-14;
2:23-24).
The Gospel of life, proclaimed in the beginning when man was created
in the image of God for a destiny of full and perfect life (cf. Gen
2:7; Wis 9:2-3), is contradicted by the painful experience of
death which enters the world and casts its shadow of meaninglessness
over man's entire existence. Death came into the world as a result of the
devil's envy (cf. Gen 3:1,4-5) and the sin of our first parents
(cf. Gen 2:17, 3:17-19). And death entered it in a violent way,
through the killing of Abel by his brother Cain: "And when
they were in the field, Cain rose up against his brother Abel, and killed
him" (Gen 4:8).
This first murder is presented with singular eloquence in a page of
the Book of Genesis which has universal significance: it is a page rewritten
daily, with inexorable and degrading frequency, in the book of human history.
Let us re-read together this biblical account which, despite its archaic
structure and its extreme simplicity, has much to teach us.
"Now Abel was a keeper of sheep, and Cain a tiller of the ground.
In the course of time Cain brought to the Lord an offering of the fruit
of the ground, and Abel brought of the firstlings of his flock and of their
fat portions. And the Lord had regard for Abel and his offering, but for
Cain and his offering he had not regard. So Cain was very angry, and his
countenance fell. The Lord said to Cain, ?Why are you angry and why has
your countenance fallen? If you do well, will you not be accepted? And
if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door; its desire is for
you, but you must master it'.
"Cain said to Abel his brother, ?Let us go out to the field'.
And when they were in the field, Cain rose up against his brother Abel,
and killed him. Then the Lord said to Cain, ?Where is Abel your brother?'
He said, ?I do not know; am I my brother's keeper?' And the Lord said,
?What have you done? The voice of your brother's blood is crying to me
from the ground. And now you are cursed from the ground, which has opened
its mouth to receive your brother's blood from your hand. When you till
the ground, it shall no longer yield to you its strength; you shall be
a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth'. Cain said to the Lord, ?My punishment
is greater than I can bear. Behold, you have driven me this day away from
the ground; and from your face I shall be hidden; and I shall be a fugitive
and a wanderer on the earth, and whoever finds me will slay me'. Then the
Lord said to him, ?Not so! If any one slays Cain, vengeance shall be taken
on him sevenfold'. And the Lord put a mark on Cain, lest any who came upon
him should kill him. Then Cain went away from the presence of the Lord,
and dwelt in the land of Nod, east of Eden" (Gen 4:2-16).
8. Cain was "very angry" and his countenance "fell"
because "the Lord had regard for Abel and his offering" (Gen
4:4-5). The biblical text does not reveal the reason why God prefers Abel's
sacrifice to Cain's. It clearly shows however that God, although preferring
Abel's gift, does not interrupt his dialogue with Cain. He admonishes
him, reminding him of his freedom in the face of evil: man is in
no way predestined to evil. Certainly, like Adam, he is tempted by the
malevolent force of sin which, like a wild beast, lies in wait at the door
of his heart, ready to leap on its prey. But Cain remains free in the face
of sin. He can and must overcome it: "Its desire is for you, but you
must master it" (Gen 4:7).
Envy and anger have the upper hand over the Lord's warning, and
so Cain attacks his own brother and kills him. As we read in the Catechism
of the Catholic Church: "In the account of Abel's murder by his
brother Cain, Scripture reveals the presence of anger and envy in man,
consequences of original sin, from the beginning of human history. Man
has become the enemy of his fellow man".10
Brother kills brother. Like the first fratricide, every murder
is a violation of the "spiritual" kinship uniting mankind
in one great family,11 in which all share the same fundamental good: equal
personal dignity. Not infrequently the kinship "of flesh and blood"
is also violated; for example when threats to life arise within the
relationship between parents and children, such as happens in abortion
or when, in the wider context of family or kinship, euthanasia is encouraged
or practised.
At the root of every act of violence against one's neighbour there is
a concession to the "thinking" of the evil one, the one
who "was a murderer from the beginning" (Jn 8:44). As
the Apostle John reminds us: "For this is the message which you have
heard from the beginning, that we should love one another, and not be like
Cain who was of the evil one and murdered his brother" (1 Jn 3:11-12).
Cain's killing of his brother at the very dawn of history is thus a sad
witness of how evil spreads with amazing speed: man's revolt against God
in the earthly paradise is followed by the deadly combat of man against
man.
After the crime, God intervenes to avenge the one killed. Before
God, who asks him about the fate of Abel, Cain, instead of showing remorse
and apologizing, arrogantly eludes the question: "I do not know; am
I my brother's keeper?" (Gen 4:9). "I do not know":
Cain tries to cover up his crime with a lie. This was and still is
the case, when all kinds of ideologies try to justify and disguise the
most atrocious crimes against human beings. "Am I my brother's
keeper?": Cain does not wish to think about his brother and refuses
to accept the responsibility which every person has towards others. We
cannot but think of today's tendency for people to refuse to accept responsibility
for their brothers and sisters. Symptoms of this trend include the lack
of solidarity towards society's weakest members�such as the elderly, the
infirm, immigrants, children� and the indifference frequently found in
relations between the world's peoples even when basic values such as survival,
freedom and peace are involved.
9. But God cannot leave the crime unpunished: from the ground
on which it has been spilt, the blood of the one murdered demands that
God should render justice (cf. Gen 37:26; Is 26:21; Ez
24:7-8). From this text the Church has taken the name of the "sins
which cry to God for justice", and, first among them, she has included
wilful murder.12 For the Jewish people, as for many peoples of antiquity,
blood is the source of life. Indeed "the blood is the life" (Dt
12:23), and life, especially human life, belongs only to God: for this
reason whoever attacks human life, in some way attacks God himself.
Cain is cursed by God and also by the earth, which will deny
him its fruit (cf. Gen 4:11-12). He is punished: he will
live in the wilderness and the desert. Murderous violence profoundly changes
man's environment. From being the "garden of Eden" (Gen
2:15), a place of plenty, of harmonious interpersonal relationships and
of friendship with God, the earth becomes "the land of Nod" (Gen
4:16), a place of scarcity, loneliness and separation from God. Cain
will be "a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth" (Gen 4:14):
uncertainty and restlessness will follow him forever.
And yet God, who is always merciful even when he punishes, "put
a mark on Cain, lest any who came upon him should kill him" (Gen
4:15). He thus gave him a distinctive sign, not to condemn him to the hatred
of others, but to protect and defend him from those wishing to kill him,
even out of a desire to avenge Abel's death. Not even a murderer loses
his personal dignity, and God himself pledges to guarantee this. And
it is pre- cisely here that the paradoxical mystery of the merciful
justice of God is shown forth. As Saint Ambrose writes: "Once
the crime is admitted at the very inception of this sinful act of parricide,
then the divine law of God's mercy should be immediately extended. If punishment
is forthwith inflicted on the accused, then men in the exercise of justice
would in no way observe patience and moderation, but would straightaway
condemn the defendant to punishment. ... God drove Cain out of his presence
and sent him into exile far away from his native land, so that he passed
from a life of human kindness to one which was more akin to the rude existence
of a wild beast. God, who preferred the correction rather than the death
of a sinner, did not desire that a homicide be punished by the exaction
of another act of homicide".13
"What have you done?" (Gen 4:10): the eclipse
of the value of life
10. The Lord said to Cain: "What have you done? The voice of your
brother's blood is crying to me from the ground" (Gen 4:10).The
voice of the blood shed by men continues to cry out, from generation
to generation, in ever new and different ways.
The Lord's question: "What have you done?", which Cain cannot
escape, is addressed also to the people of today, to make them realize
the extent and gravity of the attacks against life which continue to mark
human history; to make them discover what causes these attacks and feeds
them; and to make them ponder seriously the consequences which derive from
these attacks for the existence of individuals and peoples.
Some threats come from nature itself, but they are made worse by the
culpable indifference and negligence of those who could in some cases remedy
them. Others are the result of situations of violence, hatred and conflicting
interests, which lead people to attack others through murder, war, slaughter
and genocide.
And how can we fail to consider the violence against life done to millions
of human beings, especially children, who are forced into poverty, malnutrition
and hunger because of an unjust distribution of resources between peoples
and between social classes? And what of the violence inherent not only
in wars as such but in the scandalous arms trade, which spawns the many
armed conflicts which stain our world with blood? What of the spreading
of death caused by reckless tampering with the world's ecological balance,
by the criminal spread of drugs, or by the promotion of certain kinds of
sexual activity which, besides being morally unacceptable, also involve
grave risks to life? It is impossible to catalogue completely the vast
array of threats to human life, so many are the forms, whether explicit
or hidden, in which they appear today!
11. Here though we shall concentrate particular attention on another
category of attacks, affecting life in its earliest and in its final
stages, attacks which present new characteristics with respect to the
past and which raise questions of extraordinary seriousness. It is
not only that in generalized opinion these attacks tend no longer to be
considered as "crimes"; paradoxically they assume the nature
of "rights", to the point that the State is called upon to give
them legal recognition and to make them available through the free services
of health-care personnel. Such attacks strike human life at the time
of its greatest frailty, when it lacks any means of self-defence. Even
more serious is the fact that, most often, those attacks are carried out
in the very heart of and with the complicity of the family�the family which
by its nature is called to be the "sanctuary of life".
How did such a situation come about? Many different factors have to
be taken into account. In the background there is the profound crisis of
culture, which generates scepticism in relation to the very foundations
of knowledge and ethics, and which makes it increasingly difficult to grasp
clearly the meaning of what man is, the meaning of his rights and his duties.
Then there are all kinds of existential and interpersonal difficulties,
made worse by the complexity of a society in which individuals, couples
and families are often left alone with their problems. There are situations
of acute poverty, anxiety or frustration in which the struggle to make
ends meet, the presence of unbearable pain, or instances of violence, especially
against women, make the choice to defend and promote life so demanding
as sometimes to reach the point of heroism.
All this explains, at least in part, how the value of life can today
undergo a kind of "eclipse", even though conscience does not
cease to point to it as a sacred and inviolable value, as is evident in
the tendency to disguise certain crimes against life in its early or final
stages by using innocuous medical terms which distract attention from the
fact that what is involved is the right to life of an actual human person.
12. In fact, while the climate of widespread moral uncertainty can in
some way be explained by the multiplicity and gravity of today's social
problems, and these can sometimes mitigate the subjective responsibility
of individuals, it is no less true that we are confronted by an even larger
reality, which can be described as a veritable structure of sin. This
reality is characterized by the emergence of a culture which denies solidarity
and in many cases takes the form of a veritable "culture of death".
This culture is actively fostered by powerful cultural, economic and political
currents which encourage an idea of society excessively concerned with
efficiency. Looking at the situation from this point of view, it is possible
to speak in a certain sense of a war of the powerful against the weak:
a life which would require greater acceptance, love and care is considered
useless, or held to be an intolerable burden, and is therefore rejected
in one way or another. A person who, because of illness, handicap or, more
simply, just by existing, compromises the well-being or life-style of those
who are more favoured tends to be looked upon as an enemy to be resisted
or eliminated. In this way a kind of "conspiracy against life"
is unleashed. This conspiracy involves not only individuals in their
personal, family or group relationships, but goes far beyond, to the point
of damaging and distorting, at the international level, relations between
peoples and States.
13. In order to facilitate the spread of abortion, enormous sums
of money have been invested and continue to be invested in the production
of pharmaceutical products which make it possible to kill the fetus in
the mother's womb without recourse to medical assistance. On this point,
scientific research itself seems to be almost exclusively preoccupied with
developing products which are ever more simple and effective in suppressing
life and which at the same time are capable of removing abortion from any
kind of control or social responsibility.
It is frequently asserted that contraception, if made safe and
available to all, is the most effective remedy against abortion. The Catholic
Church is then accused of actually promoting abortion, because she obstinately
continues to teach the moral unlawfulness of contraception. When looked
at carefully, this objection is clearly unfounded. It may be that many
people use contraception with a view to excluding the subsequent temptation
of abortion. But the negative values inherent in the "contraceptive
mentality"�which is very different from responsible parenthood, lived
in respect for the full truth of the conjugal act�are such that they in
fact strengthen this temptation when an unwanted life is conceived. Indeed,
the pro- abortion culture is especially strong precisely where the Church's
teaching on contraception is rejected. Certainly, from the moral point
of view contraception and abortion arespecifically different evils:
the former contradicts the full truth of the sexual act as the proper expression
of conjugal love, while the latter destroys the life of a human being;
the former is opposed to the virtue of chastity in marriage, the latter
is opposed to the virtue of justice and directly violates the divine commandment
"You shall not kill".
But despite their differences of nature and moral gravity, contraception
and abortion are often closely connected, as fruits of the same tree. It
is true that in many cases contraception and even abortion are practised
under the pressure of real- life difficulties, which nonetheless can never
exonerate from striving to observe God's law fully. Still, in very many
other instances such practices are rooted in a hedonistic mentality unwilling
to accept responsibility in matters of sexuality, and they imply a self-centered
concept of freedom, which regards procreation as an obstacle to personal
fulfilment. The life which could result from a sexual encounter thus becomes
an enemy to be avoided at all costs, and abortion becomes the only possible
decisive response to failed contraception.
The close connection which exists, in mentality, between the practice
of contraception and that of abortion is becoming increasingly obvious.
It is being demonstrated in an alarming way by the development of chemical
products, intrauterine devices and vaccines which, distributed with the
same ease as contraceptives, really act as abortifacients in the very early
stages of the development of the life of the new human being.
14. The various techniques of artificial reproduction, which
would seem to be at the service of life and which are frequently used with
this intention, actually open the door to new threats against life. Apart
from the fact that they are morally unacceptable, since they separate procreation
from the fully human context of the conjugal act,14 these techniques have
a high rate of failure: not just failure in relation to fertilization but
with regard to the subsequent development of the embryo, which is exposed
to the risk of death, generally within a very short space of time. Furthermore,
the number of embryos produced is often greater than that needed for implantation
in the woman's womb, and these so-called "spare embryos" are
then destroyed or used for research which, under the pretext of scientific
or medical progress, in fact reduces human life to the level of simple
"biological material" to be freely disposed of.
Prenatal diagnosis, which presents no moral objections if carried
out in order to identify the medical treatment which may be needed by the
child in the womb, all too often becomes an opportunity for proposing and
procuring an abortion. This is eugenic abortion, justified in public opinion
on the basis of a mentality�mistakenly held to be consistent with the demands
of "therapeutic interventions"�which accepts life only under
certain conditions and rejects it when it is affected by any limitation,
handicap or illness.
Following this same logic, the point has been reached where the most
basic care, even nourishment, is denied to babies born with serious handicaps
or illnesses. The contemporary scene, moreover, is becoming even more alarming
by reason of the proposals, advanced here and there, to justify even infanticide,
following the same arguments used to justify the right to abortion.
In this way, we revert to a state of barbarism which one hoped had been
left behind forever.
15. Threats which are no less serious hang over the incurably ill
and the dying. In a social and cultural context which makes
it more difficult to face and accept suffering, the temptation becomes
all the greater to resolve the problem of suffering by eliminating it
at the root, by hastening death so that it occurs at the moment considered
most suitable.
Various considerations usually contribute to such a decision, all of
which converge in the same terrible outcome. In the sick person the sense
of anguish, of severe discomfort, and even of desperation brought on by
intense and prolonged suffering can be a decisive factor. Such a situation
can threaten the already fragile equilibrium of an individual's personal
and family life, with the result that, on the one hand, the sick person,
despite the help of increasingly effective medical and social assistance,
risks feeling overwhelmed by his or her own frailty; and on the other hand,
those close to the sick person can be moved by an understandable even if
misplaced compassion. All this is aggravated by a cultural climate which
fails to perceive any meaning or value in suffering, but rather considers
suffering the epitome of evil, to be eliminated at all costs. This is especially
the case in the absence of a religious outlook which could help to provide
a positive understanding of the mystery of suffering.
On a more general level, there exists in contemporary culture a certain
Promethean attitude which leads people to think that they can control life
and death by taking the decisions about them into their own hands. What
really happens in this case is that the individual is overcome and crushed
by a death deprived of any prospect of meaning or hope. We see a tragic
expression of all this in the spread of euthanasia�disguised and
surreptitious, or practised openly and even legally. As well as for reasons
of a misguided pity at the sight of the patient's suffering, euthanasia
is sometimes justified by the utilitarian motive of avoiding costs which
bring no return and which weigh heavily on society. Thus it is proposed
to eliminate malformed babies, the severely handicapped, the disabled,
the elderly, especially when they are not self-sufficient, and the terminally
ill. Nor can we remain silent in the face of other more furtive, but no
less serious and real, forms of euthanasia. These could occur for example
when, in order to increase the availability of organs for transplants,
organs are removed without respecting objective and adequate criteria which
verify the death of the donor.
16. Another present-day phenomenon, frequently used to justify
threats and attacks against life, is the demographic question. This
question arises in different ways in different parts of the world. In the
rich and developed countries there is a disturbing decline or collapse
of the birthrate. The poorer countries, on the other hand, generally have
a high rate of population growth, difficult to sustain in the context of
low economic and social development, and especially where there is extreme
underdevelopment. In the face of over- population in the poorer countries,
instead of forms of global intervention at the international level�serious
family and social policies, programmes of cultural development and of fair
production and distribution of resources�anti-birth policies continue to
be enacted.
Contraception, sterilization and abortion are certainly part of the
reason why in some cases there is a sharp decline in the birthrate. It
is not difficult to be tempted to use the same methods and attacks against
life also where there is a situation of "demographic explosion".
The Pharaoh of old, haunted by the presence and increase of the children
of Israel, submitted them to every kind of oppression and ordered that
every male child born of the Hebrew women was to be killed (cf. Ex 1:7-22).
Today not a few of the powerful of the earth act in the same way. They
too are haunted by the current demographic growth, and fear that the most
prolific and poorest peoples represent a threat for the well-being and
peace of their own countries. Consequently, rather than wishing to face
and solve these serious problems with respect for the dignity of individuals
and families and for every person's inviolable right to life, they prefer
to promote and impose by whatever means a massive programme of birth control.
Even the economic help which they would be ready to give is unjustly made
conditional on the acceptance of an anti-birth policy.
17. Humanity today offers us a truly alarming spectacle, if we consider
not only how extensively attacks on life are spreading but also their unheard-of
numerical proportion, and the fact that they receive widespread and powerful
support from a broad consensus on the part of society, from widespread
legal approval and the involvement of certain sectors of health-care personnel.
As I emphatically stated at Denver, on the occasion of the Eighth World
Youth Day, "with time the threats against life have not grown weaker.
They are taking on vast proportions. They are not only threats coming from
the outside, from the forces of nature or the ?Cains' who kill the ?Abels';
no, they are scientifically and systematically programmed threats. The
twentieth century will have been an era of massive attacks on life, an
endless series of wars and a continual taking of innocent human life. False
prophets and false teachers have had the greatest success".15 Aside
from intentions, which can be varied and perhaps can seem convincing at
times, especially if presented in the name of solidarity, we are in fact
faced by an objective "conspiracy against life", involving
even international Institutions, engaged in encouraging and carrying out
actual campaigns to make contraception, sterilization and abortion widely
available. Nor can it be denied that the mass media are often implicated
in this conspiracy, by lending credit to that culture which presents recourse
to contraception, sterilization, abortion and even euthanasia as a mark
of progress and a victory of freedom, while depicting as enemies of freedom
and progress those positions which are unreservedly pro-life.
"Am I my brother's keeper?" (Gen 4:9): a
perverse idea of freedom
18. The panorama described needs to be understood not only in terms
of the phenomena of death which characterize it but also in the variety
of causes which determine it. The Lord's question: "What have
you done?" (Gen 4:10), seems almost like an invitation addressed
to Cain to go beyond the material dimension of his murderous gesture, in
order to recognize in it all the gravity of the motives which occasioned
it and the consequences which result from it.
Decisions that go against life sometimes arise from difficult or even
tragic situations of profound suffering, loneliness, a total lack of economic
pros- pects, depression and anxiety about the future. Such circumstances
can mitigate even to a notable degree subjective responsibility and the
consequent culpability of those who make these choices which in themselves
are evil. But today the prob- lem goes far beyond the necessary recognition
of these personal situations. It is a problem which exists at the cultural,
social and political level, where it reveals its more sinister and disturbing
aspect in the tendency, ever more widely shared, to interpret the above
crimes against life as legitimate expressions of individual freedom,
to be acknowledged and protected as actual rights.
In this way, and with tragic consequences, a long historical process
is reaching a turning-point. The process which once led to discovering
the idea of "human rights"�rights inherent in every person and
prior to any Constitution and State legislation�is today marked by a surprising
contradiction. Precisely in an age when the inviolable rights of the
person are solemnly proclaimed and the value of life is publicly affirmed,
the very right to life is being denied or trampled upon, especially at
the more significant moments of existence: the moment of birth and the
moment of death.
On the one hand, the various declarations of human rights and the many
initiatives inspired by these declarations show that at the global level
there is a growing moral sensitivity, more alert to acknowledging the value
and dignity of every individual as a human being, without any distinction
of race, nationality, religion, political opinion or social class.
On the other hand, these noble proclamations are unfortunately contradicted
by a tragic repudiation of them in practice. This denial is still more
distressing, indeed more scandalous, precisely because it is occurring
in a society which makes the affirmation and protection of human rights
its primary objective and its boast. How can these repeated affirmations
of principle be reconciled with the continual increase and widespread justification
of attacks on human life? How can we reconcile these declarations with
the refusal to accept those who are weak and needy, or elderly, or those
who have just been conceived? These attacks go directly against respect
for life and they represent a direct threat to the entire culture of
human rights. It is a threat capable, in the end, of jeopardizing the
very meaning of democratic coexistence: rather than societies of "people
living together", our cities risk becoming societies of people who
are rejected, marginalized, uprooted and oppressed. If we then look
at the wider worldwide perspective, how can we fail to think that the very
affirmation of the rights of individuals and peoples made in distinguished
international assemblies is a merely futile exercise of rhetoric, if we
fail to unmask the selfishness of the rich countries which exclude poorer
countries from access to development or make such access dependent on arbitrary
prohibitions against procreation, setting up an opposition between development
and man himself? Should we not question the very economic models often
adopted by States which, also as a result of international pressures and
forms of conditioning, cause and aggravate situations of injustice and
violence in which the life of whole peoples is degraded and trampled upon?
19. What are the roots of this remarkable contradiction?
We can find them in an overall assessment of a cultural and moral nature,
beginning with the mentality which carries the concept of subjectivity
to an extreme and even distorts it, and recognizes as a subject of
rights only the person who enjoys full or at least incipient autonomy and
who emerges from a state of total dependence on others. But how can we
reconcile this approach with the exaltation of man as a being who is
"not to be used"? The theory of human rights is based precisely
on the affirmation that the human person, unlike animals and things, cannot
be subjected to domination by others. We must also mention the mentality
which tends to equate personal dignity with the capacity for verbal
and explicit, or at least perceptible, communication. It is
clear that on the basis of these presuppositions there is no place in the
world for anyone who, like the unborn or the dying, is a weak element in
the social structure, or for anyone who appears completely at the mercy
of others and radically dependent on them, and can only communicate through
the silent language of a profound sharing of affection. In this case it
is force which becomes the criterion for choice and action in interpersonal
relations and in social life. But this is the exact opposite of what a
State ruled by law, as a community in which the "reasons of force"
are replaced by the "force of reason", historically intended
to affirm.
At another level, the roots of the contradiction between the solemn
affirmation of human rights and their tragic denial in practice lies in
a notion of freedom which exalts the isolated individual in an absolute
way, and gives no place to solidarity, to openness to others and service
of them. While it is true that the taking of life not yet born or in its
final stages is sometimes marked by a mistaken sense of altruism and human
compassion, it cannot be denied that such a culture of death, taken as
a whole, betrays a completely individualistic concept of freedom, which
ends up by becoming the freedom of "the strong" against the weak
who have no choice but to submit.
It is precisely in this sense that Cain's answer to the Lord's question:
"Where is Abel your brother?" can be interpreted: "I do
not know; am I my brother's keeper?" (Gen 4:9). Yes,
every man is his "brother's keeper", because God entrusts us
to one another. And it is also in view of this entrusting that God gives
everyone freedom, a freedom which possesses an inherently relational
dimension. This is a great gift of the Creator, placed as it is at
the service of the person and of his fulfilment through the gift of self
and openness to others; but when freedom is made absolute in an individualistic
way, it is emptied of its original content, and its very meaning and dignity
are contradicted.
