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Old April 11th, 2006, 03:14 PM
NapoleonXIV NapoleonXIV is offline
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WI Catholic Church reverse stand on abortion

This is unlikely, but well within the realm of possibility. WI a new (or the present) Pope reverses the Church's stand on abortion? They now fully approve of all birth control and abortion until the time of full delivery, saying that the teaching is now clear that the soul does not enter the child while any part remains in the mother's body.

Does the Church now become the biggest promoter of condom use in Africa, to stop the AIDS epidemic?

Do large segments of the Catholics drop off, as some did even over such a seemingly small thing as requiring vernacular masses?

What about American politics? What happens to the pro-life movement when its biggest supporter is gone.
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Old April 11th, 2006, 03:28 PM
The Sandman The Sandman is offline
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Wow, that would be one hell of a schism in the Catholic Church. Exactly how much would have to change in regard to basic Catholic theology to allow abortion.

Who knows, maybe the Pope's Palace in Avignon sees some use again...
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Old April 12th, 2006, 03:41 AM
Wendell Wendell is offline
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It would not hppen in one step...

The Church would first approve most contraception, and then gradually advance into various forms and stages of abortion. On a side note, don't parts of the Church already endorse condom use, particularly in Africa?
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Old April 12th, 2006, 06:34 AM
MrP MrP is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Wendell
On a side note, don't parts of the Church already endorse condom use, particularly in Africa?
Not that I'm aware. They certainly don't have official sanction for it, if they do. They don't support it even in the West; they just turn a blind eye to the fact that the current generation merely has two or three children apiece rather than half a dozen.

To get the Church to opine that abortion os acceptable up till the time of delivery, you'd have to make the Church disregard the fact that premature babies survive. You'd have compassionate anti-abortionists - who fear that the child feels - against the Church, arguing that the child isn't worth it.

That is pretty ASB, I'm afraid.

But some level of support for abortion may turn up in the coming century. Not until the idea has absorbed most of the rest of society. The Church promoted the rhythm method, which can cause weak foetuses to be brought to term. One of my aunts has had contstant stomach (and other) problems since birth because she's one of these weaker foetuses. My Mum ran across a book once (in the '70s, IIRC) claiming that the Church knew of the scientific evidence and pushed the method anyway. I haven't noticed anyone recant yet, either.

Like Wendell says, this needs doing gradually. First contraception, then limited abortion. And, yes, whenever the Church does it, they'll lose support.

If Benedict, former head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith (!), were merely to suggest that the Church should support such a drastic form of abortion, he'd get locked up for having had a nervous breakdown.

I get literature from an irritated Catholic group based in Ireland. They regularly compare abortion statistics to the Holocaust. A lot of people agree. Some would go further.

So, no, neither this Pope nor the next could suggest this. But give it a century and you might get something similar but not the same.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 07:21 AM
Hendryk Hendryk is offline
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I agree with the general consensus that the Church's doctrinal evolution would have been gradual and slow. Now it depends on the date of the POD. Vatican II could be a possibility, many other "unquestionable" dogmas were corrected at the time, and birth control could have been one of them (so no "Humanae Vitae" encyclica by Paul VI in 1968). In the following decades the Catholic Church's position may have gradually got closer to that of, say, the Church of England's.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 08:05 AM
Shope Shope is offline
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If that POD happened, believing Catholics would stop believing that Jesus is God.


The Catholic Church has never changed a doctrine (it's true--there's doctrine and discipline; discipline can be changed, doctrine cannot be) and never will.

The Church is the Living Body of Christ and is guided by the Paraclete (Holy Spirit) that Jesus promised to send in order to guide His Church.

If the Catholic Church changes a doctrine, they will be saying that Jesus was a liar: if the doctrine is wrong, the Paraclete must not have been guiding the Church. If the Paraclete wasn't guiding the Church, Jesus is a liar. If Jesus is a liar, He can't be God.

If the Catholic Church changes any point of doctrine, they will be saying that Christianity was bullshit all along.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 08:36 AM
Hendryk Hendryk is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Shope
The Catholic Church has never changed a doctrine (it's true--there's doctrine and discipline; discipline can be changed, doctrine cannot be) and never will.
This may boil down to a question of definition, but it seems to me that the Church has changed elements of doctrine on several occasions already. Exemples include:
-- celibacy of the clergy
-- the existence of Purgatory
-- the role of the Virgin Mary
-- Papal infallibility
-- oecumenical relationships with other Christian churches and other religions
-- the political expression of Providence, and specifically human rights
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Old April 12th, 2006, 12:16 PM
Syphon Syphon is offline
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This would come down to theologicial disputes.

Isn't one of the bloody big rules, Thy should not Kill.

This is one reason I don't support abortion not so much the killing part as it allows the medical profession to define what alive is.

Is there any difference between killing the unborn or one that has just been born?
Neither can survive on their own with out help.

And the medical profession are discovering more about the unborn every day.

So if abortion is allowed so should euthanasia, of the infirm, the brain dead, those who are unable to help themselves through quadriplegia or other injuries or illness and those with mental disabilities.

