INTRODUCTION
1. THE GOSPEL OF LIFE is at the heart of Jesus' message. Lovingly received
day after day by the Church, it is to be preached with dauntless fidelity
as "good news" to the people of every age and culture.
At the dawn of salvation, it is the Birth of a Child which is proclaimed
as joyful news: "I bring you good news of a great joy which will come
to all the people; for to you is born this day in the city of David a
Saviour, who is. Christ the Lord" (Lk 2:10-11). The source of
this "great joy" is the Birth of the Saviour; but Christmas also reveals
the full meaning of every human birth, and the joy which accompanies the
Birth of the Messiah is thus seen to be the foundation and fulfilment
of joy at every child born into the world (cf. Jn 16:21).
When he presents the heart of his redemptive mission, Jesus says: "I
came that they may have life, and have it abundantly" (Jn 10:10).
In truth, he is referring to that "new" and "eternal" life which consists
in communion with the Father, to which every person is freely called in
the Son by the power of the Sanctifying Spirit. It is precisely in this
"life" that all the aspects and stages of human life achieve their full
significance.
The incomparable worth of the human person
2. Man is called to a fullness of life which far exceeds the dimensions
of his earthly existence, because it consists in sharing the very life
of God. The loftiness of this supernatural vocation reveals the greatness
and the inestimable value of human life even in its temporal
phase. Life in time, in fact, is the fundamental condition, the initial
stage and an integral part of the entire unified process of human existence.
It is a process which, unexpectedly and undeservedly, is enlightened by
the promise and renewed by the gift of divine life, which will reach its
full realization in eternity (cf. 1 Jn 3:1-2). At the same time,
it is precisely this supernatural calling which highlights the relative
character of each individual's earthly life. After all, life on earth
is not an "ultimate" but a "penultimate" reality; even so, it remains
a sacred reality entrusted to us, to be preserved with a sense
of responsibility and brought to perfection in love and in the gift of
ourselves to God and to our brothers and sisters.
The Church knows that this Gospel of life, which she has received
from her Lord,[1] has a profound
and persuasive echo in the heart of every person--believer and non-believer
alike--because it marvellously fulfils all the heart's expectations while
infinitely surpassing them. Even in the midst of difficulties and uncertainties,
every person sincerely open to truth and goodness can, by the light of
reason and the hidden action of grace, come to recognize in the natural
law written in the heart (cf. Rom 2:14-15) the sacred value of
human life from its very beginning until its end, and can affirm the right
of every human being to have this primary good respected to the highest
degree. Upon the recognition of this right, every human community and
the political community itself are founded.
In a special way, believers in Christ must defend and promote this right,
aware as they are of the wonderful truth recalled by the Second Vatican
Council: "By his incarnation the Son of God has united himself in some
fashion with every human being".[2]
This saving event reveals to humanity not only the boundless love of God
who "so loved the world that he gave his only Son" (Jn 3:16),
but also the incomparable value of every human person.
The Church, faithfully contemplating the mystery of the Redemption, acknowledges
this value with ever new wonder.[3]
She feels called to proclaim to the people of all times this "Gospel",
the source of invincible hope and true joy for every period of history.
The Gospel of God's love for man, the Gospel of the dignity of the
person and the Gospel of life are a single and indivisible Gospel.
For this reason, man--living man--represents the primary and fundamental
way for the Church.[4]
New threats to human life
3. Every individual, precisely by reason of the mystery of the Word of
God who was made flesh (cf. Jn 1:14), is entrusted to the maternal
care of the Church. Therefore every threat to human dignity and life must
necessarily be felt in the Church's very heart; it cannot but affect her
at the core of her faith in the Redemptive Incarnation of the Son of God,
and engage her in her mission of proclaiming the Gospel of life
in all the world and to every creature (cf. Mk 16:15).