There is an even more profound aspect which needs to be emphasized:
freedom negates and destroys itself, and becomes a factor leading to the
destruction of others, when it no longer recognizes and respects its
essential link with the truth. When freedom, out of a desire to emancipate
itself from all forms of tradition and authority, shuts out even the most
obvious evidence of an objective and universal truth, which is the foundation
of personal and social life, then the person ends up by no longer taking
as the sole and indisputable point of reference for his own choices the
truth about good and evil, but only his subjective and changeable opinion
or, indeed, his selfish interest and whim.
20. This view of freedom leads to a serious distortion of life in
society. If the promotion of the self is understood in terms of absolute
autonomy, people inevitably reach the point of rejecting one another. Everyone
else is considered an enemy from whom one has to defend oneself. Thus soci-
ety becomes a mass of individuals placed side by side, but without any
mutual bonds. Each one wishes to assert himself independently of the other
and in fact intends to make his own interests prevail. Still, in the face
of other people's analogous interests, some kind of compromise must be
found, if one wants a society in which the maximum possible freedom is
guaranteed to each individual. In this way, any reference to common values
and to a truth absolutely binding on everyone is lost, and social life
ventures on to the shifting sands of complete relativism. At that point,
everything is negotiable, everything is open to bargaining: even the
first of the fundamental rights, the right to life.
This is what is happening also at the level of politics and government:
the original and inalienable right to life is questioned or denied on the
basis of a parliamentary vote or the will of one part of the people�even
if it is the majority. This is the sinister result of a relativism which
reigns unopposed: the "right" ceases to be such, because it is
no longer firmly founded on the inviolable dignity of the person, but is
made subject to the will of the stronger part. In this way democracy, contradicting
its own principles, effectively moves towards a form of totalitarianism.
The State is no longer the "common home" where all can live together
on the basis of principles of fundamental equality, but is transformed
into a tyrant State, which arrogates to itself the right to dispose
of the life of the weakest and most defenceless members, from the unborn
child to the elderly, in the name of a public interest which is really
nothing but the interest of one part. The appearance of the strictest respect
for legality is maintained, at least when the laws permitting abortion
and euthanasia are the result of a ballot in accordance with what are generally
seen as the rules of democracy. Really, what we have here is only the tragic
caricature of legality; the democratic ideal, which is only truly such
when it acknowledges and safeguards the dignity of every human person,
is betrayed in its very foundations: "How is it still possible
to speak of the dignity of every human person when the killing of the weakest
and most innocent is permitted? In the name of what justice is the most
unjust of discriminations practised: some individuals are held to be deserving
of defence and others are denied that dignity?" 16 When this happens,
the process leading to the breakdown of a genuinely human co-existence
and the disintegration of the State itself has already begun.
To claim the right to abortion, infanticide and euthanasia, and to recognize
that right in law, means to attribute to human freedom a perverse and
evil significance: that of an absolute power over others and against
others. This is the death of true freedom: "Truly, truly, I say
to you, every one who commits sin is a slave to sin" (Jn 8:34).
"And from your face I shall be hidden" (Gen 4:14):
the eclipse of the sense of God and of man
21. In seeking the deepest roots of the struggle between the "culture
of life" and the "culture of death", we cannot restrict
ourselves to the perverse idea of freedom mentioned above. We have to go
to the heart of the tragedy being experienced by modern man: the eclipse
of the sense of God and of man, typical of a social and cultural climate
dominated by secularism, which, with its ubiquitous tentacles, succeeds
at times in putting Christian communities themselves to the test. Those
who allow themselves to be influenced by this climate easily fall into
a sad vicious circle: when the sense of God is lost, there is also a
tendency to lose the sense of man, of his dignity and his life; in
turn, the systematic violation of the moral law, especially in the serious
matter of respect for human life and its dignity, produces a kind of progressive
darkening of the capacity to discern God's living and saving presence.
Once again we can gain insight from the story of Abel's murder by his
brother. After the curse imposed on him by God, Cain thus addresses the
Lord: "My punishment is greater than I can bear. Behold, you have
driven me this day away from the ground; and from your face I shall
be hidden; and I shall be a fugitive and wanderer on the earth, and
whoever finds me will slay me" (Gen 4:13-14). Cain is convinced
that his sin will not obtain pardon from the Lord and that his inescapable
destiny will be to have to "hide his face" from him. If Cain
is capable of confessing that his fault is "greater than he can bear",
it is because he is conscious of being in the presence of God and before
God's just judgment. It is really only before the Lord that man can admit
his sin and recognize its full seriousness. Such was the experience of
David who, after "having committed evil in the sight of the Lord",
and being rebuked by the Prophet Nathan, exclaimed: "My offences truly
I know them; my sin is always before me. Against you, you alone, have I
sinned; what is evil in your sight I have done" (Ps 51:5-6).
22. Consequently, when the sense of God is lost, the sense of man is
also threatened and poisoned, as the Second Vatican Council concisely states:
"Without the Creator the creature would disappear ... But when God
is forgotten the creature itself grows unintelligible".17 Man is no
longer able to see himself as "mysteriously different" from other
earthly creatures; he regards himself merely as one more living being,
as an organism which, at most, has reached a very high stage of perfection.
Enclosed in the narrow horizon of his physical nature, he is somehow reduced
to being "a thing", and no longer grasps the "transcendent"
character of his "existence as man". He no longer considers life
as a splendid gift of God, something "sacred" entrusted to his
responsibility and thus also to his loving care and "veneration".
Life itself becomes a mere "thing", which man claims as his exclusive
property, completely subject to his control and manipulation.
Thus, in relation to life at birth or at death, man is no longer capable
of posing the question of the truest meaning of his own existence, nor
can he assimilate with genuine freedom these crucial moments of his own
history. He is concerned only with "doing", and, using all kinds
of technology, he busies himself with programming, controlling and dominating
birth and death. Birth and death, instead of being primary experiences
demanding to be "lived", become things to be merely "possessed"
or "rejected".
Moreover, once all reference to God has been removed, it is not surprising
that the meaning of everything else becomes profoundly distorted. Nature
itself, from being "mater" (mother), is now reduced to
being "matter", and is subjected to every kind of manipulation.
This is the direction in which a certain technical and scientific way of
thinking, prevalent in present-day culture, appears to be leading when
it rejects the very idea that there is a truth of creation which must be
ac- knowledged, or a plan of God for life which must be respected. Something
similar happens when concern about the consequences of such a "freedom
without law" leads some people to the opposite position of a "law
without freedom", as for example in ideologies which consider it unlawful
to interfere in any way with nature, practically "divinizing"
it. Again, this is a misunderstanding of nature's dependence on the plan
of the Creator. Thus it is clear that the loss of contact with God's wise
design is the deepest root of modern man's confusion, both when this loss
leads to a freedom without rules and when it leaves man in "fear"
of his freedom.
By living "as if God did not exist", man not only loses sight
of the mystery of God, but also of the mystery of the world and the mystery
of his own being.
23. The eclipse of the sense of God and of man inevitably leads to a
practical materialism, which breeds individualism, utilitarianism
and hedonism. Here too we see the permanent validity of the words of the
Apostle: "And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave
them up to a base mind and to improper conduct" (Rom 1:28).
The values of being are replaced by those of having. The
only goal which counts is the pursuit of one's own material well-being.
The so-called "quality of life" is interpreted primarily or exclusively
as economic efficiency, inordinate consumerism, physical beauty and pleasure,
to the neglect of the more profound dimensions�interpersonal, spiritual
and religious�of existence.
In such a context suffering, an inescapable burden of human existence
but also a factor of possible personal growth, is "censored",
rejected as useless, indeed opposed as an evil, always and in every way
to be avoided. When it cannot be avoided and the prospect of even some
future well-being vanishes, then life appears to have lost all meaning
and the temptation grows in man to claim the right to suppress it.
Within this same cultural climate, the body is no longer perceived
as a properly personal reality, a sign and place of relations with others,
with God and with the world. It is reduced to pure materiality: it is simply
a complex of organs, functions and energies to be used according to the
sole criteria of pleasure and efficiency. Consequently, sexuality too
is depersonalized and exploited: from being the sign, place and language
of love, that is, of the gift of self and acceptance of another, in all
the other's richness as a person, it increasingly becomes the occasion
and instrument for self-assertion and the selfish satisfaction of personal
desires and instincts. Thus the original import of human sexuality is distorted
and falsified, and the two meanings, unitive and procreative, inherent
in the very nature of the conjugal act, are artificially separated: in
this way the marriage union is betrayed and its fruitfulness is subjected
to the caprice of the couple. Procreation then becomes the "enemy"
to be avoided in sexual activity: if it is welcomed, this is only because
it expresses a desire, or indeed the intention, to have a child "at
all costs", and not because it signifies the complete acceptance of
the other and therefore an openness to the richness of life which the child
represents.
In the materialistic perspective described so far, interpersonal
relations are seriously impoverished. The first to be harmed are women,
children, the sick or suffering, and the elderly. The criterion of personal
dignity�which demands respect, generosity and service�is replaced by the
criterion of efficiency, functionality and usefulness: others are considered
not for what they "are", but for what they "have, do and
produce". This is the supremacy of the strong over the weak.
24. It is at the heart of the moral conscience that the eclipse
of the sense of God and of man, with all its various and deadly consequences
for life, is taking place. It is a question, above all, of the individual
conscience, as it stands before God in its singleness and uniqueness.18
But it is also a question, in a certain sense, of the "moral conscience"
of society: in a way it too is responsible, not only because it
tolerates or fosters behaviour contrary to life, but also because it encourages
the "culture of death", creating and consolidating actual "structures
of sin" which go against life. The moral conscience, both individual
and social, is today subjected, also as a result of the penetrating influence
of the media, to an extremely serious and mortal danger: that of
confusion between good and evil, precisely in relation to the fundamental
right to life. A large part of contemporary society looks sadly like that
humanity which Paul describes in his Letter to the Romans. It is composed
"of men who by their wickedness suppress the truth" (1:18): having
denied God and believing that they can build the earthly city without him,
"they became futile in their thinking" so that "their senseless
minds were darkened" (1:21); "claiming to be wise, they became
fools" (1:22), carrying out works deserving of death, and "they
not only do them but approve those who practise them" (1:32). When
conscience, this bright lamp of the soul (cf. Mt 6:22-23), calls
"evil good and good evil" (Is 5:20), it is already on
the path to the most alarming corruption and the darkest moral blindness.
And yet all the conditioning and efforts to enforce silence fail to
stifle the voice of the Lord echoing in the conscience of every individual:
it is always from this intimate sanctuary of the conscience that a new
journey of love, openness and service to human life can begin.
"You have come to the sprinkled blood" (cf. Heb
12: 22, 24): signs of hope and invitation to commitment
25. "The voice of your brother's blood is crying to me from the
ground" (Gen 4:10). It is not only the voice of the blood of
Abel, the first innocent man to be murdered, which cries to God, the source
and defender of life. The blood of every other human being who has been
killed since Abel is also a voice raised to the Lord. In an absolutely
singular way, as the author of the Letter to the Hebrews reminds us, the
voice of the blood of Christ, of whom Abel in his innocence is a prophetic
figure, cries out to God: "You have come to Mount Zion and to the
city of the living God ... to the mediator of a new covenant, and to the
sprinkled blood that speaks more graciously than the blood of Abel"
(12:22, 24).
It is the sprinkled blood. A symbol and prophetic sign of it
had been the blood of the sacrifices of the Old Covenant, whereby God expressed
his will to communicate his own life to men, purifying and consecrating
them (cf. Ex 24:8; Lev 17:11). Now all of this is fulfilled
and comes true in Christ: his is the sprinkled blood which redeems, purifies
and saves; it is the blood of the Mediator of the New Covenant "poured
out for many for the forgiveness of sins" (Mt 26:28). This
blood, which flows from the pierced side of Christ on the Cross (cf. Jn
19:34), "speaks more graciously" than the blood of Abel;
indeed, it expresses and requires a more radical "justice", and
above all it implores mercy,19 it makes intercession for the brethren before
the Father (cf. Heb 7:25), and it is the source of perfect redemption
and the gift of new life.
The blood of Christ, while it reveals the grandeur of the Father's love,
shows how precious man is in God's eyes and how priceless the value
of his life. The Apostle Peter reminds us of this: "You know that
you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your fathers, not
with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious blood
of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot" (1 Pt 1:18-19).
Precisely by contemplating the precious blood of Christ, the sign of his
self-giving love (cf. Jn 13:1), the believer learns to recognize
and appreciate the almost divine dignity of every human being and can exclaim
with ever renewed and grateful wonder: "How precious must man be in
the eyes of the Creator, if he ?gained so great a Redeemer' (Exsultet
of the Easter Vigil), and if God ?gave his only Son' in order that
man ?should not perish but have eternal life' (cf. Jn 3:16)!".20
Furthermore, Christ's blood reveals to man that his greatness, and therefore
his vocation, consists in the sincere gift of self. Precisely because
it is poured out as the gift of life, the blood of Christ is no longer
a sign of death, of definitive separation from the brethren, but the instrument
of a communion which is richness of life for all. Whoever in the Sacrament
of the Eucharist drinks this blood and abides in Jesus (cf. Jn 6:56)
is drawn into the dynamism of his love and gift of life, in order to bring
to its fullness the original vocation to love which belongs to everyone
(cf. Gen 1:27; 2:18-24).
It is from the blood of Christ that all draw the strength to commit
themselves to promoting life. It is precisely this blood that is the
most powerful source of hope, indeed it is the foundation of the absolute
certitude that in God's plan life will be victorious. "And death
shall be no more", exclaims the powerful voice which comes from the
throne of God in the Heavenly Jerusalem (Rev 21:4). And Saint Paul
assures us that the present victory over sin is a sign and anticipation
of the definitive victory over death, when there "shall come to pass
the saying that is written: ?Death is swallowed up in victory'. ?O death,
where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?' " (1 Cor
15:54-55).
26. In effect, signs which point to this victory are not lacking in
our societies and cultures, strongly marked though they are by the "culture
of death". It would therefore be to give a one-sided picture, which
could lead to sterile discouragement, if the condemnation of the threats
to life were not accompanied by the presentation of the positive signs
at work in humanity's present situation.
Unfortunately it is often hard to see and recognize these positive signs,
perhaps also because they do not receive sufficient attention in the communications
media. Yet, how many initiatives of help and support for people who are
weak and defenceless have sprung up and continue to spring up in the Christian
community and in civil society, at the local, national and international
level, through the efforts of individuals, groups, movements and organizations
of various kinds!
There are still many married couples who, with a generous sense
of responsibility, are ready to accept children as "the supreme gift
of marriage".21 Nor is there a lack of families which, over
and above their everyday service to life, are willing to accept abandoned
children, boys and girls and teenagers in difficulty, handicapped persons,
elderly men and women who have been left alone. Many centres in support
of life, or similar institutions, are sponsored by individuals and
groups which, with admirable dedication and sacrifice, offer moral and
material support to mothers who are in difficulty and are tempted to have
recourse to abortion. Increasingly, there are appearing in many places
groups of volunteers prepared to offer hospitality to persons without
a family, who find themselves in conditions of particular distress or who
need a supportive environment to help them to overcome destructive habits
and discover anew the meaning of life.
Medical science, thanks to the committed efforts of researchers
and practitioners, continues in its efforts to discover ever more effective
remedies: treatments which were once inconceivable but which now offer
much promise for the future are today being developed for the unborn, the
suffering and those in an acute or terminal stage of sickness. Various
agencies and organizations are mobilizing their efforts to bring the benefits
of the most advanced medicine to countries most afflicted by poverty and
endemic diseases. In a similar way national and international associations
of physicians are being organized to bring quick relief to peoples affected
by natural disasters, epidemics or wars. Even if a just international distribution
of medical resources is still far from being a reality, how can we not
recognize in the steps taken so far the sign of a growing solidarity among
peoples, a praiseworthy human and moral sensitivity and a greater respect
for life?
27. In view of laws which permit abortion and in view of efforts, which
here and there have been successful, to legalize euthanasia, movements
and initiatives to raise social awareness in defence of life have sprung
up in many parts of the world. When, in accordance with their principles,
such movements act resolutely, but without resorting to violence, they
promote a wider and more profound consciousness of the value of life, and
evoke and bring about a more determined commitment to its defence.
Furthermore, how can we fail to mention all those daily gestures
of openness, sacrifice and unselfish care which countless people lovingly
make in families, hospitals, orphanages, homes for the elderly and other
centres or communities which defend life? Allowing herself to be guided
by the example of Jesus the "Good Samaritan" (cf. Lk 10:29-37)
and upheld by his strength, the Church has always been in the front line
in providing charitable help: so many of her sons and daughters, especially
men and women Religious, in traditional and ever new forms, have consecrated
and continue to consecrate their lives to God, freely giving of themselves
out of love for their neighbour, especially for the weak and needy. These
deeds strengthen the bases of the "civilization of love and life",
without which the life of individuals and of society itself loses its most
genuinely human quality. Even if they go unnoticed and remain hidden to
most people, faith assures us that the Father "who sees in secret"
(Mt 6:6) not only will reward these actions but already here and
now makes them produce lasting fruit for the good of all.
Among the signs of hope we should also count the spread, at many levels
of public opinion, of a new sensitivity ever more opposed to war as
an instrument for the resolution of conflicts between peoples, and increasingly
oriented to finding effective but "non-violent" means to counter
the armed aggressor. In the same perspective there is evidence of a growing
public opposition to the death penalty, even when such a penalty is
seen as a kind of "legitimate defence" on the part of society.
Modern society in fact has the means of effectively suppressing crime by
rendering criminals harmless without definitively denying them the chance
to reform.
Another welcome sign is the growing attention being paid to the quality
of life and to ecology, especially in more developed societies,
where people's expectations are no longer concentrated so much on problems
of survival as on the search for an overall improvement of living conditions.
Especially significant is the reawakening of an ethical reflection on issues
affecting life. The emergence and ever more widespread development of bioethics
is promoting more reflection and dialogue�between believers and non-believers,
as well as between followers of different religions� on ethical problems,
including fundamental issues pertaining to human life.
28. This situation, with its lights and shadows, ought to make us all
fully aware that we are facing an enormous and dramatic clash between good
and evil, death and life, the "culture of death" and the "culture
of life". We find ourselves not only "faced with" but necessarily
"in the midst of" this conflict: we are all involved and we all
share in it, with the inescapable responsibility of choosing to be unconditionally
pro-life.
For us too Moses' invitation rings out loud and clear: "See, I
have set before you this day life and good, death and evil. ... I have
set before you life and death, blessing and curse; therefore choose
life, that you and your descendants may live" (Dt 30:15,
19). This invitation is very appropriate for us who are called day by day
to the duty of choosing between the "culture of life" and the
"culture of death". But the call of Deuteronomy goes even deeper,
for it urges us to make a choice which is properly religious and moral.
It is a question of giving our own existence a basic orientation and living
the law of the Lord faithfully and consistently: "If you obey the
commandments of the Lord your God which I command you this day, by loving
the Lord your God, by walking in his ways, and by keeping
his commandments and his statutes and his ordinances, then you shall
live ... therefore choose life, that you and your descendants may live,
loving the Lord your God, obeying his voice, and cleaving to him; for
that means life to you and length of days" (30:16,19-20).
The unconditional choice for life reaches its full religious and moral
meaning when it flows from, is formed by and nourished by faith in Christ.
Nothing helps us so much to face positively the conflict between death
and life in which we are engaged as faith in the Son of God who became
man and dwelt among men so "that they may have life, and have it abundantly"
(Jn 10:10). It is a matter of faith in the Risen Lord, who has
conquered death; faith in the blood of Christ "that speaks more
graciously than the blood of Abel" (Heb 12:24).
With the light and strength of this faith, therefore, in facing the
challenges of the present situation, the Church is becoming more aware
of the grace and responsibility which come to her from her Lord of proclaiming,
celebrating and serving the Gospel of life.
CHAPTER II
I CAME
THAT THEY MAY HAVE LIFE
THE CHRISTIAN MESSAGE CONCERNING LIFE
"The life was made manifest, and we saw it" (1 Jn
1:2): with our gaze fixed on Christ, "the Word of life"
29. Faced with the countless grave threats to life present in the modern
world, one could feel overwhelmed by sheer powerlessness: good can never
be powerful enough to triumph over evil!
At such times the People of God, and this includes every believer, is
called to profess with humility and courage its faith in Jesus Christ,
"the Word of life" (1 Jn 1:1). The Gospel of life is
not simply a reflection, however new and profound, on human life. Nor is
it merely a commandment aimed at raising awareness and bringing about significant
changes in society. Still less is it an illusory promise of a better future.
The Gospel of life is something concrete and personal, for it consists
in the proclamation of the very person of Jesus. Jesus made himself
known to the Apostle Thomas, and in him to every person, with the words:
"I am the way, and the truth, and the life" (Jn 14:6).
This is also how he spoke of himself to Martha, the sister of Lazarus:
"I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes in me, though
he die, yet shall he live, and whoever lives and believes in me shall never
die" (Jn 11:25-26). Jesus is the Son who from all eternity
receives life from the Father (cf. Jn 5:26), and who has come among
men to make them sharers in this gift: "I came that they may have
life, and have it abundantly" (Jn 10:10).
Through the words, the actions and the very person of Jesus, man is
given the possibility of "knowing" the complete truth
concerning the value of human life. From this "source" he receives,
in particular, the capacity to "accomplish" this truth perfectly
(cf. Jn 3:21), that is, to accept and fulfil completely the responsibility
of loving and serving, of defending and promoting human life. In Christ,
the Gospel of life is definitively proclaimed and fully given. This
is the Gospel which, already present in the Revelation of the Old Testament,
and indeed written in the heart of every man and woman, has echoed in every
conscience "from the beginning", from the time of creation itself,
in such a way that, despite the negative consequences of sin, it can
also be known in its essential traits by human reason. As the Second
Vatican Council teaches, Christ "perfected revelation by fulfilling
it through his whole work of making himself present and manifesting himself;
through his words and deeds, his signs and wonders, but especially through
his death and glorious Resurrection from the dead and final sending of
the Spirit of truth. Moreover, he confirmed with divine testimony what
revelation proclaimed: that God is with us to free us from the darkness
of sin and death, and to raise us up to life eternal".22
30. Hence, with our attention fixed on the Lord Jesus, we wish to hear
from him once again "the words of God" (Jn 3:34) and meditate
anew on the Gospel of life. The deepest and most original meaning
of this meditation on what revelation tells us about human life was taken
up by the Apostle John in the opening words of his First Letter: "That
which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with
our eyes, which we have looked upon and touched with our hands, concerning
the word of life�the life was made manifest, and we saw it, and testify
to it, and proclaim to you the eternal life which was with the Father and
was made manifest to us�that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also
to you, so that you may have fellowship with us" (1:1-3).
In Jesus, the "Word of life", God's eternal life is thus proclaimed
and given. Thanks to this proclamation and gift, our physical and spiritual
life, also in its earthly phase, acquires its full value and meaning, for
God's eternal life is in fact the end to which our living in this world
is directed and called. In this way the Gospel of life includes
everything that human experience and reason tell us about the value of
human life, accepting it, purifying it, exalting it and bringing it to
fulfilment.
"The Lord is my strength and my song, and he has become my salvation"
(Ex 15:2): life is always a good
31. The fullness of the Gospel message about life was prepared for in
the Old Testament. Especially in the events of the Exodus, the centre of
the Old Testament faith experience, Israel discovered the preciousness
of its life in the eyes of God. When it seemed doomed to extermination
because of the threat of death hanging over all its newborn males (cf.
Ex 1:15-22), the Lord revealed himself to Israel as its Saviour,
with the power to ensure a future to those without hope. Israel thus comes
to know clearly that its existence is not at the mercy of a Pharaoh
who can exploit it at his despotic whim. On the contrary, Israel's life
is the object of God's gentle and intense love.
