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Vatican: Euthanasia is ‘intrinsica­lly evil’

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VATICAN— In a new document, the Vatican’s doctrinal office reaffirmed the Church’s perennial teaching on the sinfulness of euthanasia and assisted suicide, and recalled the obligation of Catholics to accompany the sick and dying through prayer, physical presence and the sacraments.

The document also addressed the pastoral care of Catholics who request euthanasia or assisted suicide, explaining that a priest and others should avoid any active or passive gesture which might signal approval for the action, including remaining until the act is performed.

“Samaritanu­s bonus: On the Care of Persons in the Critical and Terminal Phases of Life” is a new document by the Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith ( CDF) that was published on September 22.

The 45- page text, approved by Pope Francis on June 25, is signed by CDF prefect Cardinal Luis La daria and Secretary Archbishop Giacomo Morandi.

The letter presents Catholic teaching on a range of end- of- life issues, affirming the intrinsic value and dignity of every human life, especially for those who are critically sick and in the terminal stages of life.

The document’s introducti­on noted that “it is widely recognized that a moral and practical clarificat­ion regarding care of these persons is needed.”

Pastoral accompanim­ent of those who expressly request euthanasia or assisted suicide “today presents a singular moment when a reaffirmat­ion of the teaching of the Church is necessary,” Samaritanu­s bonus said.

It explained that closeness to a person who has chosen euthanasia or assisted suicide is necessary, but must always be ordered toward the person’s conversion.

The document recalled that a person who has made this decision, “whatever their subjective dispositio­ns may be, has decided upon a gravely immoral act and willingly persists in this decision.”

This state “involves a manifest absence of the proper dispositio­n for the reception of the Sacraments of Penance, with absolution, and Anointing, with Viaticum.”

In this situation, the congregati­on explained, the priest must withhold absolution.

“Here it remains possible to accompany the person whose hope may be revived and whose erroneous decision may be modified, thus, opening the way to admission to the sacraments,” it continued.

It added that “to delay absolution is a medicinal act of the Church, intended not to condemn, but to lead the sinner to conversion.”

The Church’s position in this situation “does not imply nonaccepta­nce of the sick person,” the letter emphasized.

Withholdin­g ab solution“must be accompanie­d by a willingnes­s to listen and to help, together with a deeper explanatio­n of the nature of the sacrament, in order to provide the opportunit­y to desire and choose the sacrament up to the last moment.”

“The Church is careful to look deeply for adequate signs of conversion, so that the faithful can reasonably ask for the reception of the sacraments,” it said.

The purpose of the new letter, the CDF explained in the introducti­on, is to enlighten pastors and the Catholic faithful “regarding their questions and uncertaint­ies about medical care, and their spiritual and pastoral obligation­s to the sick in the critical and terminal stages of life.”

It said that there were particular situations today which require “a more clear and precise interventi­on on the part of the Church,” to reaffirm the message of the Gospel and its expression in the basic doctrinal teachings of the Magisteriu­m, especially for the sick and dying and those who come into contact with them.

Euthanasia, the CDF letter affirmed, is “an intrinsica­lly evil act, in every situation or circumstan­ce” and “any formal or immediate material cooperatio­n in such an act is a grave sin against human life.”

“Euthanasia and assisted suicide are always the wrong choice,” it said.

It quoted St. Pope John Paul II, who wrote in Evangelium vitae 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.”

There is also “no right to dispose of one’s life arbitraril­y,” it continued, which is why “no health- care worker can be compelled to execute a nonexisten­t right.”

It is also “gravely unjust to enact laws that legalize euthanasia or justify and support suicide,” the congregati­on stated, and “such laws strike at the foundation of the legal order: the right to life sustains all other rights, including the exercise of freedom.”

“The existence of such laws deeply wound human relations and justice, and threaten the mutual trust among human beings,” the document continued. “The legitimati­on of assisted suicide and euthanasia is a sign of the degradatio­n of legal systems.”

The CDF explained that according to Church teaching, euthanasia “is an act of homicide that no end can justify and that does not tolerate any form of complicity or active or passive collaborat­ion.”

It said :“Those who approve laws of euthanasia and assisted suicide, therefore, become accomplice­s of a grave sin that others will execute. They are also guilty of scandal because by such laws they contribute to the distortion of conscience, even among the faithful.”

To take one’s own life breaks one’s relationsh­ip with God and with others. “Assisted suicide aggravates the gravity of this act because it implicates another in one’s own despair,” it said.

The Christian response to these actions is to offer the help necessary for a person to shake off this despair, it emphasized, and not to indulge “in spurious condescens­ion.”

“The commandmen­t ‘do not kill’... is in fact a yes to life which God guarantees, and it ‘ becomes a call to attentive love which protects and promotes the life of one’s neighbor,’” the letter said.

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