Pope Ends Debate over Nutrition and Hydration for Patients in
Vegetative State
ROME, March 20, 2004 (LifeSiteNews.com)
- In a speech today to the international congress on "Life- sustaining
treatments and the vegetative state", Pope John Paul II has made the
first definitive statement on nutrition and hydration, ending years of
debate among theologians. The Pope clarified that removal of nutrition
and hydration from patients in a vegetative state who are not
otherwise dying is gravely immoral.
Alex Schadenberg, of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition is in Rome at
the conference and told LifeSiteNews.com, that the issue has been
troubling for Catholic Church leaders for many years with different
bishops and theologians coming to different conclusions on the matter.
"The Bishops of Texas said a couple of years ago that nutrition and
hydration in the case of a patient in a vegetative state was optional,
however the Bishops of Pennsylvania said that nutrition and hydration
were mandatory, just as the Pope has affirmed today."
In his address the Pope taught "In particular, I want to emphasize
that the administration of water and food . . . always represents a
natural means of preservation of life, not a medical treatment." He
continued, "Its employment is therefore is to be considered, in
principle, proportionate and ordinary, and as such morally
obligatory."
Thus John Paul II confirmed that by commission or omission, euthanasia
is "a serious violation of the Law of God" and is the "morally
unacceptable deliberate killing of a human person."
Schadenberg told LifeSite that the Pope directly contradicted Catholic
theologians such as the famed Kevin O'Rourke who suggest that when a
person is no longer able to exercise higher functioning he ceases to
be a person. The Pope said, "I feel the duty to reaffirm with vigor
that the intrinsic value and the personal dignity of every human being
does not change." He said, "A man, even if seriously sick or unable to
exercise his higher functions, is and will be always a man, he will
never become a 'vegetable' or an 'animal'."
The Pope said cost cannot be a factor as human life is of supreme
value. Moreover considerations of "quality of life" and pain
management cannot factor into the equation when dealing with denying
nutrition and hydration since such considerations stem from a
principle of eugenics.
http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2004/mar/04032001.html
See the Pope's full address (in Italian) at:
http://www.vatican.va/news_services/bull
etin/news/14536.php?index=14536&lang=en
مار شربل للحياة
Saint Charbel for Life
Back to Home
page
E-mail us:
info@lilhayat.com
|