Freedom from slavery meant the gift of an identity, the recognition
of an indestructible dignity and the beginning of a new history, in
which the discovery of God and discovery of self go hand in hand. The Exodus
was a foundational experience and a model for the future. Through it, Israel
comes to learn that whenever its existence is threatened it need only turn
to God with renewed trust in order to find in him effective help: "I
formed you, you are my servant; O Israel, you will not be forgotten by
me" (Is 44:21).
Thus, in coming to know the value of its own existence as a people,
Israel also grows in its perception of the meaning and value of life
itself. This reflection is developed more specifically in the Wisdom
Literature, on the basis of daily experience of the precariousness of life
and awareness of the threats which assail it. Faced with the contradictions
of life, faith is challenged to respond.
More than anything else, it is the problem of suffering which challenges
faith and puts it to the test. How can we fail to appreciate the universal
anguish of man when we meditate on the Book of Job? The innocent man overwhelmed
by suffering is understandably led to wonder: "Why is light given
to him that is in misery, and life to the bitter in soul, who long for
death, but it comes not, and dig for it more than for hid treasures?"
(3:20-21). But even when the darkness is deepest, faith points to a trusting
and adoring acknowledgment of the "mystery": "I know that
you can do all things, and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted"
(Job 42:2).
Revelation progressively allows the first notion of immortal life planted
by the Creator in the human heart to be grasped with ever greater clarity:
"He has made everything beautiful in its time; also he has put eternity
into man's mind" (Ec 3:11). This first notion of totality
and fullness is waiting to be manifested in love and brought to perfection,
by God's free gift, through sharing in his eternal life.
"The name of Jesus ... has made this man strong" (Acts
3:16): in the uncertainties of human life, Jesus brings life's meaning
to fulfilment
32. The experience of the people of the Covenant is renewed in the experience
of all the "poor" who meet Jesus of Nazareth. Just as God who
"loves the living" (cf. Wis 11:26) had reassured Israel
in the midst of danger, so now the Son of God proclaims to all who feel
threatened and hindered that their lives too are a good to which the Father's
love gives meaning and value.
"The blind receive their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed,
and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have good news preached
to them" (Lk 7:22). With these words of the Prophet Isaiah
(35:5-6, 61:1), Jesus sets forth the meaning of his own mission: all who
suffer because their lives are in some way "diminished" thus
hear from him the "good news" of God's concern for them, and
they know for certain that their lives too are a gift carefully guarded
in the hands of the Father (cf. Mt 6:25-34).
It is above all the "poor" to whom Jesus speaks in his preaching
and actions. The crowds of the sick and the outcasts who follow him and
seek him out (cf. Mt 4:23-25) find in his words and actions a revelation
of the great value of their lives and of how their hope of salvation is
well-founded.
The same thing has taken place in the Church's mission from the beginning.
When the Church proclaims Christ as the one who "went about doing
good and healing all that were oppressed by the devil, for God was with
him" (Acts 10:38), she is conscious of being the bearer of
a message of salvation which resounds in all its newness precisely amid
the hardships and poverty of human life. Peter cured the cripple who daily
sought alms at the "Beautiful Gate" of the Temple in Jerusalem,
saying: "I have no silver and gold, but I give you what I have; in
the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk" (Acts 3:6). By
faith in Jesus, "the Author of life" (Acts 3:15), life
which lies abandoned and cries out for help regains self-esteem and full
dignity.
The words and deeds of Jesus and those of his Church are not meant only
for those who are sick or suffering or in some way neglected by society.
On a deeper level they affect the very meaning of every person's life
in its moral and spiritual dimensions. Only those who recognize that
their life is marked by the evil of sin can discover in an encounter with
Jesus the Saviour the truth and the authenticity of their own existence.
Jesus himself says as much: "Those who are well have no need of a
physician, but those who are sick; I have not come to call the righteous,
but sinners to repentance" (Lk 5:31-32).
But the person who, like the rich land-owner in the Gospel parable,
thinks that he can make his life secure by the possession of material goods
alone, is deluding himself. Life is slipping away from him, and very soon
he will find himself bereft of it without ever having appreciated its real
meaning: "Fool! This night your soul is required of you; and the things
you have prepared, whose will they be?" (Lk 12:20).
33. In Jesus' own life, from beginning to end, we find a singular "dialectic"
between the experience of the uncertainty of human life and the affirmation
of its value. Jesus' life is marked by uncertainty from the very moment
of his birth. He is certainly accepted by the righteous, who echo
Mary's immediate and joyful "yes" (cf. Lk 1:38). But there
is also, from the start, rejection on the part of a world which
grows hostile and looks for the child in order "to destroy him"
(Mt 2:13); a world which remains indifferent and unconcerned about
the fulfilment of the mystery of this life entering the world: "there
was no place for them in the inn" (Lk 2:7). In this contrast
between threats and insecurity on the one hand and the power of God's gift
on the other, there shines forth all the more clearly the glory which radiates
from the house at Nazareth and from the manger at Bethlehem: this life
which is born is salvation for all humanity (cf. Lk 2:11).
Life's contradictions and risks were fully accepted by Jesus: "though
he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that by his poverty you
might become rich" (2 Cor 8:9). The poverty of which Paul speaks
is not only a stripping of divine privileges, but also a sharing in the
lowliest and most vulnerable conditions of human life (cf. Phil 2:6-7).
Jesus lived this poverty throughout his life, until the culminating moment
of the Cross: "he humbled himself and became obedient unto death,
even death on a cross. Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed
on him the name which is above every name" (Phil 2:8-9). It
is precisely by his death that Jesus reveals all the splendour
and value of life, inasmuch as his self-oblation on the Cross becomes
the source of new life for all people (cf. Jn 12:32). In his journeying
amid contradictions and in the very loss of his life, Jesus is guided by
the certainty that his life is in the hands of the Father. Consequently,
on the Cross, he can say to him: "Father, into your hands I commend
my spirit!" (Lk 23:46), that is, my life. Truly great must
be the value of human life if the Son of God has taken it up and made it
the instrument of the salvation of all humanity!
"Called ... to be conformed to the image of his Son" (Rom
8:28-29): God's glory shines on the face of man
34. Life is always a good. This is an instinctive perception and a fact
of experience, and man is called to grasp the profound reason why this
is so.
Why is life a good? This question is found everywhere in the
Bible, and from the very first pages it receives a powerful and amazing
answer. The life which God gives man is quite different from the life of
all other living creatures, inasmuch as man, although formed from the dust
of the earth (cf. Gen 2:7, 3:19; Job 34:15; Ps 103:14;
104:29), is a manifestation of God in the world, a sign of his presence,
a trace of his glory (cf. Gen 1:26-27; Ps 8:6). This
is what Saint Irenaeus of Lyons wanted to emphasize in his celebrated definition:
"Man, living man, is the glory of God".23 Man has been given
a sublime dignity, based on the intimate bond which unites him to
his Creator: in man there shines forth a reflection of God himself.
The Book of Genesis affirms this when, in the first account of creation,
it places man at the summit of God's creative activity, as its crown, at
the culmination of a process which leads from indistinct chaos to the most
perfect of creatures. Everything in creation is ordered to man and everything
is made subject to him: "Fill the earth and subdue it; and have
dominion over ... every living thing" (1:28); this is God's command
to the man and the woman. A similar message is found also in the other
account of creation: "The Lord God took the man and put him in the
garden of Eden to till it and keep it" (Gen 2:15). We see here
a clear affirmation of the primacy of man over things; these are made subject
to him and entrusted to his responsible care, whereas for no reason can
he be made subject to other men and almost reduced to the level of a thing.
In the biblical narrative, the difference between man and other creatures
is shown above all by the fact that only the creation of man is presented
as the result of a special decision on the part of God, a deliberation
to establish a particular and specific bond with the Creator: "Let
us make man in our image, after our likeness" (Gen 1:26). The
life which God offers to man is a gift by which God shares something
of himself with his creature.
Israel would ponder at length the meaning of this particular bond between
man and God. The Book of Sirach too recognizes that God, in creating human
beings, "endowed them with strength like his own, and made them in
his own image" (17:3). The biblical author sees as part of this image
not only man's dominion over the world but also those spiritual faculties
which are distinctively human, such as reason, discernment between
good and evil, and free will: "He filled them with knowledge and understanding,
and showed them good and evil" (Sir 17:7). The ability to
attain truth and freedom are human prerogatives inasmuch as man is
created in the image of his Creator, God who is true and just (cf. Dt
32:4). Man alone, among all visible creatures, is "capable of
knowing and loving his Creator".24 The life which God bestows upon
man is much more than mere existence in time. It is a drive towards fullness
of life; it is the seed of an existence which transcends the very limits
of time: "For God created man for incorruption, and made him in
the image of his own eternity" (Wis 2:23).
35. The Yahwist account of creation expresses the same conviction. This
ancient narrative speaks of a divine breath which is breathed
into man so that he may come to life: "The Lord God formed man
of dust from the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life;
and man became a living being" (Gen 2:7).
The divine origin of this spirit of life explains the perennial dissatisfaction
which man feels throughout his days on earth. Because he is made by God
and bears within himself an indelible imprint of God, man is naturally
drawn to God. When he heeds the deepest yearnings of the heart, every man
must make his own the words of truth expressed by Saint Augustine: "You
have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they
rest in you".25
How very significant is the dissatisfaction which marks man's life in
Eden as long as his sole point of reference is the world of plants and
animals (cf. Gen 2:20). Only the appearance of the woman, a being
who is flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones (cf. Gen 2:23),
and in whom the spirit of God the Creator is also alive, can satisfy the
need for interpersonal dialogue, so vital for human existence. In the other,
whether man or woman, there is a reflection of God himself, the definitive
goal and fulfilment of every person.
"What is man that you are mindful of him, and the son of man that
you care for him?", the Psalmist wonders (Ps 8:4). Compared
to the immensity of the universe, man is very small, and yet this very
contrast reveals his greatness: "You have made him little less than
a god, and crown him with glory and honour" (Ps 8:5). The
glory of God shines on the face of man. In man the Creator finds his
rest, as Saint Ambrose comments with a sense of awe: "The sixth day
is finished and the creation of the world ends with the formation of that
masterpiece which is man, who exercises dominion over all living creatures
and is as it were the crown of the universe and the supreme beauty of every
created being. Truly we should maintain a reverential silence, since the
Lord rested from every work he had undertaken in the world. He rested then
in the depths of man, he rested in man's mind and in his thought; after
all, he had created man endowed with reason, capable of imitating him,
of emulating his virtue, of hungering for heavenly graces. In these his
gifts God reposes, who has said: ?Upon whom shall I rest, if not upon the
one who is humble, contrite in spirit and trembles at my word?' (Is
66:1-2). I thank the Lord our God who has created so wonderful a work
in which to take his rest".26
36. Unfortunately, God's marvellous plan was marred by the appearance
of sin in history. Through sin, man rebels against his Creator and ends
up by worshipping creatures: "They exchanged the truth about
God for a lie and worshipped and served the creature rather than the Creator"
(Rom 1:25). As a result man not only deforms the image of God in
his own person, but is tempted to offences against it in others as well,
replacing relationships of communion by attitudes of distrust, indifference,
hostility and even murderous hatred. When God is not acknowledged
as God, the profound meaning of man is betrayed and communion between
people is compromised.
In the life of man, God's image shines forth anew and is again revealed
in all its fullness at the coming of the Son of God in human flesh. "Christ
is the image of the invisible God" (Col 1:15), he "reflects
the glory of God and bears the very stamp of his nature" (Heb 1:3).
He is the perfect image of the Father.
The plan of life given to the first Adam finds at last its fulfilment
in Christ. Whereas the disobedience of Adam had ruined and marred God's
plan for human life and introduced death into the world, the redemptive
obedience of Christ is the source of grace poured out upon the human race,
opening wide to everyone the gates of the kingdom of life (cf. Rom 5:12-21).
As the Apostle Paul states: "The first man Adam became a living being;
the last Adam became a life-giving spirit" (1 Cor 15:45).
All who commit themselves to following Christ are given the fullness
of life: the divine image is restored, renewed and brought to perfection
in them. God's plan for human beings is this, that they should "be
conformed to the image of his Son" (Rom 8:29). Only thus, in
the splendour of this image, can man be freed from the slavery of idolatry,
rebuild lost fellowship and rediscover his true identity.
"Whoever lives and believes in me shall never die" (Jn
11:26): the gift of eternal life
37. The life which the Son of God came to give to human beings cannot
be reduced to mere existence in time. The life which was always "in
him" and which is the "light of men" (Jn 1:4) consists
in being begotten of God and sharing in the fullness of his love: "To
all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become
children of God; who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh
nor of the will of man, but of God" (Jn 1:12-13).
Sometimes Jesus refers to this life which he came to give simply as
"life", and he presents being born of God as a necessary condition
if man is to attain the end for which God has created him: "Unless
one is born anew, he cannot see the kingdom of God" (Jn 3:3).
To give this life is the real object of Jesus' mission: he is the one who
"comes down from heaven, and gives life to the world" (Jn
6:33). Thus can he truly say: "He who follows me ... will have
the light of life" (Jn 8:12).
At other times, Jesus speaks of "eternal life". Here the adjective
does more than merely evoke a perspective which is beyond time. The life
which Jesus promises and gives is "eternal" because it is a full
participation in the life of the "Eternal One". Whoever believes
in Jesus and enters into communion with him has eternal life (cf. Jn
3:15; 6:40) because he hears from Jesus the only words which reveal
and communicate to his existence the fullness of life. These are the "words
of eternal life" which Peter acknowledges in his confession of faith:
"Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life; and
we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God"
(Jn 6:68-69). Jesus himself, addressing the Father in the great
priestly prayer, declares what eternal life consists in: "This is
eternal life, that they may know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ
whom you have sent" (Jn 17:3). To know God and his Son is to
accept the mystery of the loving communion of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit into one's own life, which even now is open to eternal
life because it shares in the life of God.
38. Eternal life is therefore the life of God himself and at the same
time the life of the children of God. As they ponder this unexpected
and inexpressible truth which comes to us from God in Christ, believers
cannot fail to be filled with ever new wonder and unbounded gratitude.
They can say in the words of the Apostle John: "See what love the
Father has given us, that we should be called children of God; and so we
are. ... Beloved, we are God's children now; it does not yet appear what
we shall be, but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, for
we shall see him as he is" (1 Jn 3:1-2).
Here the Christian truth about life becomes most sublime. The
dignity of this life is linked not only to its beginning, to the fact that
it comes from God, but also to its final end, to its destiny of fellowship
with God in knowledge and love of him. In the light of this truth Saint
Irenaeus qualifies and completes his praise of man: "the glory of
God" is indeed, "man, living man", but "the life of
man consists in the vision of God".27
Immediate consequences arise from this for human life in its earthly
state, in which, for that matter, eternal life already springs forth
and begins to grow. Although man instinctively loves life because it is
a good, this love will find further inspiration and strength, and new breadth
and depth, in the divine dimensions of this good. Similarly, the love which
every human being has for life cannot be reduced simply to a desire to
have sufficient space for self-expression and for entering into relationships
with others; rather, it devel- ops in a joyous awareness that life can
become the "place" where God manifests himself, where we meet
him and enter into communion with him. The life which Jesus gives in no
way lessens the value of our existence in time; it takes it and directs
it to its final destiny: "I am the resurrection and the life ... whoever
lives and believes in me shall never die" (Jn 11:25-26).
"From man in regard to his fellow man I will demand an accounting"
(Gen 9:5): reverence and love for every human life
39. Man's life comes from God; it is his gift, his image and imprint,
a sharing in his breath of life. God therefore is the sole Lord
of this life: man cannot do with it as he wills. God himself makes
this clear to Noah after the Flood: "For your own lifeblood, too,
I will demand an accounting ... and from man in regard to his fellow man
I will demand an accounting for human life" (Gen 9:5). The
biblical text is concerned to emphasize how the sacredness of life has
its foundation in God and in his creative activity: "For God made
man in his own image" (Gen 9:6).
Human life and death are thus in the hands of God, in his power: "In
his hand is the life of every living thing and the breath of all mankind",
exclaims Job (12:10). "The Lord brings to death and brings to life;
he brings down to Sheol and raises up" (1 Sam 2:6). He alone
can say: "It is I who bring both death and life" (Dt 32:39).
But God does not exercise this power in an arbitrary and threatening
way, but rather as part of his care and loving concern for his creatures.
If it is true that human life is in the hands of God, it is no less
true that these are loving hands, like those of a mother who accepts, nurtures
and takes care of her child: "I have calmed and quieted my soul, like
a child quieted at its mother's breast; like a child that is quieted is
my soul" (Ps 131:2; cf. Is 49:15; 66:12-13; Hos 11:4).
Thus Israel does not see in the history of peoples and in the destiny of
individuals the outcome of mere chance or of blind fate, but rather the
results of a loving plan by which God brings together all the possibilities
of life and opposes the powers of death arising from sin: "God did
not make death, and he does not delight in the death of the living. For
he created all things that they might exist" (Wis 1:13-14).
40. The sacredness of life gives rise to its inviolability, written
from the beginning in man's heart, in his conscience. The question:
"What have you done?" (Gen 4:10), which God addresses
to Cain after he has killed his brother Abel, interprets the experience
of every person: in the depths of his conscience, man is always reminded
of the inviolability of life�his own life and that of others�as something
which does not belong to him, because it is the property and gift of God
the Creator and Father.
The commandment regarding the inviolability of human life reverberates
at the heart of the "ten words" in the covenant of Sinai (cf.
Ex 34:28). In the first place that commandment prohibits murder:
"You shall not kill" (Ex 20:13); "do not slay the
innocent and righteous" (Ex 23:7). But, as is brought out in
Israel's later legislation, it also prohibits all personal injury inflicted
on another (cf. Ex 21:12-27). Of course we must recognize that in
the Old Testament this sense of the value of life, though already quite
marked, does not yet reach the refinement found in the Sermon on the Mount.
This is apparent in some aspects of the current penal legislation, which
provided for severe forms of corporal punishment and even the death penalty.
But the overall message, which the New Testament will bring to perfection,
is a forceful appeal for respect for the inviolability of physical life
and the integrity of the person. It culminates in the positive commandment
which obliges us to be responsible for our neighbour as for ourselves:
"You shall love your neighbour as yourself" (Lev 19:18).
41. The commandment "You shall not kill", included and more
fully expressed in the positive command of love for one's neighbour, is
reaffirmed in all its force by the Lord Jesus. To the rich young
man who asks him: "Teacher, what good deed must I do, to have eternal
life?", Jesus replies: "If you would enter life, keep the commandments"
(Mt 19:16,17). And he quotes, as the first of these: "You shall
not kill" (Mt 19:18). In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus demands
from his disciples a righteousness which surpasses that of the Scribes
and Pharisees, also with regard to respect for life: "You have heard
that it was said to the men of old, ?You shall not kill; and whoever kills
shall be liable to judgment'. But I say to you that every one who is angry
with his brother shall be liable to judgment" (Mt 5:21-22).
By his words and actions Jesus further unveils the positive requirements
of the commandment regarding the inviolability of life. These requirements
were already present in the Old Testament, where legislation dealt with
protecting and defending life when it was weak and threatened: in the case
of foreigners, widows, orphans, the sick and the poor in general, including
children in the womb (cf. Ex 21:22; 22:20-26). With Jesus these
positive requirements assume new force and urgency, and are revealed in
all their breadth and depth: they range from caring for the life of one's
brother (whether a blood brother, someone belonging to the same
people, or a foreigner living in the land of Israel) to showing concern
for the stranger, even to the point of loving one's enemy.
A stranger is no longer a stranger for the person who mustbecome
a neighbour to someone in need, to the point of accepting responsibility
for his life, as the parable of the Good Samaritan shows so clearly (cf.
Lk 10:25-37). Even an enemy ceases to be an enemy for the person
who is obliged to love him (cf. Mt 5:38-48; Lk 6:27-35),
to "do good" to him (cf. Lk 6:27, 33, 35) and to respond
to his immediate needs promptly and with no expectation of repayment (cf.
Lk 6:34-35). The height of this love is to pray for one's enemy.
By so doing we achieve harmony with the providential love of God: "But
I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so
that you may be children of your Father who is in heaven; for he makes
his sun rise on the evil and on the good and sends rain on the just and
on the unjust" (Mt 5:44-45; cf. Lk 6:28, 35).
Thus the deepest element of God's commandment to protect human life
is the requirement to show reverence and love for every person and
the life of every person. This is the teaching which the Apostle Paul,
echoing the words of Jesus, address- es to the Christians in Rome: "The
commandments, ?You shall not commit adultery, You shall not kill, You shall
not steal, You shall not covet', and any other commandment, are summed
up in this sentence, ?You shall love your neighbour as yourself'.
Love does no wrong to a neighbour; therefore love is the fulfilling of
the law" (Rom 13:9-10).
"Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it"
(Gen 1:28): man's responsibility for life
42. To defend and promote life, to show reverence and love for it, is
a task which God entrusts to every man, calling him as his living image
to share in his own lordship over the world: "God blessed them, and
God said to them, ?Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue
it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the
air and over every living thing that moves upon the earth' " (Gen
1:28).
The biblical text clearly shows the breadth and depth of the lordship
which God bestows on man. It is a matter first of all of dominion over
the earth and over every living creature, as the Book of Wisdom makes
clear: "O God of my fathers and Lord of mercy ... by your wisdom you
have formed man, to have dominion over the creatures you have made, and
rule the world in holiness and righteousness" (Wis 9:1, 2-3).
The Psalmist too extols the dominion given to man as a sign of glory and
honour from his Creator: "You have given him dominion over the works
of your hands; you have put all things under his feet, all sheep and oxen,
and also the beasts of the field, the birds of the air, and the fish of
the sea, whatever passes along the paths of the sea" (Ps 8:6-8).
As one called to till and look after the garden of the world (cf. Gen
2:15), man has a specific responsibility towards the environment
in which he lives, towards the creation which God has put at the service
of his personal dignity, of his life, not only for the present but also
for future generations. It is the ecological question�ranging from
the preservation of the natural habitats of the different species of animals
and of other forms of life to "human ecology" properly speaking
28� which finds in the Bible clear and strong ethical direction, leading
to a solution which respects the great good of life, of every life. In
fact, "the do- minion granted to man by the Creator is not an absolute
power, nor can one speak of a freedom to ?use and misuse', or to dispose
of things as one pleases. The limitation imposed from the beginning by
the Creator himself and expressed symbolically by the prohibition not to
?eat of the fruit of the tree' (cf. Gen 2:16-17) shows clearly enough
that, when it comes to the natural world, we are subject not only to biological
laws but also to moral ones, which cannot be violated with impunity".29
43. A certain sharing by man in God's lordship is also evident in the
specific responsibility which he is given for human life as such.
It is a responsibility which reaches its highest point in the giving
of life through procreation by man and woman in marriage. As the
Second Vatican Council teaches: "God himself who said, ?It is not
good for man to be alone' (Gen 2:18) and ?who made man from the
beginning male and female' (Mt 19:4), wished to share with man a
certain special participation in his own creative work. Thus he blessed
male and female saying: ?Increase and multiply' (Gen 1:28).30
By speaking of "a certain special participation" of man and
woman in the "creative work" of God, the Council wishes to point
out that having a child is an event which is deeply human and full of religious
meaning, insofar as it involves both the spouses, who form "one flesh"
(Gen 2:24), and God who makes himself present. As I wrote in my
Letter to Families: "When a new person is born of the conjugal
union of the two, he brings with him into the world a particular image
and likeness of God himself: the genealogy of the person is inscribed
in the very biology of generation. In affirming that the spouses, as
parents, cooperate with God the Creator in conceiving and giving birth
to a new human being, we are not speaking merely with reference to the
laws of biology. Instead, we wish to emphasize that God himself is present
in human fatherhood and motherhood quite differently than he is present
in all other instances of begetting ?on earth'. Indeed, God alone is the
source of that ?image and likeness' which is proper to the human being,
as it was received at Creation. Begetting is the continuation of Creation".31
This is what the Bible teaches in direct and eloquent language when
it reports the joyful cry of the first woman, "the mother of all the
living" (Gen 3:20). Aware that God has intervened, Eve exclaims:
"I have begotten a man with the help of the Lord" (Gen
4:1). In procreation therefore, through the communication of life from
parents to child, God's own image and likeness is transmitted, thanks to
the creation of the immortal soul.32 The beginning of the "book of
the genealogy of Adam" expresses it in this way: "When God created
man, he made him in the likeness of God. Male and female he created them,
and he blessed them and called them man when they were created. When Adam
had lived a hundred and thirty years, he became the father of a son in
his own likeness, after his image, and named him Seth" (Gen 5:1-3).