Today this proclamation is especially pressing because of the extraordinary
increase and gravity of threats to the life of individuals and peoples,
especially where life is weak and defenceless. In addition to the ancient
scourges of poverty, hunger, endemic diseases, violence and war, new threats
are emerging on an alarmingly vast scale.
The Second Vatican Council, in a passage which retains all its relevance
today, forcefully condemned a number of crimes and attacks against human
life. Thirty years later, taking up the words of the Council and with
the same forcefulness I repeat that condemnation in the name of the whole
Church, certain that I am interpreting the genuine sentiment of every
upright conscience: "Whatever is opposed to life itself, such as any type
of murder, genocide, abortion, euthanasia, or wilful self-destruction,
whatever violates the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation,
torments inflicted on body or mind, attempts to coerce the will itself;
whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary
imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women
and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where people
are treated as mere instruments of gain rather than as free and responsible
persons; all these things and others like them are infamies indeed. They
poison human society, and they do more harm to those who practise them
than to those who suffer from the injury. Moreover, they are a supreme
dishonour to the Creator".[5]
4. Unfortunately, this disturbing state of affairs, far from decreasing,
is expanding: with the new prospects opened up by scientific and technological
progress there arise new forms of attacks on the dignity of the human
being. At the same time a new cultural climate is developing and taking
hold, which gives crimes against life a new and--if possible--even
more sinister character, giving rise to further grave concern: broad
sectors of public opinion justify certain crimes against life in the name
of the rights of individual freedom, and on this basis they claim not
only exemption from punishment but even authorization by the State, so
that these things can be done with total freedom and indeed with the free
assistance of health-care systems.
All this is causing a profound change in the way in which life and relationships
between people are considered. The fact that legislation in many countries,
perhaps even departing from basic principles of their Constitutions, has
determined not to punish these practices against life, and even to make
them altogether legal, is both a disturbing symptom and a significant
cause of grave moral decline. Choices once unanimously considered criminal
and rejected by the common moral sense are gradually becoming socially
acceptable. Even certain sectors of the medical profession, which by its
calling is directed to the defence and care of human life, are increasingly
willing to carry out these acts against the person. In this way the very
nature of the medical profession is distorted and contradicted, and the
dignity of those who practise it is degraded. In such a cultural and legislative
situation, the serious demographic, social and family problems which weigh
upon many of the world's peoples and which require responsible and effective
attention from national and international bodies, are left open to false
and deceptive solutions, opposed to the truth and the good of persons
and nations.
The end result of this is tragic: not only is the fact of the destruction
of so many human lives still to be born or in their final stage extremely
grave and disturbing, but no less grave and disturbing is the fact that
conscience itself, darkened as it were by such widespread conditioning,
is finding it increasingly difficult to distinguish between good and evil
in what concerns the basic value of human life.
In communion with all the Bishops of the world
5. The Extraordinary Consistory of Cardinals held in Rome on
4-7 April 1991 was devoted to the problem of the threats to human life
in our day. After a thorough and detailed discussion of the problem and
of the challenges it poses to the entire human family and in particular
to the Christian community, the Cardinals unanimously asked me to reaffirm
with the authority of the Successor of Peter the value of human life and
its inviolability, in the light of present circumstances and attacks threatening
it today.
In response to this request, at Pentecost in 1991 I wrote a personal
letter to each of my Brother Bishops asking them, in the spirit of
episcopal collegiality, to offer me their cooperation in drawing up a
specific document.[6] I am
deeply grateful to all the Bishops who replied and provided me with valuable
facts, suggestions and proposals. In so doing they bore witness to their
unanimous desire to share in the doctrinal and pastoral mission of the
Church with regard to the Gospel of life.