Quite a can of worms that this would open.

I'm not particularly religious but this would be be a break in the major believes of the church and any pope who tried would not just be removed from the paplecy but probably excommunicated as well.

I don't believe that the world needs abortion as a convenient form of contraception there are many other less invasive methods now of preventing an unwanted pregnancy.

I'll get off my soap box know but in context to the thread I could see the church allowing contraceptives but abortion would mean the church disregarding one of the main commandments what ever number it is.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 01:21 PM
Mike Stearns Mike Stearns is offline
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I don't see how this could ever be possible. I could see the Church approving the use of the pill and condoms, as they are preemptive measures, but abortion? I doubt. I think that any pope who suggested it would probably be declared incompetant and removed.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 01:22 PM
Straha Straha is offline
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Have a series of liberal popes get in power instead of John Paul II and Benedict XVI
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Old April 12th, 2006, 01:30 PM
The Mists Of Time The Mists Of Time is offline
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There are three doctrines The Catholic Church holds about life that determine The Church's position on abortion and birth control.

1. The human soul is created and human life begins at the instant of conception. The fertilized human egg is an individual human being with a human soul at the instant of conception. This is why The Church opposes abortion and considers abortion to be murder.

2. Human life is sacred and must be respected and protected from the instant of conception until death. This is why The Catholic Church opposes abortion, euthanasia, and the death penalty.

3. Marriage is a Holy Sacrement sanctified by Jesus Christ and specially blessed by God. Of course, between husband and wife within marriage is the only place where sex can be allowed, and sex is a special gift of love between husband and wife showing their love for each other. Therefore the sex act must always be open to the possibility of life, sexual intercourse must always be open to the possibility that it will result in the creation of a new human soul. This is why The Catholic Church opposes artificial birth control. The only birth control The Church allows is to calculate when in her monthly cycle the wife can conceive and then you just don't have intercourse then. But the sex act (intercourse) must always be open to life.

For The Catholic Church to reverse its position on abortion, The Church would have to completely change or reverse its views and position on human life and on the sacredness of human life. Believe me, that is something The Catholic Church will never, never, never do.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 01:41 PM
Hendryk Hendryk is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Mists Of Time
For The Catholic Church to reverse its position on abortion, The Church would have to completely change or reverse its views and position on human life and on the sacredness of human life. Believe me, that is something The Catholic Church will never, never, never do.
I don't think it would have to "change" or "reverse" its position on the sacredness of human life per se; all that's needed is a modification of the doctrinal view of when human life begins. And that is no more difficult to arrange than other, more far-reaching about-faces in Church history.

Let's keep in mind that when it comes to such an issue as the death penalty, the position of the Church has evolved to quite a great extent. And anyway, if other Christian denominations have managed it, why not the Catholic Church?
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Old April 12th, 2006, 01:46 PM
Darkling Darkling is offline
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Karol Wojtyła gets run over by a bus (Poland and Eastern Europe probably get a worse time of it because of this though) and somebody with more liberal views on contraception becomes the architect of Paul VI's view on contraception and thus Church policy.

Somebody could also take the (Thomas More IIRC) line that the soul comes into the body when the skull is fully formed however that still won’t get eth church supporting later term abortions as they would probably re interpret it as the soul entering the body when the CNS is sufficiently formed for life.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 01:48 PM
MrP MrP is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Straha
Have a series of liberal popes get in power instead of John Paul II and Benedict XVI
'Fraid not, old boy. You'd need not so much liberal Popes as some who disregarded the idea of life beginning at conception. That's a fundamental underpinning of the Church's anti-contraception stance. Besides that, you'd need a sizeable chunk of the College of Cardinals to side with them. Not because we're a democracy, but to avoid schism or replacing the Pope(s).

Besides, the Church supporting abortion up till the very time of birth is just ASB. There were calls only a few months ago from medical chaps this side of the pond, wanting to restrict further the period in which abortions can be performed. This was because there was new evidence that foetuses were more aware than previously thought.

I fear, Napoleon, that while I agree that this scenario is unlikely, I don't agree that it's very possible either. One would need either someone deliberately attempting to subvert or destroy the Church or a sudden onset of madness. If this were in the pre-1900 forum, there might be fewer problems, because we could go right back to the start of Christianity. But post-1900? No. A global cataclysm might smack society about, screw up the Church's internal politics and eventually lead to support for abortion to prevent unhealthy children. But I can't imagine a society anything like ours having a scenario at all like this.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 02:03 PM
Tom_B Tom_B is offline
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Quickening

Mists of Time makes some good distinctions which sort of got blurred in the original formulation of this thread (which has a Barely Hidden Agenda).

I would point out that the Church in its early days (make that centuries) did not regard ensoulment as beginning at conception. Abortion before "quickening" was regarded as a lesser offense than abortion after quickening which was considered infanticide. St. Thomas held to the Aristotelian doctrine that the seed progresses from a plantlike to an animal and then to a human stage.

IIRC Justice Blackmun makes some reference to quickening in Roe vs Wade.