It is precisely in their role as co-workers with God who transmits his
image to the new creature that we see the greatness of couples who
are ready "to cooperate with the love of the Creator and the Saviour,
who through them will enlarge and enrich his own family day by day".33
This is why the Bishop Amphilochius extolled "holy matrimony, chosen
and elevated above all other earthly gifts" as "the begetter
of humanity, the creator of images of God".34
Thus, a man and woman joined in matrimony become partners in a divine
undertaking: through the act of procreation, God's gift is accepted and
a new life opens to the future.
But over and above the specific mission of parents, the task of accepting
and serving life involves everyone; and this task must be fulfilled above
all towards life when it is at its weakest. It is Christ himself who
reminds us of this when he asks to be loved and served in his brothers
and sisters who are suffering in any way: the hungry, the thirsty, the
foreigner, the naked, the sick, the impris- oned ... Whatever is done to
each of them is done to Christ himself (cf. Mt 25:31-46).
"For you formed my inmost being" (Ps 139:13):
the dignity of the unborn child
44. Human life finds itself most vulnerable when it enters the world
and when it leaves the realm of time to embark upon eternity. The word
of God frequently repeats the call to show care and respect, above all
where life is undermined by sickness and old age. Although there are no
direct and explicit calls to protect human life at its very beginning,
specifically life not yet born, and life nearing its end, this can easily
be explained by the fact that the mere possibility of harming, attacking,
or actually denying life in these circumstances is completely foreign to
the religious and cultural way of thinking of the People of God.
In the Old Testament, sterility is dreaded as a curse, while numerous
offspring are viewed as a blessing: "Sons are a heritage from the
Lord, the fruit of the womb a reward" (Ps 127:3; cf. Ps
128:3-4). This belief is also based on Israel's awareness of being the
people of the Covenant, called to increase in accordance with the promise
made to Abraham: "Look towards heaven, and number the stars, if you
are able to number them ... so shall your descendants be" (Gen
15:5). But more than anything else, at work here is the certainty that
the life which parents transmit has its origins in God. We see this attested
in the many biblical passages which respectfully and lovingly speak of
conception, of the forming of life in the mother's womb, of giving birth
and of the intimate connection between the initial moment of life and the
action of God the Creator.
"Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were
born I consecrated you" (Jer 1:5): the life of every individual,
from its very beginning, is part of God's plan. Job, from the depth
of his pain, stops to contemplate the work of God who miraculously formed
his body in his mother's womb. Here he finds reason for trust, and he expresses
his belief that there is a divine plan for his life: "You have fashioned
and made me; will you then turn and destroy me? Remember that you have
made me of clay; and will you turn me to dust again? Did you not pour me
out like milk and curdle me like cheese? You clothed me with skin and flesh,
and knit me together with bones and sinews. You have granted me life and
steadfast love; and your care has preserved my spirit" (Job 10:8-12).
Expressions of awe and wonder at God's intervention in the life of a child
in its mother's womb occur again and again in the Psalms.35
How can anyone think that even a single moment of this marvellous process
of the unfolding of life could be separated from the wise and loving work
of the Creator, and left prey to human caprice? Certainly the mother of
the seven brothers did not think so; she professes her faith in God, both
the source and guarantee of life from its very conception, and the foundation
of the hope of new life beyond death: "I do not know how you came
into being in my womb. It was not I who gave you life and breath, nor I
who set in order the elements within each of you. Therefore the Creator
of the world, who shaped the beginning of man and devised the origin of
all things, will in his mercy give life and breath back to you again, since
you now forget yourselves for the sake of his laws" (2 Mac 7:22-23).
45. The New Testament revelation confirms the indisputable recognition
of the value of life from its very beginning. The exaltation of fruitfulness
and the eager expectation of life resound in the words with which Elizabeth
rejoices in her pregnancy: "The Lord has looked on me ... to take
away my reproach among men" (Lk 1:25). And even more so, the
value of the person from the moment of conception is celebrated in the
meeting between the Virgin Mary and Elizabeth, and between the two children
whom they are carrying in the womb. It is precisely the children who reveal
the advent of the Messianic age: in their meeting, the redemptive power
of the presence of the Son of God among men first becomes operative. As
Saint Ambrose writes: "The arrival of Mary and the blessings of the
Lord's presence are also speedily declared ... Elizabeth was the first
to hear the voice; but John was the first to expe- rience grace. She heard
according to the order of nature; he leaped because of the mystery. She
recognized the arrival of Mary; he the arrival of the Lord. The woman recognized
the woman's arrival; the child, that of the child. The women speak of grace;
the babies make it effective from within to the advantage of their mothers
who, by a double miracle, prophesy under the inspiration of their children.
The infant leaped, the mother was filled with the Spirit. The mother was
not filled before the son, but after the son was filled with the Holy Spirit,
he filled his mother too".36
"I kept my faith even when I said, ?I am greatly afflicted'
" (Ps 116:10): life in old age and at times of suffering
46. With regard to the last moments of life too, it would be anachronistic
to expect biblical revelation to make express reference to present-day
issues concerning respect for elderly and sick persons, or to condemn explicitly
attempts to hasten their end by force. The cultural and religious context
of the Bible is in no way touched by such temptations; indeed, in that
context the wisdom and experience of the elderly are recognized as a unique
source of enrichment for the family and for society.
Old age is characterized by dignity and surrounded with reverence
(cf. 2 Mac 6:23). The just man does not seek to be delivered
from old age and its burden; on the contrary his prayer is this: "You,
O Lord, are my hope, my trust, O Lord, from my youth ... so even to old
age and grey hairs, O God, do not forsake me, till I proclaim your might
to all the generations to come" (Ps 71:5, 18). The ideal of
the Messianic age is presented as a time when "no more shall there
be ... an old man who does not fill out his days" (Is 65:20).
In old age, how should one face the inevitable decline of life? How
should one act in the face of death? The believer knows that his life is
in the hands of God: "You, O Lord, hold my lot" (cf. Ps
16:5), and he accepts from God the need to die: "This is the decree
from the Lord for all flesh, and how can you reject the good pleasure of
the Most High?" (Sir 41:3-4). Man is not the master of life,
nor is he the master of death. In life and in death, he has to entrust
himself completely to the "good pleasure of the Most High", to
his loving plan.
In moments of sickness too, man is called to have the same trust
in the Lord and to renew his fundamental faith in the One who "heals
all your diseases" (cf. Ps 103:3). When every hope of good
health seems to fade before a person's eyes�so as to make him cry out:
"My days are like an evening shadow; I wither away like grass"
(Ps 102:11)� even then the believer is sustained by an unshakable
faith in God's life-giving power. Illness does not drive such a person
to despair and to seek death, but makes him cry out in hope: "I kept
my faith, even when I said, ?I am greatly afflicted' " (Ps 116:10);
"O Lord my God, I cried to you for help, and you have healed me. O
Lord, you have brought up my soul from Sheol, restored me to life from
among those gone down to the pit" (Ps 30:2-3).
47. The mission of Jesus, with the many healings he performed, shows
God's great concern even for man's bodily life. Jesus, as "the
physician of the body and of the spirit",37 was sent by the Father
to proclaim the good news to the poor and to heal the brokenhearted (cf.
Lk 4:18; Is 61:1). Later, when he sends his disciples into
the world, he gives them a mission, a mission in which healing the sick
goes hand in hand with the proclamation of the Gospel: "And preach
as you go, saying, ?The kingdom of heaven is at hand'. Heal the sick, raise
the dead, cleanse lepers, cast out demons" (Mt 10:7-8; cf.
Mk 6:13; 16:18).
Certainly the life of the body in its earthly state is not an absolute
good for the believer, especially as he may be asked to give up his
life for a greater good. As Jesus says: "Whoever would save his life
will lose it; and whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel's will
save it" (Mk 8:35). The New Testament gives many different
examples of this. Jesus does not hesitate to sacrifice himself and he freely
makes of his life an offering to the Father (cf. Jn 10:17) and to
those who belong to him (cf. Jn 10:15). The death of John the Baptist,
precursor of the Saviour, also testifies that earthly existence is not
an absolute good; what is more important is remaining faithful to the word
of the Lord even at the risk of one's life (cf. Mk 6:17-29). Stephen,
losing his earthly life because of his faithful witness to the Lord's Resurrection,
follows in the Master's footsteps and meets those who are stoning him with
words of forgiveness (cf. Acts 7:59-60), thus becoming the first
of a countless host of martyrs whom the Church has venerated since the
very beginning.
No one, however, can arbitrarily choose whether to live or die; the
absolute master of such a decision is the Creator alone, in whom "we
live and move and have our being" (Acts 17:28).
"All who hold her fast will live" (Bar 4:1):
from the law of Sinai to the gift of the Spirit
48. Life is indelibly marked by a truth of its own. By accepting
God's gift, man is obliged to maintain life in this truth which
is essential to it. To detach oneself from this truth is to condemn oneself
to meaninglessness and unhappiness, and possibly to become a threat to
the existence of others, since the barriers guaranteeing respect for life
and the defence of life, in every circumstance, have been broken down.
The truth of life is revealed by God's commandment. The word
of the Lord shows concretely the course which life must follow if it is
to respect its own truth and to preserve its own dignity. The protection
of life is not only ensured by the spe- cific commandment "You shall
not kill" (Ex 20:13; Dt 5:17); the entire Law of
the Lord serves to protect life, because it reveals that truth in which
life finds its full meaning.
It is not surprising, therefore, that God's Covenant with his people
is so closely linked to the perspective of life, also in its bodily dimension.
In that Covenant, God's commandment is offered as the path of
life: "I have set before you this day life and good, death and
evil. If you obey the commandments of the Lord your God which I command
you this day, by loving the Lord your God, by walking in his ways, and
by keeping his commandments and his statutes and his ordinances, then you
shall live and multiply, and the Lord your God will bless you in the land
which you are entering to take possession of" (Dt 30:15-16).
What is at stake is not only the land of Canaan and the existence of the
people of Israel, but also the world of today and of the future, and the
existence of all humanity. In fact, it is altogether impossible for life
to remain authentic and complete once it is detached from the good; and
the good, in its turn, is essentially bound to the commandments of the
Lord, that is, to the "law of life" (Sir 17:11). The good
to be done is not added to life as a burden which weighs on it, since the
very purpose of life is that good and only by doing it can life be built
up.
It is thus the Law as a whole which fully protects human life.
This explains why it is so hard to remain faithful to the commandment "You
shall not kill" when the other "words of life" (cf. Acts
7:38) with which this commandment is bound up are not observed. Detached
from this wider framework, the commandment is destined to become nothing
more than an obligation imposed from without, and very soon we begin to
look for its limits and try to find mitigating factors and exceptions.
Only when people are open to the fullness of the truth about God, man and
history will the words "You shall not kill" shine forth once
more as a good for man in himself and in his relations with others. In
such a perspective we can grasp the full truth of the passage of the Book
of Deuteronomy which Jesus repeats in reply to the first temptation: "Man
does not live by bread alone, but ... by everything that proceeds out of
the mouth of the Lord" (Dt 8:3; cf. Mt 4:4).
It is by listening to the word of the Lord that we are able to live
in dignity and justice. It is by observing the Law of God that we are able
to bring forth fruits of life and happiness: "All who hold her fast
will live, and those who forsake her will die" (Bar 4:1).
49. The history of Israel shows how difficult it is to remain faithful
to the Law of life which God has inscribed in human hearts and which
he gave on Sinai to the people of the Covenant. When the people look for
ways of living which ignore God's plan, it is the Prophets in particular
who forcefully remind them that the Lord alone is the authentic source
of life. Thus Jeremiah writes: "My people have committed two evils:
they have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and hewed out cisterns
for themselves, broken cisterns, that can hold no water" (2:13). The
Prophets point an accusing finger at those who show contempt for life and
violate people's rights: "They trample the head of the poor into the
dust of the earth" (Amos 2:7); "they have filled this
place with the blood of innocents" (Jer 19:4). Among them,
the Prophet Ezekiel frequently condemns the city of Jerusalem, calling
it "the bloody city" (22:2; 24:6, 9), the "city that sheds
blood in her own midst" (22:3).
But while the Prophets condemn offences against life, they are concerned
above all to awaken hope for a new principle of life, capable of
bringing about a renewed relationship with God and with others, and of
opening up new and extraordinary possibilities for understanding and carrying
out all the demands inherent in the Gospel of life. This will only
be possible thanks to the gift of God who purifies and renews: "I
will sprinkle clean water upon you, and you shall be clean from all your
uncleannesses, and from all your idols I will cleanse you. A new heart
I will give you, and a new spirit I will put within you" (Ezek
36:25-26; cf. Jer 31:34). This "new heart" will make
it possible to appreciate and achieve the deepest and most authentic meaning
of life: namely, that of being a gift which is fully realized in the
giving of self. This is the splendid message about the value of life
which comes to us from the figure of the Servant of the Lord: "When
he makes himself an offering for sin, he shall see his offspring, he shall
prolong his life ... he shall see the fruit of the trav- ail of his soul
and be satisfied" (Is 53:10, 11).
It is in the coming of Jesus of Nazareth that the Law is fulfilled and
that a new heart is given through his Spirit. Jesus does not deny the Law
but brings it to fulfilment (cf. Mt 5:17): the Law and the Prophets
are summed up in the golden rule of mutual love (cf. Mt 7:12). In
Jesus the Law becomes once and for all the "gospel", the good
news of God's lordship over the world, which brings all life back to its
roots and its original purpose. This is the New Law, "the law
of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus" (Rom 8:2), and its fundamental
expression, following the example of the Lord who gave his life for his
friends (cf. Jn 15:13), is the gift of self in love for one's
brothers and sisters: "We know that we have passed out of death
into life, because we love the brethren" (1 Jn 3:14). This
is the law of freedom, joy and blessedness.
"They shall look on him whom they have pierced" (Jn
19:37): the Gospel of life is brought to fulfilment on the tree
of the Cross
50. At the end of this chapter, in which we have reflected on the Christian
message about life, I would like to pause with each one of you to contemplate
the One who was pierced and who draws all people to himself (cf. Jn
19:37; 12:32). Looking at "the spectacle" of the Cross (cf.
Lk 23:48) we shall discover in this glorious tree the fulfilment
and the complete revelation of the whole Gospel of life.
In the early afternoon of Good Friday, "there was darkness over
the whole land ... while the sun's light failed; and the curtain of the
temple was torn in two" (Lk 23:44, 45). This is the symbol
of a great cosmic disturbance and a massive conflict between the forces
of good and the forces of evil, between life and death. Today we too find
ourselves in the midst of a dramatic conflict between the "culture
of death" and the "culture of life". But the glory of the
Cross is not overcome by this darkness; rather, it shines forth ever more
radiantly and brightly, and is revealed as the centre, meaning and goal
of all history and of every human life.
Jesus is nailed to the Cross and is lifted up from the earth. He experiences
the moment of his greatest "powerlessness", and his life seems
completely delivered to the derision of his adversaries and into the hands
of his executioners: he is mocked, jeered at, insulted (cf. Mk 15:24-36).
And yet, precisely amid all this, having seen him breathe his last, the
Roman centurion exclaims: "Truly this man was the Son of God!"
(Mk 15:39). It is thus, at the moment of his greatest weakness,
that the the Son of God is revealed for who he is: on the Cross his
glory is made manifest.
By his death, Jesus sheds light on the meaning of the life and death
of every human being. Before he dies, Jesus prays to the Father, asking
forgiveness for his persecutors (cf. Lk 23:34), and to the criminal
who asks him to remember him in his kingdom he replies: "Truly, I
say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise" (Lk 23:43).
After his death "the tombs also were opened, and many bodies of the
saints who had fallen asleep were raised" (Mt 27:52). The salvation
wrought by Jesus is the bestowal of life and resurrection. Throughout his
earthly life, Jesus had indeed bestowed salvation by healing and doing
good to all (cf. Acts 10:38). But his miracles, healings and even
his raising of the dead were signs of another salvation, a salvation which
consists in the forgiveness of sins, that is, in setting man free from
his greatest sickness and in raising him to the very life of God.
On the Cross, the miracle of the serpent lifted up by Moses in the desert
(Jn 3:14-15; cf. Num 21:8-9) is renewed and brought to full
and definitive perfection. Today too, by looking upon the one who was pierced,
every person whose life is threatened encounters the sure hope of finding
freedom and redemption.
51. But there is yet another particular event which moves me deeply
when I consider it. "When Jesus had received the vinegar, he said,
?It is finished'; and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit" (Jn
19:30). Afterwards, the Roman soldier "pierced his side with a
spear, and at once there came out blood and water" (Jn 19:34).
Everything has now reached its complete fulfilment. The "giving
up" of the spirit describes Jesus' death, a death like that of every
other human being, but it also seems to allude to the "gift of the
Spirit", by which Jesus ransoms us from death and opens before us
a new life.
It is the very life of God which is now shared with man. It is the life
which through the Sacraments of the Church�symbolized by the blood and
water flowing from Christ's side�is continually given to God's children,
making them the people of the New Covenant. From the Cross, the source
of life, the "people of life" is born and increases.
The contemplation of the Cross thus brings us to the very heart of all
that has taken place. Jesus, who upon entering into the world said: "I
have come, O God, to do your will" (cf. Heb 10:9), made himself
obedient to the Father in everything and, "having loved his own who
were in the world, he loved them to the end" (Jn 13:1), giving
himself completely for them.
He who had come "not to be served but to serve, and to give his
life as a ransom for many" (Mk 10:45), attains on the Cross
the heights of love: "Greater love has no man than this, that a man
lay down his life for his friends" (Jn 15:13). And he died
for us while we were yet sinners (cf. Rom 5:8).
In this way Jesus proclaims that life finds its centre, its meaning
and its fulfilment when it is given up.
At this point our meditation becomes praise and thanksgiving, and at
the same time urges us to imitate Christ and follow in his footsteps (cf.
1 Pt 2:21).
We too are called to give our lives for our brothers and sisters, and
thus to realize in the fullness of truth the meaning and destiny of our
existence.
We shall be able to do this because you, O Lord, have given us the example
and have bestowed on us the power of your Spirit. We shall be able to do
this if every day, with you and like you, we are obedient to the Father
and do his will.
Grant, therefore, that we may listen with open and generous hearts to
every word which proceeds from the mouth of God. Thus we shall learn not
only to obey the commandment not to kill human life, but also to revere
life, to love it and to foster it.
CHAPTER III
YOU SHALL NOT KILL
GOD'S HOLY LAW
"If you would enter life, keep the commandments" (Mt
19:17): Gospel and commandment
52. "And behold, one came up to him, saying, ?Teacher, what good
deed must I do, to have eternal life?' " (Mt 19:6). Jesus replied,
"If you would enter life, keep the commandments" (Mt 19:17).
The Teacher is speaking about eternal life, that is, a sharing in the life
of God himself. This life is attained through the observance of the Lord's
commandments, including the commandment "You shall not kill".
This is the first precept from the Decalogue which Jesus quotes to the
young man who asks him what commandments he should observe: "Jesus
said, ?You shall not kill, You shall not commit adultery, You shall not
steal...' " (Mt 19:18).
God's commandment is never detached from his love: it is always
a gift meant for man's growth and joy. As such, it represents an essential
and indispensable aspect of the Gospel, actually becoming "gospel"
itself: joyful good news. The Gospel of life is both a great gift
of God and an exacting task for humanity. It gives rise to amazement and
gratitude in the person graced with freedom, and it asks to be welcomed,
preserved and esteemed, with a deep sense of responsibility. In giving
life to man, God demands that he love, respect and promote life.
The gift thus becomes a commandment, and the commandment
is itself a gift.
Man, as the living image of God, is willed by his Creator to be ruler
and lord. Saint Gregory of Nyssa writes that "God made man capable
of carrying out his role as king of the earth ... Man was created in the
image of the One who governs the universe. Everything demonstrates that
from the beginning man's nature was marked by royalty... Man is a king.
Created to exercise dominion over the world, he was given a likeness to
the king of the universe; he is the living image who participates by his
dignity in the perfection of the divine archetype".38 Called to be
fruitful and multiply, to subdue the earth and to exercise dominion over
other lesser creatures (cf. Gen 1:28), man is ruler and lord not
only over things but especially over himself,39 and in a certain sense,
over the life which he has received and which he is able to transmit through
procreation, carried out with love and respect for God's plan. Man's lordship
however is not absolute, but ministerial: it is a real reflection
of the unique and infinite lordship of God. Hence man must exercise it
with wisdom and love, sharing in the boundless wisdom and love of
God. And this comes about through obedience to God's holy Law: a free and
joyful obedience (cf. Ps 119), born of and fostered by an awareness
that the precepts of the Lord are a gift of grace entrusted to man always
and solely for his good, for the preservation of his personal dignity and
the pursuit of his happiness.
With regard to things, but even more with regard to life, man is not
the absolute master and final judge, but rather�and this is where his incomparable
greatness lies�he is the "minister of God's plan".40
Life is entrusted to man as a treasure which must not be squandered,
as a talent which must be used well. Man must render an account of it to
his Master (cf. Mt 25:14-30; Lk 19:12-27).
"From man in regard to his fellow man I will demand an accounting
for human life" (Gen 9:5): human life is sacred and
inviolable
53. "Human life is sacred because from its beginning it involves
?the creative action of God', and it remains forever in a special relationship
with the Creator, who is its sole end. God alone is the Lord of life from
its beginning until its end: no one can, in any circumstance, claim for
himself the right to destroy directly an innocent human being".41
With these words the Instruction Donum Vitae sets forth the central
content of God's revelation on the sacredness and inviolability of human
life.
Sacred Scripture in fact presents the precept "You shall
not kill" as a divine commandment (Ex 20:13; Dt 5:17).
As I have already emphasized, this commandment is found in the Deca- logue,
at the heart of the Covenant which the Lord makes with his chosen people;
but it was already contained in the original covenant between God and humanity
after the purifying punishment of the Flood, caused by the spread of sin
and violence (cf. Gen 9:5-6).
God proclaims that he is absolute Lord of the life of man, who is formed
in his image and likeness (cf. Gen 1:26-28). Human life is thus
given a sacred and inviolable character, which reflects the inviolability
of the Creator himself. Precisely for this reason God will severely judge
every violation of the commandment "You shall not kill", the
commandment which is at the basis of all life together in society. He is
the "goel", the defender of the innocent (cf. Gen 4:9-15;
Is 41:14; Jer 50:34; Ps 19:14). God thus shows that
he does not delight in the death of the living (cf. Wis 1:13). Only
Satan can delight therein: for through his envy death entered the world
(cf. Wis 2:24). He who is "a murderer from the beginning",
is also "a liar and the father of lies" (Jn 8:44). By
deceiving man he leads him to projects of sin and death, making them appear
as goals and fruits of life.
54. As explicitly formulated, the precept "You shall not kill"
is strongly negative: it indicates the extreme limit which can never be
exceeded. Implicitly, however, it encourages a positive attitude of absolute
respect for life; it leads to the promotion of life and to progress along
the way of a love which gives, receives and serves. The people of the Covenant,
although slowly and with some contradictions, progressively matured in
this way of thinking, and thus prepared for the great proclamation of Jesus
that the commandment to love one's neighbour is like the commandment to
love God; "on these two commandments depend all the law and the prophets"
(cf. Mt 22:36-40). Saint Paul emphasizes that "the commandment
... you shall not kill ... and any other commandment, are summed up in
this phrase: ?You shall love your neighbour as yourself' " (Rom
13:9; cf. Gal 5:14). Taken up and brought to fulfilment in the
New Law, the commandment "You shall not kill" stands as an indispensable
condition for being able "to enter life" (cf. Mt 19:16-19).
In this same perspective, the words of the Apostle John have a categorical
ring: "Anyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that
no murderer has eternal life abiding in him" (1 Jn 3:15).