In that same letter, written shortly after the celebration of the centenary
of the Encyclical Rerum Novarum, I drew everyone's attention
to this striking analogy: "Just as a century ago it was the working classes
which were oppressed in their fundamental rights, and the Church very
courageously came to their defence by proclaiming the sacrosanct rights
of the worker as a person, so now, when another category of persons is
being oppressed in the fundamental right to life, the Church feels in
duty bound to speak out with the same courage on behalf of those who have
no voice. Hers is always the evangelical cry in defence of the world's
poor, those who are threatened and despised and whose human rights are
violated".[7]
Today there exists a great multitude of weak and defenceless human beings,
unborn children in particular, whose fundamental right to life is being
trampled upon. If, at the end of the last century, the Church could not
be silent about the injustices of those times, still less can she be silent
today, when the social injustices of the past, unfortunately not yet overcome,
are being compounded in many regions of the world by still more grievous
forms of injustice and oppression, even if these are being presented as
elements of progress in view of a new world order.
The present Encyclical, the fruit of the cooperation of the Episcopate
of every country of the world, is therefore meant to be a precise
and vigorous reaffirmation of the value of human life and its inviolability,
and at the same time a pressing appeal addressed to each and every person,
in the name of God: respect, protect, love and serve life, every human
life! Only in this direction will you find justice, development,
true freedom, peace and happiness!
May these words reach all the sons and daughters of the Church! May they
reach all people of good will who are concerned for the good of every
man and woman and for the destiny of the whole of society!
6. In profound communion with all my brothers and sisters in the faith,
and inspired by genuine friendship towards all, I wish to meditate
upon once more and proclaim the Gospel of life, the splendour of
truth which enlightens consciences, the clear light which corrects the
darkened gaze, and the unfailing source of faithfulness and steadfastness
in facing the ever new challenges which we meet along our path.
As I recall the powerful experience of the Year of the Family, as if
to complete the Letter which I wrote "to every particular family
in every part of the world",[8]
I look with renewed confidence to every household and I pray that at every
level a general commitment to support the family will reappear and be
strengthened, so that today too--even amid so many difficulties and serious
threats--the family will always remain, in accordance with God's plan,
the "sanctuary of life".[9]
To all the members of the Church, the people of life and for life,
I make this most urgent appeal, that together we may offer this world
of ours new signs of hope, and work to ensure that justice and solidarity
will increase and that a new culture of human life will be affirmed, for
the building of an authentic civilization of truth and love.
CHAPTER I
THE VOICE OF YOUR BROTHER'S BLOOD
CRIES TO ME FROM THE GROUND
Present-Day Threats To Human Life
"Cain rose up against his brother Abel, and killed him" (Gen
4:8):
the roots of violence against life
7. "God did not make death, and he does not delight in the death of the
living. For he has created all things that they might exist...God
created man for incorruption, and made him in the image of his own
eternity, but through the devil's envy death entered the world,
and those who belong to his party experience it" (Wis 1:13-14;
2:23-24).
The Gospel of life, proclaimed in the beginning when man was
created in the image of God for a destiny of full and perfect life (cf.
Gen 2:7; Wis 9:2-3), is contradicted by the painful
experience of death which enters the world and casts its shadow
of meaninglessness over man's entire existence. Death came into the world
as a result of the devil's envy (cf. Gen 3:1,4-5) and the sin
of our first parents (cf. Gen 2:17, 3:17-19). And death entered
it in a violent way, through the killing of Abel by his brother Cain:
"And when they were in the field, Cain rose up against his brother Abel,
and killed him" (Gen 4:8).
This first murder is presented with singular eloquence in a page of the
Book of Genesis which has universal significance: it is a page rewritten
daily, with inexorable and degrading frequency, in the book of human history.
Let us re-read together this biblical account which, despite its archaic
structure and its extreme simplicity, has much to teach us.
"Now Abel was a keeper of sheep, and Cain a tiller of the ground.
In the course of time Cain brought to the Lord an offering of the fruit
of the ground, and Abel brought of the firstlings of his flock and of
their fat portions. And the Lord had regard for Abel and his offering,
but for Cain and his offering he had not regard. So Cain was very angry,
and his countenance fell. The Lord said to Cain, 'Why are you angry and
why has your countenance fallen? If you do well, will you not be accepted?
