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This famous painting by Carl Christian Vogel von Vogelstein, 1788 - 1868, celebrates the gift of children, the gift of life.In some Church circles today, we are seeing a return to the vision of a “seamless garment” or “consistent ethic of life.” Advocates have noble intentions — they want to bring the Church’s moral wisdom and passion for justice to bear on a broad range of urgent issues. They recognize that the Church’s social witness must be founded on our common responsibility to defend the gift of human life at every stage and in every condition. In practice, however, this line of thinking can lead to a kind of moral relativism that renders serious social issues as more or less equivalent.

Setting priorities and frameworks for decision-making can become an arbitrary, sometimes partisan exercise in political calculation.

A broad desire to promote the integral development of the human person leads to obvious and crucial agenda items — abortion, euthanasia, capital punishment, global poverty, the related issues of migrants and refugees, and climate change (responsible stewardship of the earth). Each of these realities of our world represents an affront to human dignity and threatens the sustainability of social order.

The Hard Truth

But the hard truth is that not all injustices in the world are “equal.” We can understand this perhaps better about issues in the past than we can with issues in the present. For instance, we would never want to describe slavery as just one of several problems in 18th century and 19th century American life.

There are indeed “lesser” evils. But that means there are also “greater” evils — evils that are more serious than others and even some evils that are so grave that Christians are called to address them as a primary duty.

Abortion & Euthanasia Stand Alone

Among the evils and injustices in American life in 2016, abortion and euthanasia are different and stand alone. Each is a direct, personal attack on innocent and vulnerable human life. Abortion and euthanasia function in our society as what the Catechism of the Catholic Church calls “structures of sin” or “social sins.”

Abortion has become a part of mainstream health care and one of the “freedoms” that Americans presume or take for granted. Euthanasia or doctor-assisted suicide is fast gaining that same status

Our society’s elites tell us that abortion and euthanasia are private, deeply personal matters that ultimately should concern only the individuals involved. But evils and injustices committed behind closed doors are still evil and unjust and are never only personal — they have consequences and implications for our life together.

Pope Francis & The Culture of Death

As Pope Francis has said:It is not licit to eliminate a human life to solve a problem. … [It is] a sin against God the Creator: think hard about this.”

This is the great challenge for the Church’s social witness in our society, which seeks to address many of its problems through the elimination of human life — not only through abortion and assisted suicide, but also in the areas of the death penalty, human embryo research, and government mandated contraception.

It is this broader mentality — what Francis and previous Popes have called a “culture of death” — that the Church must confront. That is why abortion and euthanasia are not just two issues among many or only questions of individual conscience.

Abortion and euthanasia raise basic questions of human rights and social justice, questions of what kind of society and what kind of people we want to be. Do we really want to become a people who respond to human suffering by helping to kill the one who suffers? Do we really want to be a society where the lives of the weak are sacrificed for the comfort and benefit of those who are stronger?

Betrayal

That is why any approach that essentially tolerates abortion and euthanasia or puts these issues on a par with others, not only betrays the beautiful vision of the Church’s social teaching, but also weakens the credibility of the Church’s witness in our society.

So, in this culture, the Church must insist that abortion and euthanasia are grave and intrinsic evils — evils that are corrosive and corrupting, evils that are at the heart of other social injustices.

Abortion and euthanasia are “fundamental” social issues, because if the child in the womb has no right to be born, if the sick and the old have no right to be taken care of, then there is no solid foundation to defend anyone’s human rights and there is no foundation for peace and justice in society.

How can we claim to speak for the marginalized and disenfranchised if we are allowing millions of innocent children to be killed each year in the womb? If we cannot justify caring for the weakest and most innocent of God’s creatures, how can we call on our society to resist the excesses of nationalism and militarism, or confront global poverty or protect our common home in creation?

Let’s keep praying for one another and praying for our country.  And let’s ask Our Blessed Mother Mary to help us to live our faith and to build a society where every life is welcomed, cherished, and defended, especially those lives who need more care and attention, those lives that can be a burden to others. +JMJ+

[This article is written by Archbishop José H. Gomez of Los Angeles, and it appeared in The Tidings, the newspaper of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles on 3 June 2016. © Copyright. All rights reserved.]

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