Daily Southtown

Bishops, Biden and brave new world

- Ross Douthat Douthat is a columnist for The New York Times.

For the past four or so decades, since soon after the first test-tube babies were conceived outside a human womb, scientists have followed the so-called 14-day rule, confining research on human embryos to their first two weeks of life, before various developmen­tal milestones like the first signs of an emerging central nervous system.

The rule was an ethical compromise and a gesture of reassuranc­e to a squeamish public; it was also a mostly theoretica­l limit, since for much of the period in question it was impossible to keep an embryo alive that long outside the womb.

But in the past five years it has become possible, and now the rule is gone. In May, the Internatio­nal Society for Stem Cell Research, a key profession­al organizati­on for scientists involved in this research, published new ethical guidelines opening research on older embryos on a case-bycase basis, with no definite developmen­tal ceiling on these experiment­s.

This change comes amid other breakthrou­ghs that promise to make research on embryos easier than ever before — particular­ly the developmen­t of increasing­ly complex embryo-like structures, biological models created from stem cells or adult skin cells that closely resemble nascent human life. How closely is an open question, scientific­ally and philosophi­cally. But there is presumably a point of scientific progress at which an embryo-like structure is just an embryo, created rather than conceived. So there is a pretty easily imaginable future in which the old world of the 14-day rule applied to a limited supply of donated embryos gives way to mass manufactur­e and mass experiment­ation on embryonic human life.

The issues raised by this shift could fill several bioethics journals, but for today I’m interested in a single political and religious question: Is there any scenario in which this kind of future would attract much opposition from Catholic politician­s in the Democratic Party?

It is a question that is relevant because of the debate currently dividing the ever-divided American Catholic Church, over whether its bishops should publish a document on the proper reception of communion that might propose, or at least suggest (the document does not actually exist yet), that the Eucharist be withheld from Catholic politician­s who favor or vote to fund abortion. Catholic politician­s like the regularly Mass-attending president of the United States.

The justificat­ion for withholdin­g communion is straightfo­rward, however clouded by ideologica­l disagreeme­nts. Both of our political parties take positions that put them at odds with Catholic teaching, but if abortion is what the Catholic Church (with good reason) believes it to be, the intentiona­l taking of innocent human life, then it is a different kind of issue than the usual partisan debates. The legal regime favored by Democrats has permitted tens of millions of abortions since Roe v. Wade was handed down; no Republican failure to spend enough on health care or education has that kind of directly lethal consequenc­e. This includes even Republican support for the death penalty, where the church’s position has evolved toward abolitioni­sm: A handful of executions of people found guilty of serious crimes (there were 17 executions in the United States in 2020) is not commensura­te with hundreds of thousands of abortions.

Withholdin­g communion from politician­s who are particular­ly implicated in those abortions, then, is both a political and a pastoral act. Political, because it establishe­s that the church takes abortion as seriously as it claims — seriously enough to actually use one of the few disciplina­ry measures that it has at its disposal. Pastoral, because the politician­s in question are implicated in a uniquely grave and public sin, and taking communion in that situation is a potential sacrilege from which not only the Eucharist but they themselves need to be protected.

This kind of straightfo­rward logic does not, however, make the plan to withhold communion from Joe Biden a necessaril­y prudent one. The first problem is that it is pastorally effective only if the withholdin­g takes place, and in the structure of the church only Biden’s bishops (meaning the bishop of Wilmington, Delaware, or the archbishop of Washington, D.C.) and the priests under their authority can make that kind of call. So the most likely consequenc­e of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops issuing some sort of document is that Biden continues to attend Mass and receive communion from friendly priests and prelates, and the bishops as a corporate body, already weak and scandal-tarnished, look as if they’ve made a partisan interventi­on with no meaningful effect.

Which points to the second problem — that a direct attempt at a communion ban will inevitably be interprete­d as a partisan interventi­on, at a time when the partisan captivity of conservati­ve Christiani­ty, Protestant and Catholic alike, is a serious problem for the witness of the church.

By this I mean that however reasonable the bishops’ focus on abortion as a preeminent issue, in a polarized nation it has created a situation where Republican­s can seemingly get away with a vast accumulati­on of un-Catholic acts and policies and simple lies — many of them on display in Donald Trump’s administra­tion, which was amply staffed with Catholics — and be perpetuall­y forgiven because the Democrats support Roe. v. Wade. Which, in turn, makes a pro-life church seem complicit in right-wing evils — from the treatment of child migrants to the pardons for soldiers accused of war crimes to the months of mendacity about the 2020 election — in ways that undermine its credibilit­y with the many Catholics who understand­ably did not cast a vote for Trump.

This is, I assume, the view of Pope Francis’ circle in Rome, which has been distinctly cool to the American bishops’ potential communion document. It is a view that assumes that the church’s authority needs to be restored before it can be used, and that what Catholicis­m needs is a kind of strategic patience, in which religious faith and pastoral credibilit­y are gradually renewed together.

But the difficulty with that strategy is that there is another set of actors here: the Catholic Democratic politician­s themselves, who are not simply holding steady with a kind of moderate pro-choice, “safe, legal and rare” politics, but rather following their party and the wider drift of liberalism in a more radical direction.

Where once the House Democrats included a small but robust pro-life caucus and a lot of conflicted and cross-pressured pro-choice members, now the prevailing attitude is closer to the one expressed by Rep. Ted Lieu of California, punctuatin­g a tweet listing his dissents from church teaching: “Next time I go to Church, I dare you to deny me Communion.”

And where once Joe Biden was a moderate Democrat who supported the Hyde Amendment, restrictin­g federal funding for abortion, now abortion is one of the few issues where Biden felt he needed to swing hard to the left on the campaign trail, abandoning his past positions and becoming more uncompromi­singly pro-choice.

Which is where the 14-day rule and the changing shape of embryo science comes in. This hardening of the liberal Catholic position is happening at a time when the scientific capacity to create and exploit human life is rapidly increasing — meaning that the debate over whether and how to protect unborn human life will increasing­ly encompass the laboratory as well as the womb and involve questions of scientific power as much as women’s rights.

So to return to my opening question: Is there is any evidence that the Catholic politician­s of the left, the next generation­s of Joe Bidens, will stand firmly against any of these looming, more-than-just-abortion trends? I think the answer is no. There is just too little daylight now between secular utilitaria­nism and liberal Catholicis­m in its political and partisan form.

If over the next few generation­s we move into a world where the liberalism of Catholic politician­s requires them to support not just abortion rights but a brave new world of human life manufactur­ed, commodifie­d, vivisected and snuffed out — then the bishops of tomorrow may look back on today and wish they had found a way to say “enough.”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? President Joe Biden speaks with a priest at St. Joseph on the Brandywine Catholic Church in Wilmington, Delaware.
ALEX BRANDON/AP President Joe Biden speaks with a priest at St. Joseph on the Brandywine Catholic Church in Wilmington, Delaware.
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