And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door; its desire is
for you, but you must master it'.
"Cain said to Abel his brother, 'Let us go out to the field'. And
when they were in the field, Cain rose up against his brother Abel, and
killed him. Then the Lord said to Cain, 'Where is Abel your brother?'
He said, I do not know; am I my brother's keeper?' And the Lord said,
'What have you done? The voice of your brother's blood is crying to me
from the ground. And now you are cursed from the ground, which has opened
its mouth to receive your brother's blood from your hand. When you till
the ground, it shall no longer yield to you its strength; you shall be
a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth'. Cain said to the Lord, 'My punishment
is greater than I can bear. Behold, you have driven me this day away from
the ground; and from your face I shall be hidden; and I shall be a fugitive
and a wanderer on the earth, and whoever finds me will slay me'. Then
the Lord said to him, 'Not so! If any one slays Cain, vengeance shall
be taken on him sevenfold'. And the Lord put a mark on Cain, lest any
who came upon him should kill him. Then Cain went away from the presence
of the Lord, and dwelt in the land of Nod, east of Eden" (Gen
4:2-16).
8. Cain was "very angry" and his countenance "fell" because "the Lord
had regard for Abel and his offering" (Gen 4:4-5). The biblical
text does not reveal the reason why God prefers Abel's sacrifice to Cain's.
It clearly shows however that God, although preferring Abel's gift, does
not interrupt his dialogue with Cain. He admonishes him, reminding
him of his freedom in the face of evil: man is in no way predestined
to evil. Certainly, like Adam, he is tempted by the malevolent force of
sin which, like a wild beast, lies in wait at the door of his heart, ready
to leap on its prey. But Cain remains free in the face of sin. He can
and must overcome it: "Its desire is for you, but you must master it"
(Gen 4:7).
Envy and anger have the upper hand over the Lord's warning,
and so Cain attacks his own brother and kills him. As we read in the Catechism
of the Catholic Church: "In the account of Abel's murder by his brother
Cain, Scripture reveals the presence of anger and envy in man, consequences
of original sin, from the beginning of human history. Man has become the
enemy of his fellow man"[10]
Brother kills brother. Like the first fratricide, every murder
is a violation of the "spiritual" kinship uniting mankind in
one great family,[11] in
which all share the same fundamental good: equal personal dignity. Not
infrequently the kinship "of flesh and blood" is also violated;
for example when threats to life arise within the relationship between
parents and children, such as happens in abortion or when, in the wider
context of family or kinship, euthanasia is encouraged or practised.
At the root of every act of violence against one's neighbour there is
a concession to the "thinking" of the evil one, the one who "was
a murderer from the beginning" (Jn 8:44). As the Apostle John
reminds us: "For this is the message which you have heard from the beginning,
that we should love one another, and not be like Cain who was of the evil
one and murdered his brother" (1 Jn 3:11-12). Cain's killing
of his brother at the very dawn of history is thus a sad witness of how
evil spreads with amazing speed: man's revolt against God in the earthly
paradise is followed by the deadly combat of man against man.
After the crime, God intervenes to avenge the one killed. Before
God, who asks him about the fate of Abel, Cain, instead of showing remorse
and apologizing, arrogantly eludes the question: "I do not know; am I
my brother's keeper?" (Gen 4:9). "I do not know": Cain
tries to cover up his crime with a lie. This was and still is the case,
when all kinds of ideologies try to justify and disguise the most atrocious
crimes against human beings. "Am I my brother's keeper?": Cain
does not wish to think about his brother and refuses to accept the responsibility
which every person has towards others. We cannot but think of today's
tendency for people to refuse to accept responsibility for their brothers
and sisters. Symptoms of this trend include the lack of solidarity towards
society's weakest members--such as the elderly, the infirm, immigrants,
children--and the indifference frequently found in relations between the
world's peoples even when basic values such as survival, freedom and peace
are involved.