From the beginning, the living Tradition of the Church�as shown
by the Didache, the most ancient non-biblical Christian writing�categorically
repeated the commandment "You shall not kill": "There are
two ways, a way of life and a way of death; there is a great difference
between them... In accordance with the precept of the teaching: you shall
not kill ... you shall not put a child to death by abortion nor kill it
once it is born ... The way of death is this: ... they show no compassion
for the poor, they do not suffer with the suffering, they do not acknowledge
their Creator, they kill their children and by abortion cause God's creatures
to perish; they drive away the needy, oppress the suffering, they are advocates
of the rich and unjust judges of the poor; they are filled with every sin.
May you be able to stay ever apart, o children, from all these sins!".42
As time passed, the Church's Tradition has always consistently taught
the absolute and unchanging value of the commandment "You shall not
kill". It is a known fact that in the first centuries, murder was
put among the three most serious sins�along with apostasy and adultery�and
required a particularly heavy and lengthy public penance before the repentant
murderer could be granted forgiveness and readmission to the ecclesial
community.
55. This should not cause surprise: to kill a human being, in whom the
image of God is present, is a particularly serious sin. Only God is
the master of life! Yet from the beginning, faced with the many and
often tragic cases which occur in the life of individuals and society,
Christian reflection has sought a fuller and deeper understanding of what
God's commandment prohibits and prescribes.43 There are in fact situations
in which values proposed by God's Law seem to involve a genuine paradox.
This happens for example in the case of legitimate defence, in which
the right to protect one's own life and the duty not to harm someone else's
life are difficult to reconcile in practice. Certainly, the intrinsic value
of life and the duty to love oneself no less than others are the basis
of a true right to self-defence. The demanding commandment of love
of neighbour, set forth in the Old Testament and confirmed by Jesus, itself
presupposes love of oneself as the basis of comparison: "You shall
love your neighbour as yourself " (Mk 12:31). Consequently,
no one can renounce the right to self-defence out of lack of love for life
or for self. This can only be done in virtue of a heroic love which deepens
and transfigures the love of self into a radical self-offering, according
to the spirit of the Gospel Beatitudes (cf. Mt 5:38-40). The sublime
example of this self-offering is the Lord Jesus himself.
Moreover, "legitimate defence can be not only a right but a grave
duty for someone responsible for another's life, the common good of the
family or of the State".44 Unfortunately it happens that the need
to render the aggressor incapable of causing harm sometimes involves taking
his life. In this case, the fatal outcome is attributable to the aggressor
whose action brought it about, even though he may not be morally responsible
because of a lack of the use of reason.45
56. This is the context in which to place the problem of the death
penalty. On this matter there is a growing tendency, both in the Church
and in civil society, to demand that it be applied in a very limited way
or even that it be abolished completely. The problem must be viewed in
the context of a system of penal justice ever more in line with human dignity
and thus, in the end, with God's plan for man and society. The primary
purpose of the punishment which society inflicts is "to redress the
disorder caused by the offence".46 Public authority must redress the
violation of personal and social rights by imposing on the offender an
adequate punishment for the crime, as a condition for the offender to regain
the exercise of his or her freedom. In this way authority also fulfils
the purpose of defending public order and ensuring people's safety, while
at the same time offering the offender an incentive and help to change
his or her behaviour and be rehabilitated.47
It is clear that, for these purposes to be achieved, the nature and
extent of the punishment must be carefully evaluated and decided upon,
and ought not go to the extreme of executing the offender except in cases
of absolute necessity: in other words, when it would not be possible otherwise
to defend society. Today however, as a result of steady improvements in
the organization of the penal system, such cases are very rare, if not
practically non-existent.
In any event, the principle set forth in the new Catechism of the
Catholic Church remains valid: "If bloodless means are sufficient
to defend human lives against an aggressor and to protect public order
and the safety of persons, public authority must limit itself to such means,
because they better correspond to the concrete conditions of the common
good and are more in conformity to the dignity of the human person".48
57. If such great care must be taken to respect every life, even that
of criminals and unjust aggressors, the commandment "You shall not
kill" has absolute value when it refers to the innocent person.
And all the more so in the case of weak and defenceless human beings,
who find their ultimate defence against the arrogance and caprice of others
only in the absolute binding force of God's commandment.
In effect, the absolute inviolability of innocent human life is a moral
truth clearly taught by Sacred Scripture, constantly upheld in the Church's
Tradition and consistently proposed by her Magisterium. This consistent
teaching is the evident result of that "supernatural sense of the
faith" which, inspired and sustained by the Holy Spirit, safeguards
the People of God from error when "it shows universal agreement in
matters of faith and morals".49
Faced with the progressive weakening in individual consciences and in
society of the sense of the absolute and grave moral illicitness of the
direct taking of all innocent human life, especially at its beginning and
at its end, the Church's Magisterium has spoken out with increasing
frequency in defence of the sacredness and inviolability of human life.
The Papal Magisterium, particularly insistent in this regard, has always
been seconded by that of the Bishops, with numerous and comprehensive doctrinal
and pastoral documents issued either by Episcopal Conferences or by individual
Bishops. The Second Vatican Council also addressed the matter forcefully,
in a brief but incisive passage.50
Therefore, by the authority which Christ conferred upon Peter and his
Successors, and in communion with the Bishops of the Catholic Church, I
confirm that the direct and voluntary killing of an innocent human being
is always gravely immoral. This doctrine, based upon that unwritten
law which man, in the light of reason, finds in his own heart (cf. Rom
2:14-15), is reaffirmed by Sacred Scripture, transmitted by the Tradition
of the Church and taught by the ordinary and universal Magisterium.51
The deliberate decision to deprive an innocent human being of his life
is always morally evil and can never be licit either as an end in itself
or as a means to a good end. It is in fact a grave act of disobedience
to the moral law, and indeed to God himself, the author and guarantor of
that law; it contradicts the fundamental virtues of justice and charity.
"Nothing and no one can in any way permit the killing of an innocent
human being, whether a fetus or an embryo, an infant or an adult, an old
person, or one suffering from an incurable disease, or a person who is
dying. Furthermore, no one is permitted to ask for this act of killing,
either for himself or herself or for another person entrusted to his or
her care, nor can he or she consent to it, either explicitly or implicitly.
Nor can any authority legitimately recommend or permit such an action".52
As far as the right to life is concerned, every innocent human being
is absolutely equal to all others. This equality is the basis of all authentic
social relationships which, to be truly such, can only be founded on truth
and justice, recognizing and protecting every man and woman as a person
and not as an object to be used. Before the moral norm which prohibits
the direct taking of the life of an innocent human being "there are
no privileges or exceptions for anyone. It makes no difference whether
one is the master of the world or the ?poorest of the poor' on the face
of the earth. Before the demands of morality we are all absolutely equal".53
"Your eyes beheld my unformed substance" (Ps 139:16):
the unspeakable crime of abortion
58. Among all the crimes which can be committed against life, procured
abortion has characteristics making it particularly serious and deplorable.
The Second Vatican Council defines abortion, together with infanticide,
as an "unspeakable crime".54
But today, in many people's consciences, the perception of its gravity
has become progressively obscured. The acceptance of abortion in the popular
mind, in behaviour and even in law itself, is a telling sign of an extremely
dangerous crisis of the moral sense, which is becoming more and more incapable
of distinguishing between good and evil, even when the fundamental right
to life is at stake. Given such a grave situation, we need now more than
ever to have the courage to look the truth in the eye and to call things
by their proper name, without yielding to convenient compromises or
to the temptation of self-deception. In this regard the reproach of the
Prophet is extremely straightforward: "Woe to those who call evil
good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness"
(Is 5:20). Especially in the case of abortion there is a widespread
use of ambiguous terminology, such as "interruption of pregnancy",
which tends to hide abortion's true nature and to attenuate its seriousness
in public opinion. Perhaps this linguistic phenomenon is itself a symptom
of an uneasiness of conscience. But no word has the power to change the
reality of things: procured abortion is the deliberate and direct killing,
by whatever means it is carried out, of a human being in the initial phase
of his or her existence, extending from conception to birth.
The moral gravity of procured abortion is apparent in all its truth
if we recognize that we are dealing with murder and, in particular, when
we consider the specific elements involved. The one eliminated is a human
being at the very beginning of life. No one more absolutely innocent
could be imagined. In no way could this human being ever be considered
an aggressor, much less an unjust aggressor! He or she is weak, defenceless,
even to the point of lacking that minimal form of defence consisting in
the poignant power of a newborn baby's cries and tears. The unborn child
is totally entrusted to the protection and care of the woman carrying
him or her in the womb. And yet sometimes it is precisely the mother herself
who makes the decision and asks for the child to be eliminated, and who
then goes about having it done.
It is true that the decision to have an abortion is often tragic and
painful for the mother, insofar as the decision to rid herself of the fruit
of conception is not made for purely selfish reasons or out of convenience,
but out of a desire to protect certain important values such as her own
health or a decent standard of living for the other members of the family.
Sometimes it is feared that the child to be born would live in such conditions
that it would be better if the birth did not take place. Nevertheless,
these reasons and others like them, however serious and tragic, can
never justify the deliberate killing of an innocent human being.
59. As well as the mother, there are often other people too who decide
upon the death of the child in the womb. In the first place, the father
of the child may be to blame, not only when he di- rectly pressures the
woman to have an abortion, but also when he indirectly encourages such
a decision on her part by leaving her alone to face the problems of pregnancy:
55 in this way the family is thus mortally wounded and profaned in its
nature as a community of love and in its vocation to be the "sanctuary
of life". Nor can one overlook the pressures which sometimes come
from the wider family circle and from friends. Sometimes the woman is subjected
to such strong pressure that she feels psychologically forced to have an
abortion: certainly in this case moral responsibility lies particularly
with those who have directly or indirectly obliged her to have an abortion.
Doctors and nurses are also responsible, when they place at the service
of death skills which were acquired for promoting life.
But responsibility likewise falls on the legislators who have promoted
and approved abortion laws, and, to the extent that they have a say in
the matter, on the administrators of the health-care centres where abortions
are performed. A general and no less serious responsibility lies with those
who have encouraged the spread of an attitude of sexual permissiveness
and a lack of esteem for motherhood, and with those who should have ensured�but
did not�effective family and social policies in support of families, especially
larger families and those with particular financial and educational needs.
Finally, one cannot overlook the network of complicity which reaches out
to include international institutions, foundations and associations which
systematically campaign for the legalization and spread of abortion in
the world. In this sense abortion goes beyond the responsibility of individuals
and beyond the harm done to them, and takes on a distinctly social dimension.
It is a most serious wound inflicted on society and its culture
by the very people who ought to be society's promoters and defenders. As
I wrote in my Letter to Families, "we are facing an immense
threat to life: not only to the life of individuals but also to that of
civilization itself".56 We are facing what can be called a "structure
of sin" which opposes human life not yet born.
60. Some people try to justify abortion by claiming that the result
of conception, at least up to a certain number of days, cannot yet be considered
a personal human life. But in fact, "from the time that the ovum is
fertilized, a life is begun which is neither that of the father nor 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. This has always
been clear, and ... modern genetic science offers clear confirmation. It
has demonstrated that from the first instant there is established the programme
of what this living being will be: a person, this individual person with
his characteristic aspects already well determined. Right from fertilization
the adventure of a human life begins, and each of its capacities requires
time�a rather lengthy time�to find its place and to be in a position to
act".57 Even if the presence of a spiritual soul cannot be ascertained
by empirical data, the results themselves of scientific research on the
human embryo provide "a valuable indication for discerning by the
use of reason a personal presence at the moment of the first appearance
of a human life: how could a human individual not be a human person?".58
Furthermore, what is at stake is so important that, from the standpoint
of moral obligation, the mere probability that a human person is involved
would suffice to justify an absolutely clear prohibition of any intervention
aimed at killing a human embryo. Precisely for this reason, over and above
all scientific debates and those philosophical affirmations to which the
Magisterium has not expressly committed itself, the Church has always taught
and continues to teach that the result of human procreation, from the first
moment of its existence, must be guaranteed that unconditional respect
which is morally due to the human being in his or her totality and unity
as body and spirit: "The human being is to be respected and treated
as a person from the moment of conception; and therefore from that
same moment his rights as a person must be recognized, among which in the
first place is the inviolable right of every innocent human being to life".59
61. The texts of Sacred Scripture never address the question
of deliberate abortion and so do not directly and specifically condemn
it. But they show such great respect for the human being in the mother's
womb that they require as a logical consequence that God's commandment
"You shall not kill" be extended to the unborn child as well.
Human life is sacred and inviolable at every moment of existence, including
the initial phase which precedes birth. All human beings, from their mothers'
womb, belong to God who searches them and knows them, who forms them and
knits them together with his own hands, who gazes on them when they are
tiny shapeless embryos and already sees in them the adults of tomorrow
whose days are numbered and whose vocation is even now written in the "book
of life" (cf. Ps 139: 1, 13-16). There too, when they are still
in their mothers' womb�as many passages of the Bible bear witness60�they
are the personal objects of God's loving and fatherly providence.
Christian Tradition�as the Declaration issued by the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith points out so well61�is clear and unanimous,
from the beginning up to our own day, in describing abortion as a particularly
grave moral disorder. From its first contacts with the Greco-Roman world,
where abortion and infanticide were widely practised, the first Christian
community, by its teaching and practice, radically opposed the customs
rampant in that society, as is clearly shown by the Didache mentioned
earlier.62 Among the Greek ecclesiastical writers, Athenagoras records
that Christians consider as murderesses women who have recourse to abortifacient
medicines, because children, even if they are still in their mother's womb,
"are already under the protection of Divine Providence".63 Among
the Latin authors, Tertullian affirms: "It is anticipated murder to
prevent someone from being born; it makes little difference whether one
kills a soul already born or puts it to death at birth. He who will one
day be a man is a man already".84
Throughout Christianity's two thousand year history, this same doctrine
has been constantly taught by the Fathers of the Church and by her Pastors
and Doctors. Even scientific and philosophical discussions about the precise
moment of the infusion of the spiritual soul have never given rise to any
hesitation about the moral condemnation of abortion.
62. The more recent Papal Magisterium has vigorously reaffirmed
this common doctrine. Pius XI in particular, in his Encyclical Casti
Connubii, rejected the specious justifications of abortion.65 Pius
XII excluded all direct abortion, i.e., every act tending directly to destroy
human life in the womb "whether such destruction is intended as an
end or only as a means to an end".66 John XXIII reaffirmed that human
life is sacred because "from its very beginning it directly involves
God's creative activity".67 The Second Vatican Council, as mentioned
earlier, sternly condemned abortion: "From the moment of its conception
life must be guarded with the greatest care, while abortion and infanticide
are unspeakable crimes".68
The Church's canonical discipline, from the earliest centuries,
has inflicted penal sanctions on those guilty of abortion. This practice,
with more or less severe penalties, has been confirmed in various periods
of history. The 1917 Code of Canon Law punished abortion with excommunication.69
The revised canonical legislation continues this tradition when it decrees
that "a person who actually procures an abortion incurs automatic
(latae sententiae) excommunication".70 The excommu- nication
affects all those who commit this crime with knowledge of the penalty attached,
and thus includes those accomplices without whose help the crime would
not have been committed.71 By this reiterated sanction, the Church makes
clear that abortion is a most serious and dangerous crime, thereby encouraging
those who commit it to seek without delay the path of conversion. In the
Church the purpose of the penalty of excommunication is to make an individual
fully aware of the gravity of a certain sin and then to foster genuine
conversion and repentance.
Given such unanimity in the doctrinal and disciplinary tradition of
the Church, Paul VI was able to declare that this tradition is unchanged
and unchangeable.72 Therefore, by the authority which Christ conferred
upon Peter and his Successors, in communion with the Bishops�who on various
occasions have condemned abortion and who in the aforementioned consultation,
albeit dispersed throughout the world, have shown unanimous agreement concerning
this doctrine�I declare that direct abortion, that is, abortion willed
as an end or as a means, always constitutes a grave moral disorder, since
it is the deliberate killing of an innocent human being. This doctrine
is based upon the natural law and upon the written Word of God, is transmitted
by the Church's Tradition and taught by the ordinary and universal Magisterium.73
No circumstance, no purpose, no law whatsoever can ever make licit an
act which is intrinsically illicit, since it is contrary to the Law of
God which is written in every human heart, knowable by reason itself, and
proclaimed by the Church.
63. This evaluation of the morality of abortion is to be applied also
to the recent forms of intervention on human embryos which, although
carried out for purposes legitimate in themselves, inevitably involve the
killing of those embryos. This is the case with experimentation on embryos,
which is becoming increasingly widespread in the field of biomedical
research and is legally permitted in some countries. Although "one
must uphold as licit procedures carried out on the human embryo which respect
the life and integrity of the embryo and do not involve disproportionate
risks for it, but rather are directed to its healing, the improvement of
its condition of health, or its individual survival",74 it must nonetheless
be stated that the use of human embryos or fetuses as an object of experimentation
constitutes a crime against their dignity as human beings who have a right
to the same respect owed to a child once born, just as to every person.75
This moral condemnation also regards procedures that exploit living
human embryos and fetuses�sometimes specifically "produced" for
this purpose by in vitro fertilization�either to be used as "biological
material" or as providers of organs or tissue for transplants in
the treatment of certain diseases. The killing of innocent human creatures,
even if carried out to help others, constitutes an absolutely unacceptable
act.
Special attention must be given to evaluating the morality of prenatal
diagnostic techniques which enable the early detection of possible
anomalies in the unborn child. In view of the complexity of these techniques,
an accurate and systematic moral judgment is necessary. When they do not
involve disproportionate risks for the child and the mother, and are meant
to make possible early therapy or even to favour a serene and informed
acceptance of the child not yet born, these techniques are morally licit.
But since the possibilities of prenatal therapy are today still limited,
it not infrequently happens that these techniques are used with a eugenic
intention which accepts selective abortion in order to prevent the birth
of children affected by various types of anomalies. Such an attitude is
shameful and utterly reprehensible, since it presumes to measure the value
of a human life only within the parameters of "normality" and
physical well-being, thus opening the way to legitimizing infanticide and
euthanasia as well.
And yet the courage and the serenity with which so many of our brothers
and sisters suffering from serious disabilities lead their lives when they
are shown acceptance and love bears eloquent witness to what gives authentic
value to life, and makes it, even in difficult conditions, something precious
for them and for others. The Church is close to those married couples who,
with great anguish and suffering, willingly accept gravely handicapped
children. She is also grateful to all those families which, through adoption,
welcome children abandoned by their parents because of disabilities or
illnesses.
"It is I who bring both death and life" (Dt 32:39):
the tragedy of euthanasia
64. At the other end of life's spectrum, men and women find themselves
facing the mystery of death. Today, as a result of advances in medicine
and in a cultural context frequently closed to the transcendent, the experience
of dying is marked by new features. When the prevailing tendency is to
value life only to the extent that it brings pleasure and well-being, suffering
seems like an unbearable setback, something from which one must be freed
at all costs. Death is considered "senseless" if it suddenly
interrupts a life still open to a future of new and interesting experiences.
But it becomes a "rightful liberation" once life is held to be
no longer meaningful because it is filled with pain and inexorably doomed
to even greater suffering.
Furthermore, when he denies or neglects his fundamental relationship
to God, man thinks he is his own rule and measure, with the right to demand
that society should guarantee him the ways and means of deciding what to
do with his life in full and complete autonomy. It is especially people
in the developed countries who act in this way: they feel encouraged to
do so also by the constant progress of medicine and its ever more advanced
techniques. By using highly sophisticated systems and equipment, science
and medical practice today are able not only to attend to cases formerly
considered untreatable and to reduce or eliminate pain, but also to sustain
and prolong life even in situations of extreme frailty, to resuscitate
artifi- cially patients whose basic biological functions have undergone
sudden collapse, and to use special procedures to make organs available
for transplanting.
In this context the temptation grows to have recourse to euthanasia,
that is, to take control of death and bring it about before its
time, "gently" ending one's own life or the life of others.
In reality, what might seem logical and humane, when looked at more closely
is seen to be senseless and inhumane. Here we are faced with one
of the more alarming symptoms of the "culture of death", which
is advancing above all in prosperous societies, marked by an attitude of
excessive preoccupation with efficiency and which sees the growing number
of elderly and disabled people as intolerable and too burdensome. These
people are very often isolated by their families and by society, which
are organized almost exclusively on the basis of criteria of productive
efficiency, according to which a hopelessly impaired life no longer has
any value.
65. For a correct moral judgment on euthanasia, in the first place a
clear definition is required. Euthanasia in the strict sense is
understood to be an action or omission which of itself and by intention
causes death, with the purpose of eliminating all suffering. "Euthanasia's
terms of reference, therefore, are to be found in the intention of the
will and in the methods used".76
Euthanasia must be distinguished from the decision to forego so-called
"aggressive medical treatment", in other words, medical procedures
which no longer correspond to the real situation of the patient, either
because they are by now disproportionate to any expected results or because
they impose an excessive burden on the patient and his family. In such
situations, when death is clearly imminent and inevitable, one can in conscience
"refuse forms of treatment that would only secure a precarious and
burdensome prolongation of life, so long as the normal care due to the
sick person in similar cases is not interrupted".77 Certainly there
is a moral obligation to care for oneself and to allow oneself to be cared
for, but this duty must take account of concrete circumstances. It needs
to be determined whether the means of treatment available are objectively
proportionate to the prospects for improvement. To forego extraordinary
or disproportionate means is not the equivalent of suicide or euthanasia;
it rather expresses acceptance of the human condition in the face of death.78
In modern medicine, increased attention is being given to what are called
"methods of palliative care", which seek to make suffering more
bearable in the final stages of illness and to ensure that the patient
is supported and accompanied in his or her ordeal. Among the questions
which arise in this context is that of the licitness of using various types
of painkillers and sedatives for relieving the patient's pain when this
involves the risk of shortening life. While praise may be due to the person
who voluntarily accepts suffering by forgoing treatment with pain-killers
in order to remain fully lucid and, if a believer, to share consciously
in the Lord's Passion, such "heroic" behaviour cannot be considered
the duty of everyone. Pius XII affirmed that it is licit to relieve pain
by narcotics, even when the result is decreased consciousness and a shortening
of life, "if no other means exist, and if, in the given circumstances,
this does not prevent the carrying out of other religious and moral duties".79
In such a case, death is not willed or sought, even though for reasonable
motives one runs the risk of it: there is simply a desire to ease pain
effectively by using the analgesics which medicine provides. All the same,
"it is not right to deprive the dying person of consciousness without
a serious reason": 80 as they approach death people ought to be able
to satisfy their moral and family duties, and above all they ought to be
able to prepare in a fully conscious way for their definitive meeting with
God.
Taking into account these distinctions, in harmony with the Magisterium
of my Predecessors 81 and in communion with the Bishops of the Catholic
Church, I confirm that euthanasia is a grave violation of the law of
God, since it is the deliberate and morally unacceptable killing of
a human person. This doctrine is based upon the natural law and upon the
written word of God, is transmitted by the Church's Tradition and taught
by the ordinary and universal Magisterium.82
Depending on the circumstances, this practice involves the malice proper
to suicide or murder.
66. Suicide is always as morally objectionable as murder. The Church's
tradition has always rejected it as a gravely evil choice.83 Even though
a certain psychological, cultural and social conditioning may induce a
person to carry out an action which so radically contradicts the innate
inclination to life, thus lessening or removing subjective responsibility,
suicide, when viewed objectively, is a gravely immoral act. In fact,
it involves the rejection of love of self and the renunciation of the obligation
of justice and charity towards one's neighbour, towards the communities
to which one belongs, and towards society as a whole.84 In its deepest
reality, suicide represents a rejection of God's absolute sovereignty over
life and death, as proclaimed in the prayer of the ancient sage of Israel:
"You have power over life and death; you lead men down to the gates
of Hades and back again" (Wis 16:13; cf. Tob 13:2).
To concur with the intention of another person to commit suicide and
to help in carrying it out through so-called "assisted suicide"
means to cooperate in, and at times to be the actual perpetrator of, an
injustice which can never be excused, even if it is requested. In a remarkably
relevant passage Saint Augustine writes that "it is never licit to
kill another: even if he should wish it, indeed if he request it because,
hanging between life and death, he begs for help in freeing the soul struggling
against the bonds of the body and longing to be released; nor is it licit
even when a sick person is no longer able to live".85 Even when not
motivated by a selfish refusal to be burdened with the life of someone
who is suffering, euthanasia must be called a false mercy, and indeed
a disturbing "perversion" of mercy. True "compassion"
leads to sharing another's pain; it does not kill the person whose suffering
we cannot bear. Moreover, the act of euthanasia appears all the more perverse
if it is carried out by those, like relatives, who are supposed to treat
a family member with patience and love, or by those, such as doctors, who
by virtue of their specific profession are supposed to care for the sick
person even in the most painful terminal stages.
