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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20161220044432/https://www.ewtn.com/library/bishops/vasapelosi.htm
Modern Look at Abortion Not Same as St.
Augustine's
Bishop Robert Vasa
Diocese of Baker, Oregon
BEND — It is not possible this week to write about things related to the
Catholic Church without making special note of the comments of a
high-ranking U.S. official regarding abortion. This official, drawing
from the rich tradition of the teachings of Saint Augustine, implied
that he would have permitted abortion up to three months after
conception. As has been well reported by others, Saint Augustine was
working from the defective science of his day and he was trying to
reconcile what he understood from science with the philosophical views
of his day. It should be noted that Saint Augustine died in 430 AD.
In order to give a fair treatment of Augustine’s view I turn to an entry
by John C. Bauerschmidt, Abortion, in Augustine Through The Ages: An
Encyclopedia. He writes:
“Abortion: Augustine, in common with most other ecclesiastical writers
of his period, vigorously condemned the practice of induced abortion.
Procreation was one of the goods of marriage; abortion figured as a
means, along with drugs which cause sterility, of frustrating this good.
It lay along a continuum which included infanticide as an instance of
‘lustful cruelty’ or ‘cruel lust.’ Augustine called the use of means to
avoid the birth of a child an ‘evil work:’ a reference to either
abortion or contraception or both.”
According to a spokesperson, the public official’s “views on when life
begins were informed by the views of Saint Augustine, who said: ‘the law
does not provide that the act (abortion) pertains to homicide, for there
cannot yet be said to be a live soul in a body that lacks sensation.’”
(Saint Augustine, On Exodus 21.22) Clearly Augustine believed, according
to the science of his day, that the “body” of a pre-born child “lacked
sensation” and from this he concluded that the child likewise lacked a
human soul. Since the creature in the womb of its mother seemed to lack
both sensation and soul, at least until the 40th day after conception,
he had questions about the full humanity of the child. If Augustine had
access to ultrasound images or if he had seen the film, “Silent Scream,”
he would have had no doubt about whether the child “lacked sensation.”
Precisely because of the lack of scientific precision, Augustine
distinguished between a vivified and unvivified fetus, (a fetus before
or after ensoulment). Since he could not conceive of an ensouled person
without sensation, he concluded that the abortion of a “pre-vivifed”
fetus, while a grave evil, could not be considered, in the strict moral
sense, a murder.
I certainly commend the public official for going to Saint Augustine, a
great theologian and philosopher, for views on morality but Augustine’s
views need to be read and adopted in context. It is highly disingenuous,
deceptive and intellectually dishonest to take this ecclesial sound bite
from 1,500 years ago and treat it as if it is the last definitive word
on the subject. This is particularly true since Augustine himself
“vigorously condemned the practice of induced abortion” despite the
unavailability of accurate scientific information. Furthermore,
according to Bauerschmidt, Augustine also called the use of means to
avoid the birth of a child “evil work.” It would appear that the public
official conveniently missed that part and thus does not allow Saint
Augustine to form any part of her understanding of the evil of either
abortion or contraception while boasting that this is precisely what she
has done.
The spokesperson also attempted to further blur the concerns about the
public official’s stand on abortion by indicating that the public
official “has a long, proud record of working with the Catholic Church
on many issues, including alleviating poverty and promoting social
justice and peace.” I, too, could commend the pubic official for
“working with the Catholic Church” on these issues but if the views on
these issues are formed by the teachings of the Catholic Church, which
are quite current, why does the public official seemingly work so hard
to reject the teachings of the Catholic Church, as they are currently
stated, regarding abortion and contraception?
If I were to think a bit more critically I would be inclined to conclude
that the public official accepts the views of the Church which agree
with her view and rejects those views which do not. In other words, she
is not formed by either Augustine or the Catholic Church on any of these
social or moral issues, but simply happens to agree on some points. This
then would have nothing to do with any true conviction about the
goodness, beauty or truth of the teachings of the Catholic Church but
rather pure political expediency.
The spokesperson’s statement also implies that, as has often been
posited by politicians of one stripe or another, because they hold and
support properly Catholic views on the social issues of race, poverty,
justice and peace that they should not be held accountable for their
rejection of the Catholic teachings on the more direct life issues such
as abortion, assisted suicide and embryonic stem cell research. This is
an inappropriate and unjust application of the U.S. Bishops statements
concerning a “consistent ethic of life.” This consistent ethic is
sometimes interpreted to mean that life issues as divergent as capital
punishment and abortion, or assisted suicide and the loss of life in the
war in Iraq, are equivalent. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Certainly in each of these instances, regrettably, a human life is at
stake but the difference is that only in the case of abortion or
assisted suicide do we deal with the direct and intentional taking of
the life of a completely innocent person.
A person may work very admirably to alleviate poverty but this does not
justify ignoring the greatest poverty which is the one which fails to
recognize the value of life. A person may work very admirably to promote
social justice but this does not justify turning a blind eye to the
greatest injustice openly operative in our society which is the unjust
deprivation of the pre-born of their most basic constitutional right,
the right to life.
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