9. But God cannot leave the crime unpunished: from the ground
on which it has been spilt, the blood of the one murdered demands that
God should render justice (cf. Gen 37:26; Is 26:21;
Ez 24:7-8). From this text the Church has taken the name of the
"sins which cry to God for justice", and, first among them, she has included
wilful murder.[12] For the
Jewish people, as for many peoples of antiquity, blood is the source of
life. Indeed "the blood is the life" (Dt 12:23), and life, especially
human life, belongs only to God: for this reason whoever attacks human
life, in some way attacks God himself.
Cain is cursed by God and also by the earth, which will deny
him its fruit (cf. Gen 4: 12). He is punished: he will
live in the wilderness and the desert. Murderous violence profoundly changes
man's environment. From being the "garden of Eden" (Gen 2:15),
a place of plenty, of harmonious interpersonal relationships and of friendship
with God, the earth becomes "the land of Nod" (Gen 4:16), a place
of scarcity, loneliness and separation from God. Cain will be "a fugitive
and a wanderer on the earth" (Gen 4:14): uncertainty and restlessness
will follow him forever.
And yet God, who is always merciful even when he punishes, "put a
mark on Cain, lest any who came upon him should kill him" (Gen
4:15). He thus gave him a distinctive sign, not to condemn him to the
hatred of others, but to protect and defend him from those wishing to
kill him, even out of a desire to avenge Abel's death. Not even a
murderer loses his personal dignity, and God himself pledges to guarantee
this. And it is precisely here that the paradoxical mystery of the
merciful justice of God is shown forth. As Saint Ambrose writes:
"Once the crime is admitted at the very inception of this sinful act of
parricide, then the divine law of God's mercy should be immediately extended.
If punishment is forthwith inflicted on the accused, then men in the exercise
of justice would in no way observe patience and moderation, but would
straightaway condemn the defendant to punishment.... God drove Cain out
of his presence and sent him into exile far away from his native land,
so that he passed from a life of human kindness to one which was more
akin to the rude existence of a wild beast. God, who preferred the correction
rather than the death of a sinner, did not desire that a homicide be punished
by the exaction of another act of homicide".[13]
"What have you done?" (Gen 4:10): the eclipse of
the value of life
10. The Lord said to Cain: "What have you done? The voice of your brother's
blood is crying to me from the ground" (Gen 4:10). The voice
of the blood shed by men continues to cry out, from generation to
generation, in ever new and different ways.
The Lord's question: "What have you done?", which Cain cannot escape,
is addressed also to the people of today, to make them realize the extent
and gravity of the attacks against life which continue to mark human history;
to make them discover what causes these attacks and feeds them; and to
make them ponder seriously the consequences which derive from these attacks
for the existence of individuals and peoples.
Some threats come from nature itself, but they are made worse by the
culpable indifference and negligence of those who could in some cases
remedy them. Others are the result of situations of violence, hatred and
conflicting interests, which lead people to attack others through murder,
war, slaughter and genocide.
And how can we fail to consider the violence against life done to millions
of human beings, especially children, who are forced into poverty, malnutrition
and hunger because of an unjust distribution of resources between peoples
and between social classes? And what of the violence inherent not only
in wars as such but in the scandalous arms trade, which spawns the many
armed conflicts which stain our world with blood? What of the spreading
of death caused by reckless tampering with the world's ecological balance,
by the criminal spread of drugs, or by the promotion of certain kinds
of sexual activity which, besides being morally unacceptable, also involve
grave risks to life? It is impossible to catalogue completely the vast
array of threats to human life, so many are the forms, whether explicit
or hidden, in which they appear today!
11. Here though we shall concentrate particular attention on another
category of attacks, affecting life in its earliest and in its final
stages, attacks which present new characteristics with respect to
the past and which raise questions of extraordinary seriousness.