The choice of euthanasia becomes more serious when it takes the form
of a murder committed by others on a person who has in no way requested
it and who has never consented to it. The height of arbitrariness and injustice
is reached when certain people, such as physicians or legislators, arrogate
to themselves the power to decide who ought to live and who ought to die.
Once again we find ourselves before the temptation of Eden: to become like
God who "knows good and evil" (cf. Gen 3:5). God alone
has the power over life and death: "It is I who bring both death and
life" (Dt 32:39; cf. 2 Kg 5:7; 1 Sam 2:6). But
he only exercises this power in accordance with a plan of wisdom and love.
When man usurps this power, being enslaved by a foolish and selfish way
of thinking, he inevitably uses it for injustice and death. Thus the life
of the person who is weak is put into the hands of the one who is strong;
in society the sense of justice is lost, and mutual trust, the basis of
every authentic interpersonal relationship, is undermined at its root.
67. Quite different from this is the way of love and true mercy,
which our common humanity calls for, and upon which faith in Christ
the Redeemer, who died and rose again, sheds ever new light. The request
which arises from the human heart in the supreme confrontation with suffering
and death, especially when faced with the temptation to give up in utter
desperation, is above all a request for companionship, sympathy and support
in the time of trial. It is a plea for help to keep on hoping when all
human hopes fail. As the Second Vatican Council reminds us: "It is
in the face of death that the riddle of human existence becomes most acute"
and yet "man rightly follows the intuition of his heart when he abhors
and repudiates the absolute ruin and total disappearance of his own person.
Man rebels against death because he bears in himself an eternal seed which
cannot be reduced to mere matter".86
This natural aversion to death and this incipient hope of immortality
are illumined and brought to fulfilment by Christian faith, which both
promises and offers a share in the victory of the Risen Christ: it is the
victory of the One who, by his redemptive death, has set man free from
death, "the wages of sin" (Rom 6:23), and has given him
the Spirit, the pledge of resurrection and of life (cf. Rom 8:11).
The certainty of future immortality and hope in the promised resurrection
cast new light on the mystery of suffering and death, and fill the
believer with an extraordinary capacity to trust fully in the plan of God.
The Apostle Paul expressed this newness in terms of belonging completely
to the Lord who embraces every human condition: "None of us lives
to himself, and none of us dies to himself. If we live, we live to the
Lord, and if we die, we die to the Lord; so then, whether we live or whether
we die, we are the Lord's" (Rom 14:7-8). Dying to the Lord
means experiencing one's death as the supreme act of obedience to the
Father (cf. Phil 2:8), being ready to meet death at the "hour"
willed and chosen by him (cf.Jn 13:1), which can only mean when
one's earthly pilgrimage is completed. Living to the Lord also means
recognizing that suffering, while still an evil and a trial in itself,
can always become a source of good. It becomes such if it is experienced
for love and with love through sharing, by God's gracious gift and one's
own personal and free choice, in the suffering of Christ Crucified. In
this way, the person who lives his suffering in the Lord grows more fully
conformed to him (cf. Phil 3:10; 1 Pet 2:21) and more closely
associated with his redemptive work on behalf of the Church and humanity.87
This was the experience of Saint Paul, which every person who suffers is
called to relive: "I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in
my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake
of his Body, that is, the Church" (Col 1:24).
"We must obey God rather than men" (Acts 5:29):
civil law and the moral law
68. One of the specific characteristics of present-day attacks on human
life�as has already been said several times�consists in the trend to demand
a legal justification for them, as if they were rights which the
State, at least under certain conditions, must acknowledge as belonging
to citizens. Consequently, there is a tendency to claim that it should
be possible to exercise these rights with the safe and free assistance
of doctors and medical personnel.
It is often claimed that the life of an unborn child or a seriously
disabled person is only a relative good: according to a proportionalist
approach, or one of sheer calculation, this good should be compared with
and balanced against other goods. It is even maintained that only someone
present and personally involved in a concrete situation can correctly judge
the goods at stake: consequently, only that person would be able to decide
on the morality of his choice. The State therefore, in the interest of
civil coexistence and social harmony, should respect this choice, even
to the point of permitting abortion and euthanasia.
At other times, it is claimed that civil law cannot demand that all
citizens should live according to moral standards higher than what all
citizens themselves acknowledge and share. Hence the law should always
express the opinion and will of the majority of citizens and recognize
that they have, at least in certain extreme cases, the right even to abortion
and euthanasia. Moreover the prohibition and the punishment of abortion
and euthanasia in these cases would inevitably lead�so it is said�to an
increase of illegal practices: and these would not be subject to necessary
control by society and would be carried out in a medically unsafe way.
The question is also raised whether supporting a law which in practice
cannot be enforced would not ultimately undermine the authority of all
laws.
Finally, the more radical views go so far as to maintain that in a modern
and pluralistic society people should be allowed complete freedom to dispose
of their own lives as well as of the lives of the unborn: it is asserted
that it is not the task of the law to choose between different moral opinions,
and still less can the law claim to impose one particular opinion to the
detriment of others.
69. In any case, in the democratic culture of our time it is commonly
held that the legal system of any society should limit itself to taking
account of and accepting the convictions of the majority. It should therefore
be based solely upon what the majority itself considers moral and actually
practises. Furthermore, if it is believed that an objective truth shared
by all is de facto unattainable, then respect for the freedom of
the citizens�who in a democratic system are considered the true rulers�would
require that on the legislative level the autonomy of individual consciences
be acknowledged. Consequently, when establishing those norms which are
absolutely necessary for social coexistence, the only determining factor
should be the will of the majority, whatever this may be. Hence every politician,
in his or her activity, should clearly separate the realm of private conscience
from that of public conduct.
As a result we have what appear to be two diametrically opposed tendencies.
On the one hand, individuals claim for themselves in the moral sphere the
most complete freedom of choice and demand that the State should not adopt
or impose any ethical position but limit itself to guaranteeing maximum
space for the freedom of each individual, with the sole limitation of not
infringing on the freedom and rights of any other citizen. On the other
hand, it is held that, in the exercise of public and professional duties,
respect for other people's freedom of choice requires that each one should
set aside his or her own convictions in order to satisfy every demand of
the citizens which is recognized and guaranteed by law; in carrying out
one's duties the only moral criterion should be what is laid down by the
law itself. Individual responsibility is thus turned over to the civil
law, with a renouncing of personal conscience, at least in the public sphere.
70. At the basis of all these tendencies lies the ethical relativism
which characterizes much of present-day culture. There are those who
consider such relativism an essential condition of democ- racy, inasmuch
as it alone is held to guarantee tolerance, mutual respect between people
and acceptance of the decisions of the majority, whereas moral norms considered
to be objective and binding are held to lead to authoritarianism and intolerance.
But it is precisely the issue of respect for life which shows what misunderstandings
and contradictions, accompanied by terrible practical consequences, are
concealed in this position.
It is true that history has known cases where crimes have been committed
in the name of "truth". But equally grave crimes and radical
denials of freedom have also been committed and are still being committed
in the name of "ethical relativism". When a parliamentary or
social majority decrees that it is legal, at least under certain conditions,
to kill unborn human life, is it not really making a "tyrannical"
decision with regard to the weakest and most defenceless of human beings?
Everyone's conscience rightly rejects those crimes against humanity of
which our century has had such sad experience. But would these crimes cease
to be crimes if, instead of being committed by unscrupulous tyrants, they
were legitimated by popular consensus?
Democracy cannot be idolized to the point of making it a substitute
for morality or a panacea for immorality. Fundamentally, democracy is a
"system" and as such is a means and not an end. Its "moral"
value is not automatic, but depends on conformity to the moral law to which
it, like every other form of human behaviour, must be subject: in other
words, its morality depends on the morality of the ends which it pursues
and of the means which it employs. If today we see an almost universal
consensus with regard to the value of democracy, this is to be considered
a positive "sign of the times", as the Church's Magisterium has
frequently noted.88 But the value of democracy stands or falls with the
values which it embodies and promotes. Of course, values such as the dignity
of every human person, respect for inviolable and inalienable human rights,
and the adoption of the "common good" as the end and criterion
regulating political life are certainly fundamental and not to be ignored.
The basis of these values cannot be provisional and changeable "majority"
opinions, but only the acknowledgment of an objective moral law which,
as the "natural law" written in the human heart, is the obligatory
point of reference for civil law itself. If, as a result of a tragic obscuring
of the collective conscience, an attitude of scepticism were to succeed
in bringing into question even the fundamental principles of the moral
law, the democratic system itself would be shaken in its foundations, and
would be reduced to a mere mechanism for regulating different and opposing
interests on a purely empirical basis.89
Some might think that even this function, in the absence of anything
better, should be valued for the sake of peace in society. While one acknowledges
some element of truth in this point of view, it is easy to see that without
an objective moral grounding not even democracy is capable of ensuring
a stable peace, especially since peace which is not built upon the values
of the dignity of every individual and of solidarity between all people
frequently proves to be illusory. Even in participatory systems of government,
the regulation of interests often occurs to the advantage of the most powerful,
since they are the ones most capable of manoeuvering not only the levers
of power but also of shaping the formation of consensus. In such a situation,
democracy easily becomes an empty word.
71. It is therefore urgently necessary, for the future of society and
the development of a sound democracy, to rediscover those essential and
innate human and moral values which flow from the very truth of the human
being and express and safeguard the dignity of the person: values which
no individual, no majority and no State can ever create, modify or destroy,
but must only acknowledge, respect and promote.
Consequently there is a need to recover the basic elements of a vision
of the relationship between civil law and moral law, which are put
forward by the Church, but which are also part of the patrimony of the
great juridical traditions of humanity.
Certainly the purpose of civil law is different and more limited
in scope than that of the moral law. But "in no sphere of life can
the civil law take the place of conscience or dictate norms concerning
things which are outside its competence",90 which is that of ensuring
the common good of people through the recognition and defence of their
fundamental rights, and the promotion of peace and of public morality.91
The real purpose of civil law is to guarantee an ordered social coexistence
in true justice, so that all may "lead a quiet and peaceable life,
godly and respectful in every way" (1 Tim 2:2). Precisely for
this reason, civil law must ensure that all members of society enjoy respect
for certain fundamental rights which innately belong to the person, rights
which every positive law must recognize and guarantee. First and fundamental
among these is the inviolable right to life of every innocent human being.
While public authority can sometimes choose not to put a stop to something
which�were it prohibited� would cause more serious harm,92 it can never
presume to legitimize as a right of individuals�even if they are the majority
of the members of society�an offence against other persons caused by the
disregard of so fundamental a right as the right to life. The legal toleration
of abortion or of euthanasia can in no way claim to be based on respect
for the conscience of others, precisely because society has the right and
the duty to protect itself against the abuses which can occur in the name
of conscience and under the pretext of freedom.93
In the Encyclical Pacem in Terris, John XXIII pointed out that
"it is generally accepted today that the common good is best safeguarded
when personal rights and duties are guaranteed. The chief concern of civil
authorities must therefore be to ensure that these rights are recognized,
respected, co-ordinated, defended and promoted, and that each individual
is enabled to perform his duties more easily. For ?to safeguard the inviolable
rights of the human person, and to facilitate the performance of his duties,
is the principal duty of every public authority'. Thus any government which
refused to recognize human rights or acted in violation of them, would
not only fail in its duty; its decrees would be wholly lacking in binding
force".94
72. The doctrine on the necessary conformity of civil law with the
moral law is in continuity with the whole tradition of the Church.
This is clear once more from John XXIII's Encyclical: "Authority is
a postulate of the moral order and derives from God. Consequently, laws
and decrees enacted in contravention of the moral order, and hence of the
divine will, can have no binding force in conscience...; indeed, the passing
of such laws undermines the very nature of authority and results in shameful
abuse".95 This is the clear teaching of Saint Thomas Aquinas, who
writes that "human law is law inasmuch as it is in conformity with
right reason and thus derives from the eternal law. But when a law is contrary
to reason, it is called an unjust law; but in this case it ceases to be
a law and becomes instead an act of violence".96 And again: "Every
law made by man can be called a law insofar as it derives from the natural
law. But if it is somehow opposed to the natural law, then it is not really
a law but rather a corruption of the law".97
Now the first and most immediate application of this teaching concerns
a human law which disregards the fundamental right and source of all other
rights which is the right to life, a right belonging to every individual.
Consequently, laws which legitimize the direct killing of innocent human
beings through abortion or euthanasia are in complete opposition to the
inviolable right to life proper to every individual; they thus deny the
equality of everyone before the law. It might be objected that such is
not the case in euthanasia, when it is requested with full awareness by
the person involved. But any State which made such a request legitimate
and authorized it to be carried out would be legalizing a case of suicide-murder,
contrary to the fundamental principles of absolute respect for life and
of the protection of every innocent life. In this way the State contributes
to lessening respect for life and opens the door to ways of acting which
are destructive of trust in relations between people. Laws which authorize
and promote abortion and euthanasia are therefore radically opposed not
only to the good of the individual but also to the common good; as such
they are completely lacking in authentic juridical validity. Disregard
for the right to life, precisely because it leads to the killing of the
person whom society exists to serve, is what most directly conflicts with
the possibility of achieving the common good. Consequently, a civil law
authorizing abortion or euthanasia ceases by that very fact to be a true,
morally binding civil law.
73. Abortion and euthanasia are thus crimes which no human law can claim
to legitimize. There is no obligation in conscience to obey such laws;
instead there is a grave and clear obligation to oppose them by conscientious
objection. From the very beginnings of the Church, the apostolic preaching
reminded Christians of their duty to obey legitimately constituted public
authorities (cf. Rom 13:1-7; 1 Pet 2:13-14), but at the same
time it firmly warned that "we must obey God rather than men"
(Acts 5:29). In the Old Testament, precisely in regard to threats
against life, we find a significant example of resistance to the unjust
command of those in authority. After Pharaoh ordered the killing of all
newborn males, the Hebrew midwives refused. "They did not do as the
king of Egypt commanded them, but let the male children live" (Ex
1:17). But the ultimate reason for their action should be noted: "the
midwives feared God" (ibid.). It is precisely from obedience
to God�to whom alone is due that fear which is acknowledgment of his absolute
sovereignty�that the strength and the courage to resist unjust human laws
are born. It is the strength and the courage of those prepared even to
be imprisoned or put to the sword, in the certainty that this is what makes
for "the endurance and faith of the saints" (Rev 13:10).
In the case of an intrinsically unjust law, such as a law permitting
abortion or euthanasia, it is therefore never licit to obey it, or to "take
part in a propaganda campaign in favour of such a law, or vote for it".98
A particular problem of conscience can arise in cases where a legislative
vote would be decisive for the passage of a more restrictive law, aimed
at limiting the number of authorized abortions, in place of a more permissive
law already passed or ready to be voted on. Such cases are not infrequent.
It is a fact that while in some parts of the world there continue to be
campaigns to introduce laws favouring abortion, often supported by powerful
international organizations, in other nations�particularly those which
have already experienced the bitter fruits of such permissive legislation�there
are growing signs of a rethinking in this matter. In a case like the one
just mentioned, when it is not possible to overturn or completely abrogate
a pro-abortion law, an elected official, whose absolute personal opposition
to procured abortion was well known, could licitly support proposals aimed
at limiting the harm done by such a law and at lessening its negative
consequences at the level of general opinion and public morality. This
does not in fact represent an illicit cooperation with an unjust law, but
rather a legitimate and proper attempt to limit its evil aspects.
74. The passing of unjust laws often raises difficult problems of conscience
for morally upright people with regard to the issue of cooperation, since
they have a right to demand not to be forced to take part in morally evil
actions. Sometimes the choices which have to be made are difficult; they
may require the sacrifice of prestigious professional positions or the
relinquishing of reasonable hopes of career advancement. In other cases,
it can happen that carrying out certain actions, which are provided for
by legislation that overall is unjust, but which in themselves are indifferent,
or even positive, can serve to protect human lives under threat. There
may be reason to fear, however, that willingness to carry out such actions
will not only cause scandal and weaken the necessary opposition to attacks
on life, but will gradually lead to further capitulation to a mentality
of permissiveness.
In order to shed light on this difficult question, it is necessary to
recall the general principles concerning cooperation in evil actions.
Christians, like all people of good will, are called upon under grave
obligation of conscience not to cooperate formally in practices which,
even if permitted by civil legislation, are contrary to God's law. Indeed,
from the moral standpoint, it is never licit to cooperate formally in evil.
Such cooperation occurs when an action, either by its very nature or by
the form it takes in a concrete situation, can be defined as a direct participation
in an act against innocent human life or a sharing in the immoral intention
of the person committing it. This cooperation can never be justified either
by invoking respect for the freedom of others or by appealing to the fact
that civil law permits it or requires it. Each individual in fact has moral
responsibility for the acts which he personally performs; no one can be
exempted from this responsibility, and on the basis of it everyone will
be judged by God himself (cf. Rom 2:6; 14:12).
To refuse to take part in committing an injustice is not only a moral
duty; it is also a basic human right. Were this not so, the human person
would be forced to perform an action intrinsically incompatible with human
dignity, and in this way human freedom itself, the authentic meaning and
purpose of which are found in its orientation to the true and the good,
would be radically compromised. What is at stake therefore is an essential
right which, precisely as such, should be acknowledged and protected by
civil law. In this sense, the opportunity to refuse to take part in the
phases of consultation, preparation and execution of these acts against
life should be guaranteed to physicians, health-care personnel, and directors
of hospitals, clinics and convalescent facilities. Those who have recourse
to conscientious objection must be protected not only from legal penalties
but also from any negative effects on the legal, disciplinary, financial
and professional plane.
"You shall love your neighbour as yourself" (Lk
10:27):"promote" life
75. God's commandments teach us the way of life. The negative moral
precepts, which declare that the choice of certain actions is morally
unacceptable, have an absolute value for human freedom: they are valid
always and everywhere, without exception. They make it clear that the choice
of certain ways of acting is radically incompatible with the love of God
and with the dignity of the person created in his image. Such choices cannot
be redeemed by the goodness of any intention or of any consequence; they
are irrevocably opposed to the bond between persons; they contradict the
fundamental decision to direct one's life to God.99
In this sense, the negative moral precepts have an extremely important
positive function. The "no" which they unconditionally require
makes clear the absolute limit beneath which free individuals cannot lower
themselves. At the same time they indicate the minimum which they must
respect and from which they must start out in order to say "yes"
over and over again, a "yes" which will gradually embrace the
entire horizon of the good (cf. Mt 5:48). The commandments,
in particular the negative moral precepts, are the beginning and the first
necessary stage of the journey towards freedom. As Saint Augustine writes,
"the beginning of freedom is to be free from crimes... like murder,
adultery, fornication, theft, fraud, sacrilege and so forth. Only when
one stops committing these crimes (and no Christian should commit them),
one begins to lift up one's head towards freedom. But this is only the
beginning of freedom, not perfect freedom".100
76. The commandment "You shall not kill" thus establishes
the point of departure for the start of true freedom. It leads us to promote
life actively, and to develop particular ways of thinking and acting which
serve life. In this way we exercise our responsibility towards the persons
entrusted to us and we show, in deeds and in truth, our gratitude to God
for the great gift of life (cf. Ps 139:13-14).
The Creator has entrusted man's life to his responsible concern, not
to make arbitrary use of it, but to preserve it with wisdom and to care
for it with loving fidelity. The God of the Covenant has entrusted the
life of every individual to his or her fellow human beings, brothers and
sisters, according to the law of reciprocity in giving and receiving, of
self-giving and of the acceptance of others. In the fullness of time, by
taking flesh and giving his life for us, the Son of God showed what heights
and depths this law of reciprocity can reach. With the gift of his Spirit,
Christ gives new content and meaning to the law of reciprocity, to our
being entrusted to one another. The Spirit who builds up communion in love
creates between us a new fraternity and solidarity, a true reflection of
the mystery of mutual self-giving and receiving proper to the Most Holy
Trinity. The Spirit becomes the new law which gives strength to believers
and awakens in them a responsibility for sharing the gift of self and for
accepting others, as a sharing in the boundless love of Jesus Christ himself.
77. This new law also gives spirit and shape to the commandment "You
shall not kill". For the Christian it involves an absolute imperative
to respect, love and promote the life of every brother and sister, in accordance
with the requirements of God's bountiful love in Jesus Christ. "He
laid down his life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren"
(1 Jn 3:16).
The commandment "You shall not kill", even in its more positive
aspects of respecting, loving and promoting human life, is binding on every
individual human being. It resounds in the moral conscience of everyone
as an irrepressible echo of the original covenant of God the Creator with
mankind. It can be recognized by everyone through the light of reason and
it can be observed thanks to the mysterious working of the Spirit who,
blowing where he wills (cf. Jn 3:8), comes to and involves every
person living in this world.
It is therefore a service of love which we are all committed to ensure
to our neighbour, that his or her life may be always defended and promoted,
especially when it is weak or threatened. It is not only a personal but
a social concern which we must all foster: a concern to make unconditional
respect for human life the foundation of a renewed society.
We are asked to love and honour the life of every man and woman and
to work with perseverance and courage so that our time, marked by all too
many signs of death, may at last witness the establishment of a new culture
of life, the fruit of the culture of truth and of love.
CHAPTER IV
YOU DID IT TO ME
FOR A NEW CULTURE OF HUMAN LIFE
"You are God's own people, that you may declare the wonderful
deeds of him who called you out of darkness into his marvellous light"
(1 Pet 2:9): a people of life and for life
78. The Church has received the Gospel as a proclamation and a source
of joy and salvation. She has received it as a gift from Jesus, sent by
the Father "to preach good news to the poor" (Lk 4:18).
She has received it through the Apostles, sent by Christ to the whole world
(cf. Mk 16:15; Mt 28:19-20). Born from this evangelizing
activity, the Church hears every day the echo of Saint Paul's words of
warning: "Woe to me if I do not preach the Gospel!" (1 Cor
9:16). As Paul VI wrote, "evangelization is the grace and vocation
proper to the Church, her deepest identity. She exists in order to evangelize".101
Evangelization is an all-embracing, progressive activity through which
the Church participates in the prophetic, priestly and royal mission of
the Lord Jesus. It is therefore inextricably linked to preaching, celebration
and the service of charity. Evangelization is a profoundly ecclesial
act, which calls all the various workers of the Gospel to action, according
to their individual charisms and ministry.
This is also the case with regard to the proclamation of the Gospel
of life, an integral part of that Gospel which is Jesus Christ himself.
We are at the service of this Gospel, sustained by the awareness that we
have received it as a gift and are sent to preach it to all humanity, "to
the ends of the earth" (Acts 1:8). With humility and gratitude
we know that we are the people of life and for life, and this is
how we present ourselves to everyone.
79. We are the people of life because God, in his unconditional
love, has given us the Gospel of life and by this same Gospel we
have been transformed and saved. We have been ransomed by the "Author
of life" (Acts 3:15) at the price of his precious blood (cf.
1 Cor 6:20; 7:23; 1 Pet 1:19). Through the waters of Baptism
we have been made a part of him (cf. Rom 6:4-5; Col 2:12),
as branches which draw nourishment and fruitfulness from the one tree (cf.
Jn 15:5). Interiorly renewed by the grace of the Spirit, "who
is the Lord and giver of life", we have become a people for life
and we are called to act accordingly.
We have been sent. For us, being at the service of life is not
a boast but rather a duty, born of our awareness of being "God's own
people, that we may declare the wonderful deeds of him who called us out
of darkness into his marvellous light" (cf. 1 Pet 2:9). On
our journey we are guided and sustained by the law of love: a love
which has as its source and model the Son of God made man, who "by
dying gave life to the world".102
We have been sent as a people. Everyone has an obligation to
be at the service of life. This is a properly "ecclesial" responsibility,
which requires concerted and generous action by all the members and by
all sectors of the Christian community. This community commitment does
not however eliminate or lessen the responsibility of each individual,
called by the Lord to "become the neighbour" of everyone:
"Go and do likewise" (Lk 10:37).