So it is ever so slightly possible that Benedict might eat some strange sushi one night and wake up next morning convinced that Aquinas was right after all (this is extra unlikely in his case because he is a ressourcement Augustinian who likes to downplay Thomism). So abortion very early in a pregancy is not murder. This might have some implications re the abortion pill. It still leaves the related but distinct issues of artifical contraception.

There is no way the CHurch would endorse the fatuous notion of ensoulment at birth.

Last edited by Tom_B; April 12th, 2006 at 02:10 PM..
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Old April 12th, 2006, 02:07 PM
MrP MrP is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom_B
Mists of Time makes some good distinctions which sort of got blurred in the original formulation of this thread (which has a Barely Hidden Agenda).

I would point out that the Church in its early days (make that centuries) did not regard ensoulment as beginning at conception. Abortion before "quickening" was regarded as a lesser offense than abortion after quickening which was considered infanticide. St. Thomas held to the Aristotelian doctrine that the seed progresses from a plantlike to an animal and then to a human stage.

IIRC Justice Blackmun makes some reference to quickening in Roe vs Wade.

So it is ever so slightly possible that Benedict might eat some strange sushi one night and wake up next morning and wake up next morning convinced that Aquinas was right after all (this is extra unlikely in his case because he is a ressourcement Augustinian who likes to downplay Thomism). So abortion very early in a pregancy is not murder. This might have some implications re the abortion pill. It still leaves the related but distinct issues of artifical contraception.

There is no way the CHurch would endorse the fatuous notion of ensoulment at birth.
Interesting points, Tom. The only quibble I have is that the Agenda isn't even a Barely Hidden one.
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Old April 12th, 2006, 07:50 PM
JLCook JLCook is offline
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Abortion is like the Holocaust?

Quote:
Originally Posted by MrP

I get literature from an irritated Catholic group based in Ireland. They regularly compare abortion statistics to the Holocaust. A lot of people agree. Some would go further.

I suppose that is what the Europeans would think was comparable.

Myself, I am an American, and I find that Abortion is much more comparable to the institution of Slavery in most respects than being comparable to the holocaust.

I'll admit that the Holocaust was a very virulent form of evil, but it's practitioners had to know that it WAS Evil.

Slaveowners on the otherhand, were of the opinion that they had the RIGHT to own slaves, just like people today feel that they have the RIGHT to kill unborn babies.

Back in 1855, you heard about the "Property rights of slaveowners", just as today you hear: "It's the RIGHT of a woman to do with her own body as she pleases" ( Someone explain to me how this doesn't automaticlly become a justification for Prostitution).
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Old April 12th, 2006, 08:07 PM
The Ubbergeek The Ubbergeek is offline
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It's more like the right to say 'f*** you' to a machist man who would tell a woman what to do with her boddy, like keeping the baby. A thing that religious conservatives have at head.
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Old April 13th, 2006, 01:48 AM
Wendell Wendell is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Mists Of Time
There are three doctrines The Catholic Church holds about life that determine The Church's position on abortion and birth control.

1. The human soul is created and human life begins at the instant of conception. The fertilized human egg is an individual human being with a human soul at the instant of conception. This is why The Church opposes abortion and considers abortion to be murder.

2. Human life is sacred and must be respected and protected from the instant of conception until death. This is why The Catholic Church opposes abortion, euthanasia, and the death penalty.

3. Marriage is a Holy Sacrement sanctified by Jesus Christ and specially blessed by God. Of course, between husband and wife within marriage is the only place where sex can be allowed, and sex is a special gift of love between husband and wife showing their love for each other. Therefore the sex act must always be open to the possibility of life, sexual intercourse must always be open to the possibility that it will result in the creation of a new human soul. This is why The Catholic Church opposes artificial birth control. The only birth control The Church allows is to calculate when in her monthly cycle the wife can conceive and then you just don't have intercourse then. But the sex act (intercourse) must always be open to life.

For The Catholic Church to reverse its position on abortion, The Church would have to completely change or reverse its views and position on human life and on the sacredness of human life. Believe me, that is something The Catholic Church will never, never, never do.
But an act of birth control instituted prior to the coitus would only prevent the conception, not thwart it. Granted, abortion would have that thwarting effect.
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Old April 13th, 2006, 01:51 AM
Wendell Wendell is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JLCook
I suppose that is what the Europeans would think was comparable.

Myself, I am an American, and I find that Abortion is much more comparable to the institution of Slavery in most respects than being comparable to the holocaust.

I'll admit that the Holocaust was a very virulent form of evil, but it's practitioners had to know that it WAS Evil.

Slaveowners on the otherhand, were of the opinion that they had the RIGHT to own slaves, just like people today feel that they have the RIGHT to kill unborn babies.

Back in 1855, you heard about the "Property rights of slaveowners", just as today you hear: "It's the RIGHT of a woman to do with her own body as she pleases" ( Someone explain to me how this doesn't automaticlly become a justification for Prostitution).
Worse, it could bar any legitimacy in the regulation of prostitution.
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