It is not only that in generalized opinion these attacks tend no longer
to be considered as "crimes"; paradoxically they assume the nature of
"rights", to the point that the State is called upon to give them legal
recognition and to make them available through the free services of health-care
personnel. Such attacks strike human life at the time of its greatest
frailty, when it lacks any means of self-defence. Even more serious is
the fact that, most often, those attacks are carried out in the very heart
of and with the complicity of the family--the family which by its nature
is called to be the "sanctuary of life".
How did such a situation come about? Many different factors have to be
taken into account. In the background there is the profound crisis of
culture, which generates scepticism in relation to the very foundations
of knowledge and ethics, and which makes it increasingly difficult to
grasp clearly the meaning of what man is, the meaning of his rights and
his duties. Then there are all kinds of existential and interpersonal
difficulties, made worse by the complexity of a society in which individuals,
couples and families are often left alone with their problems. There are
situations of acute poverty, anxiety or frustration in which the struggle
to make ends meet, the presence of unbearable pain, or instances of violence,
especially against women, make the choice to defend and promote life so
demanding as sometimes to reach the point of heroism.
All this explains, at least in part, how the value of life can today
undergo a kind of "eclipse", even though conscience does not cease to
point to it as a sacred and inviolable value, as is evident in the tendency
to disguise certain crimes against life in its early or final stages by
using innocuous medical terms which distract attention from the fact that
what is involved is the right to life of an actual human person.
12. In fact, while the climate of widespread moral uncertainty can in
some way be explained by the multiplicity and gravity of today's social
problems, and these can sometimes mitigate the subjective responsibility
of individuals, it is no less true that we are confronted by an even larger
reality, which can be described as a <veritable structure of sin>.
This reality is characterized by the emergence of a culture which denies
solidarity and in many cases takes the form of a veritable "culture of
death". This culture is actively fostered by powerful cultural, economic
and political currents which encourage an idea of society excessively
concerned with efficiency. Looking at the situation from this point of
view, it is possible to speak in a certain sense of a war of the powerful
against the weak: a life which would require greater acceptance,
love and care is considered useless, or held to be an intolerable burden,
and is therefore rejected in one way or another. A person who, because
of illness, handicap or, more simply, just by existing, compromises the
well-being or life-style of those who are more favoured tends to be looked
upon as an enemy to be resisted or eliminated. In this way a kind of "conspiracy
against life" is unleashed. This conspiracy involves not only individuals
in their personal, family or group relationships, but goes far beyond,
to the point of damaging and distorting, at the international level, relations
between peoples and States.
13. In order to facilitate the spread of abortion, enormous
sums of money have been invested and continue to be invested in the production
of pharmaceutical products which make it possible to kill the fetus in
the mother's womb without recourse to medical assistance. On this point,
scientific research itself seems to be almost exclusively preoccupied
with developing products which are ever more simple and effective in suppressing
life and which at the same time are capable of removing abortion from
any kind of control or social responsibility.
It is frequently asserted that contraception, if made safe and
available to all, is the most effective remedy against abortion. The Catholic
Church is then accused of actually promoting abortion, because she obstinately
continues to teach the moral unlawfulness of contraception. When looked
at carefully, this objection is clearly unfounded. It may be that many
people use contraception with a view to excluding the subsequent temptation
of abortion. But the negative values inherent in the "contraceptive mentality"--which
is very different from responsible parenthood, lived in respect for the
full truth of the conjugal act--are such that they in fact strengthen
this temptation when an unwanted life is conceived. Indeed, the pro-abortion
culture is especially strong precisely where the Church's teaching on
contraception is rejected. Certainly, from the moral point of view contraception
and abortion are specifically different evils: the former contradicts
the full truth of the sexual act as the proper expression of conjugal
love, while the latter destroys the life of a human being; the former
is opposed to the virtue of chastity in marriage, the latter is opposed
to the virtue of justice and directly violates the divine commandment
"You shall not kill".