Together we all sense our duty to preach the Gospel of life,
to celebrate it in the Liturgy and in our whole existence, and to
serve it with the various programmes and structures which support
and promote life.
"That which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you"
(1 Jn 1:3): proclaiming the Gospel of life
80. "That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which
we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon and touched with
our hands, concerning the word of life ... we proclaim also to you, so
that you may have fellowship with us" (1 Jn 1:1, 3). Jesus
is the only Gospel: we have nothing further to say or any other witness
to bear.
To proclaim Jesus is itself to proclaim life. For Jesus is "the
word of life" (1 Jn 1:1). In him "life was made manifest"
(1 Jn 1:2); he himself is "the eternal life which was with
the Father and was made manifest to us" (1 Jn 1:2). By the
gift of the Spirit, this same life has been bestowed on us. It is in being
destined to life in its fullness, to "eternal life", that every
person's earthly life acquires its full meaning.
Enlightened by this Gospel of life, we feel a need to proclaim
it and to bear witness to it in all its marvellous newness. Since
it is one with Jesus himself, who makes all things new 103 and conquers
the "oldness" which comes from sin and leads to death,104 this
Gospel exceeds every human expectation and reveals the sublime heights
to which the dignity of the human person is raised through grace. This
is how Saint Gregory of Nyssa understands it: "Man, as a being, is
of no account; he is dust, grass, vanity. But once he is adopted by the
God of the universe as a son, he becomes part of the family of that Being,
whose excellence and greatness no one can see, hear or understand. What
words, thoughts or flight of the spirit can praise the superabundance of
this grace? Man surpasses his nature: mortal, he becomes immortal; perishable,
he becomes imperishable; fleeting, he becomes eternal; human, he becomes
divine".105
Gratitude and joy at the incomparable dignity of man impel us to share
this message with everyone: "that which we have seen and heard we
proclaim also to you, so that you may have fellowship with us" (1
Jn 1:3). We need to bring the Gospel of life to the heart of
every man and woman and to make it penetrate every part of society.
81. This involves above all proclaiming the core of this Gospel.
It is the proclamation of a living God who is close to us, who calls us
to profound communion with himself and awakens in us the certain hope of
eternal life. It is the affirmation of the inseparable connection between
the person, his life and his bodiliness. It is the presentation of human
life as a life of relationship, a gift of God, the fruit and sign of his
love. It is the proclamation that Jesus has a unique relationship with
every person, which enables us to see in every human face the face of Christ.
It is the call for a "sincere gift of self" as the fullest way
to realize our personal freedom.
It also involves making clear all the consequences of this Gospel.
These can be summed up as follows: human life, as a gift of God, is sacred
and inviolable. For this reason procured abortion and euthanasia are absolutely
unacceptable. Not only must human life not be taken, but it must be protected
with loving concern. The meaning of life is found in giving and receiving
love, and in this light human sexuality and procreation reach their true
and full significance. Love also gives meaning to suffering and death;
despite the mystery which surrounds them, they can become saving events.
Respect for life requires that science and technology should always be
at the service of man and his integral development. Society as a whole
must respect, defend and promote the dignity of every human person, at
every moment and in every condition of that person's life.
82. To be truly a people at the service of life we must propose these
truths constantly and courageously from the very first proclamation of
the Gospel, and thereafter in catechesis, in the various forms of preaching,
in personal dialogue and in all educational activity. Teachers, catechists
and theologians have the task of emphasizing the anthropological reasons
upon which respect for every human life is based. In this way, by making
the newness of the Gospel of life shine forth, we can also help
everyone discover in the light of reason and of personal experience how
the Christian message fully reveals what man is and the meaning of his
being and existence. We shall find important points of contact and dialogue
also with non- believers, in our common commitment to the establishment
of a new culture of life.
Faced with so many opposing points of view, and a widespread rejection
of sound doctrine concerning human life, we can feel that Paul's entreaty
to Timothy is also addressed to us: "Preach the word, be urgent in
season and out of season, convince, rebuke, and exhort, be unfailing in
patience and in teaching" (2 Tim 4:2). This exhortation should
resound with special force in the hearts of those members of the Church
who di- rectly share, in different ways, in her mission as "teacher"
of the truth. May it resound above all for us who are Bishops: we
are the first ones called to be untiring preachers of the Gospel of
life. We are also entrusted with the task of ensuring that the doctrine
which is once again being set forth in this Encyclical is faithfully handed
on in its integ- rity. We must use appropriate means to defend the faithful
from all teaching which is contrary to it. We need to make sure that in
theological faculties, seminaries and Catholic institutions sound doctrine
is taught, explained and more fully investigated.106 May Paul's exhortation
strike a chord in all theologians, pastors, teachers and in all
those responsible for catechesis and the formation of consciences. Aware
of their specific role, may they never be so grievously irresponsible as
to betray the truth and their own mission by proposing personal ideas contrary
to the Gospel of life as faithfully presented and interpreted by
the Magisterium.
In the proclamation of this Gospel, we must not fear hostility or unpopularity,
and we must refuse any compromise or ambiguity which might conform us to
the world's way of thinking (cf. Rom 12:2). We must be in the
world but not of the world (cf. Jn 15:19; 17:16), drawing
our strength from Christ, who by his Death and Res- urrection has overcome
the world (cf. Jn 16:33).
"I give you thanks that I am fearfully, wonderfully made"
(Ps 139:14): celebrating the Gospel of life
83. Because we have been sent into the world as a "people for life",
our proclamation must also become a genuine celebration of the Gospel
of life. This celebration, with the evocative power of its gestures,
symbols and rites, should become a precious and significant setting in
which the beauty and grandeur of this Gospel is handed on.
For this to happen, we need first of all to foster, in ourselves
and in others, a contemplative outlook.107 Such an outlook arises
from faith in the God of life, who has created every individual as a "wonder"
(cf. Ps 139:14). It is the outlook of those who see life in its
deeper meaning, who grasp its utter gratuitousness, its beauty and its
invitation to freedom and responsibility. It is the outlook of those who
do not presume to take possession of reality but instead accept it as a
gift, discovering in all things the reflection of the Creator and seeing
in every person his living image (cf. Gen 1:27; Ps 8:5).
This outlook does not give in to discouragement when confronted by those
who are sick, suffering, outcast or at death's door. Instead, in all these
situations it feels challenged to find meaning, and precisely in these
circumstances it is open to perceiving in the face of every person a call
to encounter, dialogue and solidarity.
It is time for all of us to adopt this outlook, and with deep religious
awe to rediscover the ability to revere and honour every person, as
Paul VI invited us to do in one of his first Christmas messages.108 Inspired
by this contemplative outlook, the new people of the redeemed cannot but
respond with songs of joy, praise and thanksgiving for the priceless
gift of life, for the mystery of every individual's call to share through
Christ in the life of grace and in an existence of unending communion with
God our Creator and Father.
84. To celebrate the Gospel of life means to celebrate the God of
life, the God who gives life: "We must celebrate Eternal Life,
from which every other life proceeds. From this, in proportion to its capacities,
every being which in any way participates in life, receives life. This
Divine Life, which is above every other life, gives and preserves life.
Every life and every living movement proceed from this Life which transcends
all life and every principle of life. It is to this that souls owe their
incorruptibility; and because of this all animals and plants live, which
receive only the faintest glimmer of life. To men, beings made of spirit
and matter, Life grants life. Even if we should abandon Life, because of
its overflowing love for man, it converts us and calls us back to itself.
Not only this: it promises to bring us, soul and body, to perfect life,
to immortality. It is too little to say that this Life is alive: it is
the Principle of life, the Cause and sole Wellspring of life. Every living
thing must contemplate it and give it praise: it is Life which overflows
with life".109
Like the Psalmist, we too, in our daily prayer as individuals
and as a community, praise and bless God our Father, who knitted us together
in our mother's womb, and saw and loved us while we were still without
form (cf. Ps 139:13, 15-16). We exclaim with overwhelming joy: "I
give you thanks that I am fearfully, wonderfully made; wonderful are your
works. You know me through and through" (Ps 139:14). Indeed,
"despite its hardships, its hidden mysteries, its suffering and its
inevitable frailty, this mortal life is a most beautiful thing, a marvel
ever new and moving, an event worthy of being exalted in joy and glory".110
Moreover, man and his life appear to us not only as one of the greatest
marvels of creation: for God has granted to man a dignity which is near
to divine (Ps 8:5-6). In every child which is born and in every
person who lives or dies we see the image of God's glory. We celebrate
this glory in every human being, a sign of the living God, an icon of Jesus
Christ.
We are called to express wonder and gratitude for the gift of life and
to welcome, savour and share the Gospel of life not only in our
personal and community prayer, but above all in the celebrations of
the liturgical year. Particularly important in this regard are the
Sacraments, the efficacious signs of the presence and saving action
of the Lord Jesus in Christian life. The Sacraments make us sharers in
divine life, and provide the spiritual strength necessary to experience
life, suffering and death in their fullest meaning. Thanks to a genuine
rediscovery and a better appreciation of the significance of these rites,
our liturgical celebrations, especially celebrations of the Sacraments,
will be ever more capable of expressing the full truth about birth, life,
suffering and death, and will help us to live these moments as a participation
in the Paschal Mystery of the Crucified and Risen Christ.
85. In celebrating the Gospel of life we also need toappreciate
and make good use of the wealth of gestures and symbols present in the
traditions and customs of different cultures and peoples. There are
special times and ways in which the peoples of different nations and cultures
express joy for a newborn life, respect for and protection of individual
human lives, care for the suffering or needy, closeness to the elderly
and the dying, participation in the sorrow of those who mourn, and hope
and desire for immortality.
In view of this and following the suggestion made by the Cardinals in
the Consistory of 1991, I propose that a Day for Life be celebrated
each year in every country, as already established by some Episcopal Conferences.
The celebration of this Day should be planned and carried out with the
active participation of all sectors of the local Church. Its primary purpose
should be to foster in individual consciences, in families, in the Church
and in civil society a recognition of the meaning and value of human life
at every stage and in every condition. Particular attention should be drawn
to the seriousness of abortion and euthanasia, without neglecting other
aspects of life which from time to time deserve to be given careful consideration,
as occasion and circumstances demand.
86. As part of the spiritual worship acceptable to God (cf. Rom 12:1),
the Gospel of life is to be celebrated above all in daily living,
which should be filled with self-giving love for others. In this way,
our lives will become a genuine and respon- sible acceptance of the gift
of life and a heartfelt song of praise and gratitude to God who has given
us this gift. This is already happening in the many different acts of selfless
generosity, often humble and hidden, carried out by men and women, children
and adults, the young and the old, the healthy and the sick.
It is in this context, so humanly rich and filled with love, that heroic
actions too are born. These are the most solemn celebration of the
Gospel of life, for they proclaim it by the total gift of self.
They are the radiant manifestation of the highest degree of love, which
is to give one's life for the person loved (cf. Jn 15:13). They
are a sharing in the mystery of the Cross, in which Jesus reveals the value
of every person, and how life attains its fullness in the sincere gift
of self. Over and above such outstanding moments, there is an everyday
heroism, made up of gestures of sharing, big or small, which build up an
authentic culture of life. A particularly praiseworthy example of such
gestures is the donation of organs, performed in an ethically acceptable
manner, with a view to offering a chance of health and even of life itself
to the sick who sometimes have no other hope.
Part of this daily heroism is also the silent but effective and eloquent
witness of all those "brave mothers who devote themselves to their
own fam- ily without reserve, who suffer in giving birth to their children
and who are ready to make any effort, to face any sacrifice, in order to
pass on to them the best of themselves".111 In living out their mission
"these heroic women do not always find support in the world around
them. On the contrary, the cultural models frequently promoted and broadcast
by the media do not encourage motherhood. In the name of progress and modernity
the values of fidelity, chastity, sacrifice, to which a host of Christian
wives and mothers have borne and continue to bear outstanding witness,
are presented as obsolete ... We thank you, heroic mothers, for your invincible
love! We thank you for your intrepid trust in God and in his love. We thank
you for the sacrifice of your life ... In the Paschal Mystery, Christ restores
to you the gift you gave him. Indeed, he has the power to give you back
the life you gave him as an offering".112
"What does it profit, my brethren, if a man says he has faith
but has not works?" (Jas 2:14): serving the Gospel of
life
87. By virtue of our sharing in Christ's royal mission, our support
and promotion of human life must be accomplished through the service
of charity, which finds expression in personal witness, various forms
of volunteer work, social activity and political commitment. This is a
particularly pressing need at the present time, when the "culture
of death" so forcefully opposes the "culture of life" and
often seems to have the upper hand. But even before that it is a need which
springs from "faith working through love" (Gal 5:6). As
the Letter of James admonishes us: "What does it profit, my brethren,
if a man says he has faith but has not works? Can his faith save him? If
a brother or sister is ill-clad and in lack of daily food, and one of you
says to them, ?Go in peace, be warmed and filled', without giving them
the things needed for the body, what does it profit? So faith by itself,
if it has no works, is dead" (2:14-17).
In our service of charity, we must be inspired and distinguished
by a specific attitude: we must care for the other as a person for
whom God has made us responsible. As disciples of Jesus, we are called
to become neighbours to everyone (cf. Lk 10:29-37), and to show
special favour to those who are poorest, most alone and most in need. In
helping the hungry, the thirsty, the foreigner, the naked, the sick, the
imprisoned�as well as the child in the womb and the old person who is suffering
ornear death�we have the opportunity to serve Jesus. He himself said: "As
you did it to one of the least of these my breth- ren, you did it to me"
(Mt 25:40). Hence we cannot but feel called to account and judged
by the ever relevant words of Saint John Chrysostom: "Do you wish
to honour the body of Christ? Do not neglect it when you find it naked.
Do not do it homage here in the church with silk fabrics only to neglect
it outside where it suffers cold and nakedness".113
Where life is involved, the service of charity must be profoundly
consistent. It cannot tolerate bias and discrimination, for human life
is sacred and inviolable at every stage and in every situation; it is an
indivisible good. We need then to "show care" for all life
and for the life of everyone. Indeed, at an even deeper level, we need
to go to the very roots of life and love.
It is this deep love for every man and woman which has given rise down
the centuries to an outstanding history of charity, a history which
has brought into being in the Church and society many forms of service
to life which evoke admiration from all unbiased observers. Every Christian
community, with a renewed sense of responsibility, must continue to write
this history through various kinds of pastoral and social activity. To
this end, appropriate and effective programmes of support for new life
must be implemented, with special closeness to mothers who, even without
the help of the father, are not afraid to bring their child into the world
and to raise it. Similar care must be shown for the life of the marginalized
or suffering, especially in its final phases.
88. All of this involves a patient and fearless work of education
aimed at encouraging one and all to bear each other's burdens (cf.
Gal 6:2). It requires a continuous promotion of vocations to
service, particularly among the young. It involves the implementation
of long-term practical projects and initiatives inspired by the
Gospel.
Many are the means towards this end which need to be developed
with skill and serious commitment. At the first stage of life, centres
for natural methods of regulating fertility should be promoted as a
valuable help to responsible parenthood, in which all individuals, and
in the first place the child, are recognized and respected in their own
right, and where every decision is guided by the ideal of the sincere gift
of self. Marriage and family counselling agencies by their specific
work of guidance and prevention, carried out in accordance with an anthropology
consistent with the Christian vision of the person, of the couple and of
sexuality, also offer valuable help in rediscovering the meaning of love
and life, and in supporting and accompanying every family in its mission
as the "sanctuary of life". Newborn life is also served by centres
of assistance and homes or centres where new life receives a welcome. Thanks
to the work of such centres, many unmarried mothers and couples in difficulty
discover new hope and find assistance and support in overcoming hardship
and the fear of accepting a newly conceived life or life which has just
come into the world.
When life is challenged by conditions of hardship, maladjustment, sickness
or rejection, other programmes�such as communities for treating drug
addiction, residential communities for minors or the mentally ill, care
and relief centres for AIDS patients, associations for solidarity especially
towards the disabled�are eloquent expressions of what charity is able
to devise in order to give everyone new reasons for hope and practical
possibilities for life.
And when earthly existence draws to a close, it is again charity which
finds the most appropriate means for enabling the elderly, especially
those who can no longer look after themselves, and the terminally ill
to enjoy genuinely humane assistance and to receive an adequate response
to their needs, in particular their anxiety and their loneliness. In these
cases the role of families is indispensable; yet families can receive much
help from social welfare agencies and, if necessary, from recourse to palliative
care, taking advantage of suitable medical and social services available
in public institutions or in the home.
In particular, the role of hospitals, clinics and convalescent
homes needs to be reconsidered. These should not merely be institutions
where care is provided for the sick or the dying. Above all they should
be places where suffering, pain and death are acknowledged and understood
in their human and specifically Christian meaning. This must be especially
evident and effective in institutes staffed by Religious or in any way
connected with the Church.
89. Agencies and centres of service to life, and all other initiatives
of support and solidarity which circumstances may from time to time suggest,
need to be directed by people who are generous in their involvement
and fully aware of the importance of the Gospel of life for
the good of individuals and society.
A unique responsibility belongs to health-care personnel: doctors,
pharmacists, nurses, chaplains, men and women religious, administrators
and volunteers. Their profession calls for them to be guardians and
servants of human life. In today's cultural and social context, in which
science and the practice of medicine risk losing sight of their inherent
ethical dimension, health-care professionals can be strongly tempted at
times to become manipulators of life, or even agents of death. In the face
of this temptation their responsibility today is greatly increased. Its
deepest inspiration and strongest support lie in the intrinsic and undeniable
ethical dimension of the health-care profession, something already recognized
by the ancient and still relevant Hippocratic Oath, which requires
every doctor to commit himself to absolute respect for human life and its
sacredness.
Absolute respect for every innocent human life also requires the exercise
of conscientious objection in relation to procured abortion and euthanasia.
"Causing death" can never be considered a form of medical treatment,
even when the intention is solely to comply with the patient's request.
Rather, it runs completely counter to the health- care profession, which
is meant to be an impassioned and unflinching affirmation of life. Bio-
medical research too, a field which promises great benefits for humanity,
must always reject experimentation, research or applications which disregard
the inviolable dignity of the human being, and thus cease to be at the
service of people and become instead means which, under the guise of helping
people, actually harm them.
90. Volunteer workers have a specific role to play: they make
a valuable contribution to the service of life when they combine professional
ability and generous, selfless love. The Gospel of life inspires
them to lift their feelings of good will towards others to the heights
of Christ's charity; to renew every day, amid hard work and weariness,
their awareness of the dignity of every person; to search out people's
needs and, when necessary, to set out on new paths where needs are greater
but care and support weaker.
If charity is to be realistic and effective, it demands that the Gospel
of life be implemented also by means of certain forms of social
activity and commitment in the political field, as a way of defending
and promoting the value of life in our ever more complex and pluralistic
societies. Individuals, families, groups and associations, albeit
for different reasons and in different ways, all have a responsibility
for shaping society and developing cultural, economic, political and legislative
projects which, with respect for all and in keeping with democratic principles,
will contribute to the building of a society in which the dignity of each
person is recognized and protected and the lives of all are defended and
enhanced.
This task is the particular responsibility of civil leaders. Called
to serve the people and the common good, they have a duty to make courageous
choices in support of life, especially through legislative measures.
In a democratic system, where laws and decisions are made on the basis
of the consensus of many, the sense of personal responsibility in the consciences
of individuals invested with authority may be weakened. But no one can
ever renounce this responsibility, especially when he or she has a legislative
or decision-making mandate, which calls that person to answer to God, to
his or her own conscience and to the whole of society for choices which
may be contrary to the common good. Although laws are not the only means
of protecting human life, nevertheless they do play a very important and
sometimes decisive role in influencing patterns of thought and behaviour.
I repeat once more that a law which violates an innocent person's natural
right to life is unjust and, as such, is not valid as a law. For this reason
I urgently appeal once more to all political leaders not to pass laws which,
by disregarding the dignity of the person, undermine the very fabric of
society.
The Church well knows that it is difficult to mount an effective legal
defence of life in pluralistic democracies, because of the presence of
strong cultural currents with differing outlooks. At the same time, certain
that moral truth cannot fail to make its presence deeply felt in every
conscience, the Church encourages political leaders, starting with those
who are Christians, not to give in, but to make those choices which, taking
into account what is realistically attainable, will lead to the re- establishment
of a just order in the defence and promotion of the value of life. Here
it must be noted that it is not enough to remove unjust laws. The underlying
causes of attacks on life have to be eliminated, especially by ensuring
proper support for families and motherhood. A family policy must be
the basis and driving force of all social policies. For this reason
there need to be set in place social and political initiatives capable
of guaranteeing conditions of true freedom of choice in matters of parenthood.
It is also necessary to rethink labour, urban, residential and social service
policies so as to harmonize working schedules with time available for the
family, so that it becomes effectively possible to take care of children
and the elderly.
91. Today an important part of policies which favour life is the issue
of population growth. Certainly public authorities have a responsibility
to "intervene to orient the demography of the population".114
But such interventions must always take into account and respect the primary
and inalienable responsibility of married couples and families, and cannot
employ methods which fail to respect the person and fundamental human rights,
beginning with the right to life of every innocent human being. It is therefore
morally unacceptable to encourage, let alone impose, the use of methods
such as contraception, sterilization and abortion in order to regulate
births. The ways of solving the population problem are quite different.
Governments and the various international agencies must above all strive
to create economic, social, public health and cultural conditions which
will enable married couples to make their choices about procreation in
full freedom and with genuine responsibility. They must then make efforts
to ensure "greater opportunities and a fairer distribution of wealth
so that everyone can share equitably in the goods of creation. Solutions
must be sought on the global level by establishing a true economy of
communion and sharing of goods, in both the national and international
order".115 This is the only way to respect the dignity of persons
and families, as well as the authentic cultural patrimony of peoples.
Service of the Gospel of life is thus an immense and complex
task. This service increasingly appears as a valuable and fruitful area
for positive cooperation with our brothers and sisters of other Churches
and ecclesial communities, in accordance with the practical ecumenism
which the Second Vatican Council authoritatively encouraged.116 It
also appears as a providential area for dialogue and joint efforts with
the followers of other religions and with all people of good will. No
single person or group has a monopoly on the defence and promotion of life.
These are everyone's task and responsibility. On the eve of the Third
Millennium, the challenge facing us is an arduous one: only the concerted
efforts of all those who believe in the value of life can prevent a setback
of unforeseeable consequences for civilization.
"Your children will be like olive shoots around your table"
(Ps 128:3): the family as the "sanctuary of life"
92. Within the "people of life and the people for life", the
family has a decisive responsibility. This responsibility flows from
its very nature as a community of life and love, founded upon marriage,
and from its mission to "guard, reveal and communicate love".117
Here it is a matter of God's own love, of which parents are co-workers
and as it were interpreters when they transmit life and raise it according
to his fatherly plan.118 This is the love that becomes selflessness, receptiveness
and gift. Within the family each member is accepted, respected and honoured
precisely because he or she is a person; and if any family member is in
greater need, the care which he or she receives is all the more intense
and attentive.
The family has a special role to play throughout the life of its members,
from birth to death. It is truly "the sanctuary of life: the
place in which life�the gift of God�can be properly welcomed and protected
against the many attacks to which it is exposed, and can develop in accordance
with what constitutes authentic human growth".119 Consequently the
role of the family in building a culture of life is decisive and irreplaceable.
As the domestic church, the family is summoned to proclaim, celebrate
and serve the Gospel of life. This is a responsibility which first
concerns married couples, called to be givers of life, on the basis of
an ever greater awareness of the meaning of procreation as a unique
event which clearly reveals that human life is a gift received in order
then to be given as a gift. In giving origin to a new life, parents
recognize that the child, "as the fruit of their mutual gift of love,
is, in turn, a gift for both of them, a gift which flows from them".120
It is above all in raising children that the family fulfils its
mission to proclaim the Gospel of life. By word and example, in
the daily round of relations and choices, and through concrete actions
and signs, parents lead their children to authentic freedom, actualized
in the sincere gift of self, and they cultivate in them respect for others,
a sense of justice, cordial openness, dialogue, generous service, solidarity
and all the other values which help people to live life as a gift. In raising
children Christian parents must be concerned about their children's faith
and help them to fulfil the vocation God has given them. The parents' mission
as educators also includes teaching and giving their children an example
of the true meaning of suffering and death. They will be able to do this
if they are sensitive to all kinds of suffering around them and, even more,
if they succeed in fostering attitudes of closeness, assistance and sharing
towards sick or elderly members of the family.
93. The family celebrates the Gospel of life through daily
prayer, both individual prayer and family prayer. The family prays
in order to glorify and give thanks to God for the gift of life, and implores
his light and strength in order to face times of difficulty and suffering
without losing hope. But the celebration which gives meaning to every other
form of prayer and worship is found in the family's actual daily life
together, if it is a life of love and self-giving.
This celebration thus becomes a service to the Gospel of life,
expressed through solidarity as experienced within and around the
family in the form of concerned, attentive and loving care shown in the
humble, ordinary events of each day. A particularly significant expression
of solidarity between families is a willingness to adopt or take
in children abandoned by their parents or in situations of serious
hardship. True parental love is ready to go beyond the bonds of flesh and
blood in order to accept children from other families, offering them whatever
is necessary for their well-being and full development. Among the various
forms of adoption, consideration should be given to adoption-at-a-distance,
preferable in cases where the only reason for giving up the child is
the extreme poverty of the child's family. Through this type of adoption,
parents are given the help needed to support and raise their children,
without their being uprooted from their natural environment.
As "a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the
common good",121 solidarity also needs to be practised through participation
in social and political life. Serving the Gospel of life thus
means that the family, particularly through its membership of family associations,
works to ensure that the laws and institutions of the State in no way violate
the right to life, from conception to natural death, but rather protect
and promote it.
94. Special attention must be given to the elderly. While in
some cultures older people remain a part of the family with an important
and active role, in others the elderly are regarded as a useless burden
and are left to themselves. Here the temptation to resort to euthanasia
can more easily arise.
Neglect of the elderly or their outright rejection are intolerable.
Their presence in the family, or at least their closeness to the family
in cases where limited living space or other reasons make this impossible,
is of fundamental importance in creating a climate of mutual interaction
and enriching communication between the different age-groups. It is therefore
important to preserve, or to re-establish where it has been lost, a sort
of "covenant" between generations. In this way parents, in their
later years, can receive from their children the acceptance and solidarity
which they themselves gave to their children when they brought them into
the world. This is required by obedience to the divine commandment to honour
one's father and mother (cf. Ex 20:12; Lev 19:3). But there
is more. The elderly are not only to be considered the object of our concern,
closeness and service. They themselves have a valuable contribution to
make to the Gospel of life. Thanks to the rich treasury of experiences
they have acquired through the years, the elderly can and must be sources
of wisdom and witnesses of hope and love.
Although it is true that "the future of humanity passes by way
of the family",122 it must be admitted that modern social, economic
and cultural conditions make the family's task of serving life more difficult
and demanding. In order to fulfil its vocation as the "sanctuary of
life", as the cell of a society which loves and welcomes life, the
family urgently needs to be helped and supported. Communities and States
must guarantee all the support, including economic support, which families
need in order to meet their problems in a truly human way. For her part,
the Church must untiringly promote a plan of pastoral care for families,
capable of making every family rediscover and live with joy and courage
its mission to further the Gospel of life.
"Walk as children of light" (Eph 5:8): bringing
about a transformation of culture
95. "Walk as children of light ... and try to learn what is pleasing
to the Lord. Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness" (Eph
5:8, 10-11). In our present social context, marked by a dramatic struggle
between the "culture of life" and the "culture of death",
there is need to develop a deep critical sense, capable of discerning
true values and authentic needs.
What is urgently called for is a general mobilization of consciences
and a united ethical effort to activate a great campaign
in support of life. All together, we must build a new culture of life:
new, because it will be able to confront and solve today's unprecedented
problems affecting human life; new, because it will be adopted with deeper
and more dynamic conviction by all Christians; new, because it will be
capable of bringing about a serious and courageous cultural dialogue among
all parties. While the urgent need for such a cultural transformation is
linked to the present historical situation, it is also rooted in the Church's
mission of evangelization. The purpose of the Gospel, in fact, is "to
transform humanity from within and to make it new".123 Like the yeast
which leavens the whole measure of dough (cf. Mt 13:33), the Gospel
is meant to permeate all cultures and give them life from within,124 so
that they may express the full truth about the human person and about human
life.
We need to begin with the renewal of a culture of life within Christian
communities themselves. Too often it happens that believers, even those
who take an active part in the life of the Church, end up by separating
their Christian faith from its ethical requirements concerning life, and
thus fall into moral subjectivism and certain objectionable ways of acting.
With great openness and courage, we need to question how widespread is
the culture of life today among individual Christians, families, groups
and communities in our Dioceses. With equal clarity and determination we
must identify the steps we are called to take in order to serve life in
all its truth. At the same time, we need to promote a serious and in-depth
exchange about basic issues of human life with everyone, including non-believers,
in intellectual circles, in the various professional spheres and at the
level of people's everyday life.
96. The first and fundamental step towards this cultural transformation
consists in forming consciences with regard to the incomparable
and inviolable worth of every human life. It is of the greatest importance
to re-establish the essential connection between life and freedom. These
are inseparable goods: where one is violated, the other also ends up being
violated. There is no true freedom where life is not welcomed and loved;
and there is no fullness of life except in freedom. Both realities have
something inherent and specific which links them inextricably: the vocation
to love. Love, as a sincere gift of self,125 is what gives the life and
freedom of the person their truest meaning.
No less critical in the formation of conscience is the recovery of
the necessary link between freedom and truth. As I have frequently
stated, when freedom is detached from objective truth it becomes impossible
to establish personal rights on a firm rational basis; and the ground is
laid for society to be at the mercy of the unrestrained will of individuals
or the oppressive totalitarianism of public authority.126
It is therefore essential that man should acknowledge his inherent condition
as a creature to whom God has granted being and life as a gift and a duty.
Only by admitting his innate dependence can man live and use his freedom
to the full, and at the same time respect the life and freedom of every
other person. Here especially one sees that "at the heart of every
culture lies the attitude man takes to the greatest mystery: the mystery
of God".127 Where God is denied and people live as though he did not
exist, or his commandments are not taken into account, the dignity of the
human person and the inviolability of human life also end up being rejected
or compromised.
97. Closely connected with the formation of conscience is the work
of education, which helps individuals to be ever more human, leads
them ever more fully to the truth, instils in them growing respect for
life, and trains them in right interpersonal relationships.
In particular, there is a need for education about the value of life
from its very origins. It is an illusion to think that we can build
a true culture of human life if we do not help the young to accept and
experience sexuality and love and the whole of life according to their
true meaning and in their close interconnection. Sexuality, which enriches
the whole person, "manifests its inmost meaning in leading the person
to the gift of self in love".128 The trivialization of sexuality is
among the principal factors which have led to contempt for new life. Only
a true love is able to protect life. There can be no avoiding the duty
to offer, especially to adolescents and young adults, an authentic education
in sexuality and in love, an education which involves training in
chastity as a virtue which fosters personal maturity and makes one
capable of respecting the "spousal" meaning of the body.
The work of educating in the service of life involves the training
of married couples in responsible procreation. In its true meaning,
responsible procreation requires couples to be obedient to the Lord's call
and to act as faithful interpreters of his plan. This happens when the
family is generously open to new lives, and when couples maintain an attitude
of openness and service to life, even if, for serious reasons and in respect
for the moral law, they choose to avoid a new birth for the time being
or indefinitely. The moral law obliges them in every case to control the
impulse of instinct and passion, and to respect the biological laws inscribed
in their person. It is precisely this respect which makes legitimate, at
the service of responsible procreation, the use of natural methods of
regulating fertility. From the scientific point of view, these methods
are becoming more and more accurate and make it possible in practice to
make choices in harmony with moral values. An honest appraisal of their
effectiveness should dispel certain prejudices which are still widely held,
and should convince married couples, as well as health-care and social
workers, of the importance of proper training in this area. The Church
is grateful to those who, with personal sacrifice and often unacknowledged
dedication, devote themselves to the study and spread of these methods,
as well to the promotion of education in the moral values which they presuppose.
The work of education cannot avoid a consideration of suffering and
death. These are a part of human existence, and it is futile, not to
say misleading, to try to hide them or ignore them. On the contrary, people
must be helped to understand their profound mystery in all its harsh reality.
Even pain and suffering have meaning and value when they are experienced
in close connection with love received and given. In this regard, I have
called for the yearly celebration of the World Day of the Sick, emphasizing
"the salvific nature of the offering up of suffering which, experienced
in communion with Christ, belongs to the very essence of the Redemption".129
Death itself is anything but an event without hope. It is the door which
opens wide on eternity and, for those who live in Christ, an experience
of participation in the mystery of his Death and Resurrection.
98. In a word, we can say that the cultural change which we are calling
for demands from everyone the courage to adopt a new life-style, consisting
in making practical choices�at the personal, family, social and international
level�on the basis of a correct scale of values: the primacy of being
over having,130 of the person over things.131 This renewed life-style
involves a passing from indifference to concern for others, from rejection
to acceptance of them. Other people are not rivals from whom we must
defend ourselves, but brothers and sisters to be supported. They are to
be loved for their own sakes, and they enrich us by their very presence.
In this mobilization for a new culture of life no one must feel excluded:
everyone has an important role to play. Together with the family,
teachers and educators have a particularly valuable contribution
to make. Much will depend on them if young people, trained in true freedom,
are to be able to preserve for themselves and make known to others new,
authentic ideals of life, and if they are to grow in respect for and service
to every other person, in the family and in society.
Intellectuals can also do much to build a new culture of human
life. A special task falls to Catholic intellectuals, who are called
to be present and active in the leading centres where culture is formed,
in schools and universities, in places of scientific and technological
research, of artistic creativity and of the study of man. Allowing their
talents and activity to be nourished by the living force of the Gospel,
they ought to place themselves at the service of a new culture of life
by offering serious and well documented contributions, capable of commanding
general respect and interest by reason of their merit. It was precisely
for this purpose that I established the Pontifical Acad- emy for Life,
assigning it the task of "studying and providing information and
training about the principal problems of law and biomedicine pertaining
to the promotion of life, especially in the direct relationship they have
with Christian morality and the directives of the Church's Magisterium".132
A specific contribution will also have to come from Universities,
particularly from Catholic Universities, and from Centres, Institutes
and Committees of Bioethics.
An important and serious responsibility belongs to those involved
in the mass media, who are called to ensure that the messages which
they so effectively transmit will support the culture of life. They need
to present noble models of life and make room for instances of people's
positive and sometimes heroic love for others. With great respect they
should also present the positive values of sexuality and human love, and
not insist on what defiles and cheapens human dignity. In their interpretation
of things, they should refrain from emphasizing anything that suggests
or fosters feelings or attitudes of indifference, contempt or rejection
in relation to life. With scrupulous concern for factual truth, they are
called to combine freedom of information with respect for every person
and a profound sense of humanity.
99. In transforming culture so that it supports life, women occupy
a place, in thought and action, which is unique and decisive. It depends
on them to promote a "new feminism" which rejects the temptation
of imitating models of "male domination", in order to acknowledge
and affirm the true genius of women in every aspect of the life of society,
and overcome all discrimination, violence and exploitation.
Making my own the words of the concluding message of the Second Vatican
Council, I address to women this urgent appeal: "Reconcile people
with life".133 You are called to bear witness to the meaning
of genuine love, of that gift of self and of that acceptance of others
which are present in a special way in the relationship of husband and wife,
but which ought also to be at the heart of every other interpersonal relationship.
The experience of motherhood makes you acutely aware of the other person
and, at the same time, confers on you a particular task: "Motherhood
involves a special communion with the mystery of life, as it develops in
the woman's womb ... This unique contact with the new human being developing
within her gives rise to an attitude towards human beings not only towards
her own child, but every human being, which profoundly marks the woman's
personality".134 A mother welcomes and carries in herself another
human being, enabling it to grow inside her, giving it room, respecting
it in its otherness. Women first learn and then teach others that human
relations are authentic if they are open to accepting the other person:
a person who is recognized and loved because of the dignity which comes
from being a person and not from other considerations, such as usefulness,
strength, intelligence, beauty or health. This is the fundamental contribution
which the Church and humanity expect from women. And it is the indispensable
prerequisite for an authentic cultural change.
I would now like to say a special word to women who have had an abortion.
The Church is aware of the many factors which may have influenced your
decision, and she does not doubt that in many cases it was a painful and
even shattering decision. The wound in your heart may not yet have healed.
Certainly what happened was and remains terribly wrong. But do not give
in to discouragement and do not lose hope. Try rather to understand what
happened and face it honestly. If you have not already done so, give yourselves
over with humility and trust to repentance. The Father of mercies is ready
to give you his forgiveness and his peace in the Sacrament of Reconciliation.
You will come to understand that nothing is definitively lost and you will
also be able to ask forgiveness from your child, who is now living in the
Lord. With the friendly and expert help and advice of other people, and
as a result of your own painful experience, you can be among the most eloquent
defenders of everyone's right to life. Through your commitment to life,
whether by accepting the birth of other children or by welcoming and caring
for those most in need of someone to be close to them, you will become
promoters of a new way of looking at human life.
100. In this great endeavour to create a new culture of life we are
inspired and sustained by the confidence that comes from knowing
that the Gospel of life, like the Kingdom of God itself, is growing
and producing abundant fruit (cf. Mk 4:26-29). There is certainly
an enormous disparity between the powerful resources available to the forces
promoting the "culture of death" and the means at the disposal
of those working for a "culture of life and love". But we know
that we can rely on the help of God, for whom nothing is impossible (cf.
Mt 19:26).
Filled with this certainty, and moved by profound concern for the destiny
of every man and woman, I repeat what I said to those families who carry
out their challenging mission amid so many difficulties: 135 a great
prayer for life is urgently needed, a prayer which will rise up throughout
the world. Through special initiatives and in daily prayer, may an impassioned
plea rise to God, the Creator and lover of life, from every Christian community,
from every group and association, from every family and from the heart
of every believer. Jesus himself has shown us by his own example that prayer
and fasting are the first and most effective weapons against the forces
of evil (cf. Mt 4:1-11). As he taught his disciples, some demons
cannot be driven out except in this way (cf. Mk 9:29). Let us therefore
discover anew the humility and the courage to pray and fast so that
power from on high will break down the walls of lies and deceit: the walls
which conceal from the sight of so many of our brothers and sisters the
evil of practices and laws which are hostile to life. May this same power
turn their hearts to resolutions and goals inspired by the civilization
of life and love.
"We are writing this that our joy may be complete" (1
Jn 1:4): the Gospel of life is for the whole of human society
101. "We are writing you this that our joy may be complete"
(1 Jn 1:4). The revelation of the Gospel of life is given
to us as a good to be shared with all people: so that all men and women
may have fellowship with us and with the Trinity (cf. 1 Jn 1:3).
Our own joy would not be complete if we failed to share this Gospel with
others but kept it only for ourselves.
The Gospel of life is not for believers alone: it is for everyone.
The issue of life and its defence and promotion is not a concern of
Christians alone. Although faith provides special light and strength, this
question arises in every human conscience which seeks the truth and which
cares about the future of humanity. Life certainly has a sacred and religious
value, but in no way is that value a concern only of believers. The value
at stake is one which every human being can grasp by the light of reason;
thus it necessarily concerns everyone.
Consequently, all that we do as the "people of life and for life"
should be interpreted correctly and welcomed with favour. When the Church
declares that unconditional respect for the right to life of every innocent
person�from conception to natural death�is one of the pillars on which
every civil society stands, she "wants simply to promote a human
State. A State which recognizes the defence of the fundamental rights
of the human person, especially of the weakest, as its primary duty".136
The Gospel of life is for the whole of human society. To be actively
pro-life is to contribute to the renewal of society through the
promotion of the common good. It is impossible to further the common good
without acknowledging and defending the right to life, upon which all the
other inalienable rights of individuals are founded and from which they
develop. A society lacks solid foundations when, on the one hand, it asserts
values such as the dignity of the person, justice and peace, but then,
on the other hand, radically acts to the contrary by allowing or tolerating
a variety of ways in which human life is devalued and violated, especially
where it is weak or marginalized. Only respect for life can be the foundation
and guarantee of the most precious and essential goods of society, such
as democracy and peace.
There can be no true democracy without a rec- ognition of every
person's dignity and without respect for his or her rights.
Nor can there be true peace unless life is defended and promoted.
As Paul VI pointed out: "Every crime against life is an attack
on peace, especially if it strikes at the moral conduct of people... But
where human rights are truly professed and publicly recognized and defended,
peace becomes the joyful and operative climate of life in society".137
The "people of life" rejoices in being able to share its commitment
with so many others. Thus may the "people for life" constantly
grow in number and may a new culture of love and solidarity develop for
the true good of the whole of human society.
CONCLUSION
102. At the end of this Encyclical, we naturally look again to the Lord
Jesus, "the Child born for us" (cf. Is 9:6), that in him
we may contemplate "the Life" which "was made manifest"
(1 Jn 1:2). In the mystery of Christ's Birth the encounter of God
with man takes place and the earthly journey of the Son of God begins,
a journey which will culminate in the gift of his life on the Cross. By
his death Christ will conquer death and become for all humanity the source
of new life.
The one who accepted "Life" in the name of all and for the
sake of all was Mary, the Virgin Mother; she is thus most closely and personally
associated with the Gospel of life. Mary's consent at the Annunciation
and her motherhood stand at the very beginning of the mystery of life which
Christ came to bestow on humanity (cf. Jn 10:10). Through her acceptance
and loving care for the life of the Incarnate Word, human life has been
rescued from condemnation to final and eternal death.
For this reason, Mary, "like the Church of which she is the type,
is a mother of all who are reborn to life. She is in fact the mother of
the Life by which everyone lives, and when she brought it forth from herself
she in some way brought to rebirth all those who were to live by that Life".138
As the Church contemplates Mary's motherhood, she discovers the meaning
of her own motherhood and the way in which she is called to express it.
At the same time, the Church's experience of motherhood leads to a most
profound understanding of Mary's experience as the incomparable model
of how life should be welcomed and cared for.
"A great portent appeared in heaven, a woman clothed with the
sun" (Rev 12:1): the motherhood of Mary and of the Church
103. The mutual relationship between the mystery of the Church and Mary
appears clearly in the "great portent" described in the Book
of Rev- elation: "A great portent appeared in heaven, a woman clothed
with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of
twelve stars" (12:1). In this sign the Church recognizes an image
of her own mystery: present in history, she knows that she transcends history,
inasmuch as she constitutes on earth the "seed and beginning"
of the Kingdom of God.139 The Church sees this mystery fulfilled in complete
and exemplary fashion in Mary. She is the woman of glory in whom God's
plan could be carried out with supreme perfection.
The "woman clothed with the sun"�the Book of Revelation tells
us�"was with child" (12:2). The Church is fully aware that she
bears within herself the Saviour of the world, Christ the Lord. She is
aware that she is called to offer Christ to the world, giving men and women
new birth into God's own life. But the Church cannot forget that her mission
was made possible by the motherhood of Mary, who conceived and bore the
One who is "God from God", "true God from true God".
Mary is truly the Mother of God, the Theotokos, in whose motherhood
the vocation to motherhood bestowed by God on every woman is raised to
its highest level. Thus Mary becomes the model of the Church, called to
be the "new Eve", the mother of believers, the mother of the
"living" (cf. Gen 3:20).
The Church's spiritual motherhood is only achieved�the Church knows
this too�through the pangs and "the labour" of childbirth (cf.
Rev 12:2), that is to say, in constant tension with the forces of
evil which still roam the world and affect human hearts, offering resistance
to Christ: "In him was life, and the life was the light of men. The
light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it"
(Jn 1:4-5).
Like the Church, Mary too had to live her motherhood amid suffering:
"This child is set ... for a sign that is spoken against�and a sword
will pierce through your own soul also�that thoughts out of many hearts
may be revealed" (Lk 2:34-35). The words which Simeon addresses
to Mary at the very beginning of the Saviour's earthly life sum up and
prefigure the rejection of Jesus, and with him of Mary, a rejection which
will reach its culmination on Calvary. "Standing by the cross of Jesus"
(Jn 19:25), Mary shares in the gift which the Son makes of himself:
she offers Jesus, gives him over, and begets him to the end for our sake.
The "yes" spoken on the day of the Annunciation reaches full
maturity on the day of the Cross, when the time comes for Mary to receive
and beget as her children all those who become disciples, pouring out upon
them the saving love of her Son: "When Jesus saw his mother, and the
disciple whom he loved standing near, he said to his mother, ?Woman, behold,
your son!' " (Jn 19:26).
"And the dragon stood before the woman ... that he might devour
her child when she brought it forth" (Rev 12:4): life
menaced by the forces of evil
104. In the Book of Revelation, the "great portent" of the
"woman" (12:1) is accompanied by "another portent which
appeared in heaven": "a great red dragon" (Rev 12:3),
which represents Satan, the personal power of evil, as well as all the
powers of evil at work in history and opposing the Church's mission.
Here too Mary sheds light on the Community of Believers. The hostility
of the powers of evil is, in fact, an insidious opposition which, before
affecting the disciples of Jesus, is directed against his mother. To save
the life of her Son from those who fear him as a dangerous threat, Mary
has to flee with Joseph and the Child into Egypt (cf. Mt 2:13-15).
Mary thus helps the Church to realize that life is always at the
centre of a great struggle between good and evil, between light and
darkness. The dragon wishes to devour "the child brought forth"
(cf. Rev 12:4), a figure of Christ, whom Mary brought forth "in
the fullness of time" (Gal 4:4) and whom the Church must unceasingly
offer to people in every age. But in a way that child is also a figure
of every person, every child, especially every helpless baby whose life
is threatened, because�as the Council reminds us�"by his Incarnation
the Son of God has united himself in some fashion with every person".140
It is precisely in the "flesh" of every person that Christ continues
to reveal himself and to enter into fellowship with us, so that rejection
of human life, in whatever form that rejection takes, is really
a rejection of Christ. This is the fascinating but also demanding truth
which Christ reveals to us and which his Church continues untiringly to
proclaim: "Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me"
(Mt 18:5); "Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the
least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Mt 25:40).
"Death shall be no more" (Rev 21:4): the
splendour of the Resurrection
105. The angel's Annunciation to Mary is framed by these reassuring
words: "Do not be afraid, Mary" and "with God nothing will
be impossible" (Lk 1:30, 37). The whole of the Virgin Mother's
life is in fact pervaded by the certainty that God is near to her and that
he accompanies her with his providential care. The same is true of the
Church, which finds "a place prepared by God" (Rev 12:6)
in the desert, the place of trial but also of the manifestation of God's
love for his people (cf. Hos 2:16). Mary is a living word of comfort
for the Church in her struggle against death. Showing us the Son, the Church
assures us that in him the forces of death have already been defeated:
"Death with life contended: combat strangely ended! Life's own Champion,
slain, yet lives to reign".141
The Lamb who was slain is alive, bearing the marks of his Passion
in the splendour of the Res- urrection. He alone is master of all the events
of history: he opens its "seals" (cf. Rev 5:1-10) and
proclaims, in time and beyond, the power of life over death. In
the "new Jerusalem", that new world towards which human history
is travelling, "death shall be no more, neither shall there
be mourning nor crying nor pain any more, for the former things have passed
away" (Rev 21:4).
And as we, the pilgrim people, the people of life and for life, make
our way in confidence towards "a new heaven and a new earth"
(Rev 21:1), we look to her who is for us "a sign of sure hope
and solace".142
O Mary,
bright dawn of the new world,
Mother of the living,
to you do we entrust the cause of life
Look down, O Mother,
upon the vast numbers
of babies not allowed to be born,
of the poor whose lives are made difficult,
of men and women
who are victims of brutal violence,
of the elderly and the sick killed
by indifference or out of misguided mercy.
Grant that all who believe in your Son
may proclaim the Gospel of life
with honesty and love
to the people of our time.
Obtain for them the grace
to accept that Gospel
as a gift ever new,
the joy of celebrating it with gratitude
throughout their lives
and the courage to bear witness to it
resolutely, in order to build,
together with all people of good will,
the civilization of truth and love,
to the praise and glory of God,
the Creator and lover of life.
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 25 March, the Solemnity of the
Annunciation of the Lord, in the year 1995, the seventeenth of my Pontificate.
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