But despite their differences of nature and moral gravity, contraception
and abortion are often closely connected, as fruits of the same tree.
It is true that in many cases contraception and even abortion are practised
under the pressure of real-life difficulties, which nonetheless can never
exonerate from striving to observe God's law fully. Still, in very many
other instances such practices are rooted in a hedonistic mentality unwilling
to accept responsibility in matters of sexuality, and they imply a self-centered
concept of freedom, which regards procreation as an obstacle to personal
fulfilment. The life which could result from a sexual encounter thus becomes
an enemy to be avoided at all costs, and abortion becomes the only possible
decisive response to failed contraception.
The close connection which exists, in mentality, between the practice
of contraception and that of abortion is becoming increasingly obvious.
It is being demonstrated in an alarming way by the development of chemical
products, intrauterine devices and vaccines which, distributed with the
same ease as contraceptives, really act as abortifacients in the very
early stages of the development of the life of the new human being.
14. The various techniques of artificial reproduction, which
would seem to be at the service of life and which are frequently used
with this intention, actually open the door to new threats against life.
Apart from the fact that they are morally unacceptable, since they separate
procreation from the fully human context of the conjugal act,[14]
these techniques have a high rate of failure: not just failure in relation
to fertilization but with regard to the subsequent development of the
embryo, which is exposed to the risk of death, generally within a very
short space of time. Furthermore, the number of embryos produced is often
greater than that needed for implantation in the woman's womb, and these
so-called "spare embryos" are then destroyed or used for research which,
under the pretext of scientific or medical progress, in fact reduces human
life to the level of simple "biological material" to be freely disposed
of.
Prenatal diagnosis, which presents no moral objections if carried
out in order to identify the medical treatment which may be needed by
the child in the womb, all too often becomes an opportunity for proposing
and procuring an abortion. This is eugenic abortion, justified in public
opinion on the basis of a mentality--mistakenly held to be consistent
with the demands of "therapeutic interventions"--which accepts life only
under certain conditions and rejects it when it is affected by any limitation,
handicap or illness.
Following this same logic, the point has been reached where the most
basic care, even nourishment, is denied to babies born with serious handicaps
or illnesses. The contemporary scene, moreover, is becoming even more
alarming by reason of the proposals, advanced here and there, to justify
even infanticide, following the same arguments used to justify
the right to abortion. In this way, we revert to a state of barbarism
which one hoped had been left behind forever.
15. Threats which are no less serious hang over the incurably ill
and the dying. In a social and cultural context which makes it
more difficult to face and accept suffering, the temptation becomes
all the greater to resolve the problem of suffering by eliminating
it at the root, by hastening death so that it occurs at the moment
considered most suitable.
Various considerations usually contribute to such a decision, all of
which converge in the same terrible outcome. In the sick person the sense
of anguish, of severe discomfort, and even of desperation brought on by
intense and prolonged suffering can be a decisive factor. Such a situation
can threaten the already fragile equilibrium of an individual's personal
and family life, with the result that, on the one hand, the sick person,
despite the help of increasingly effective medical and social assistance,
risks feeling overwhelmed by his or her own frailty; and on the other
hand, those close to the sick person can be moved by an understandable
even if misplaced compassion. All this is aggravated by a cultural climate
which fails to perceive any meaning or value in suffering, but rather
considers suffering the epitome of evil, to be eliminated at all costs.
This is especially the case in the absence of a religious outlook which
could help to provide a positive understanding of the mystery of suffering.
On a more general level, there exists in contemporary culture a certain
Promethean attitude which leads people to think that they can control
life and death by taking the decisions about them into their own hands.
What really happens in this case is that the individual is overcome and
crushed by a death deprived of any prospect of meaning or hope. We see
a tragic expression of all this in the spread of euthanasia--disguised
and surreptitious, or practised openly and even legally. As well as for
reasons of a misguided pity at the sight of the patient's suffering, euthanasia
is sometimes justified by the utilitarian motive of avoiding costs which
bring no return and which weigh heavily on society. Thus it is proposed
to eliminate malformed babies, the severely handicapped, the disabled,
the elderly, especially when they are not self-sufficient, and the terminally
ill. Nor can we remain silent in the face of other more furtive, but no
less serious and real, forms of euthanasia. These could occur for example
when, in order to increase the availability of organs for transplants,
organs are removed without respecting objective and adequate criteria
which verify the death of the donor.
16. Another present-day phenomenon, frequently used to justify
threats and attacks against life, is the demographic question.
This question arises in different ways in different parts of the world.
In the rich and developed countries there is a disturbing decline or collapse
of the birthrate. The poorer countries, on the other hand, generally have
a high rate of population growth, difficult to sustain in the context
of low economic and social development, and especially where there is
extreme underdevelopment. In the face of overpopulation in the poorer
countries, instead of forms of global intervention at the international
level--serious family and social policies, programmes of cultural development
and of fair production and distribution of resources--anti-birth policies
continue to be enacted.
Contraception, sterilization and abortion are certainly part of the reason
why in some cases there is a sharp decline in the birthrate. It is not
difficult to be tempted to use the same methods and attacks against life
also where there is a situation of "demographic explosion".
The Pharaoh of old, haunted by the presence and increase of the children
of Israel, submitted them to every kind of oppression and ordered that
every male child born of the Hebrew women was to be killed (cf. Ex
1:7-22). Today not a few of the powerful of the earth act in the same
way. They too are haunted by the current demographic growth, and fear
that the most prolific and poorest peoples represent a threat for the
well-being and peace of their own countries. Consequently, rather than
wishing to face and solve these serious problems with respect for the
dignity of individuals and families and for every person's inviolable
right to life, they prefer to promote and impose by whatever means a massive
programme of birth control. Even the economic help which they would be
ready to give is unjustly made conditional on the acceptance of an anti-birth
policy.
17. Humanity today offers us a truly alarming spectacle, if we consider
not only how extensively attacks on life are spreading but also their
unheard-of numerical proportion, and the fact that they receive widespread
and powerful support from a broad consensus on the part of society, from
widespread legal approval and the involvement of certain sectors of health-care
personnel.
As I emphatically stated at Denver, on the occasion of the Eighth World
Youth Day, "with time the threats against life have not grown weaker.
They are taking on vast proportions. They are not only threats coming
from the outside, from the forces of nature or the 'Cains' who kill the
'Abels'; no, they are scientifically and systematically programmed
threats. The twentieth century will have been an era of massive attacks
on life, an endless series of wars and a continual taking of innocent
human life. False prophets and false teachers have had the greatest success".[15]
Aside from intentions, which can be varied and perhaps can seem convincing
at times, especially if presented in the name of solidarity, we are in
fact faced by an objective "conspiracy against life", involving
even international Institutions, engaged in encouraging and carrying out
actual campaigns to make contraception, sterilization and abortion widely
available. Nor can it be denied that the mass media are often implicated
in this conspiracy, by lending credit to that culture which presents recourse
to contraception, sterilization, abortion and even euthanasia as a mark
of progress and a victory of freedom, while depicting as enemies of freedom
and progress those positions which are unreservedly pro-life.
"Am I my brother's keeper?" (Gen 4:9): a perverse
idea of freedom
18. The panorama described needs to be understood not only in terms of
the phenomena of death which characterize it but also in the variety
of causes which determine it. The Lord's question: "What have you
done?" (Gen 4:10), seems almost like an invitation addressed
to Cain to go beyond the material dimension of his murderous gesture,
in order to recognize in it all the gravity of the motives which
occasioned it and the consequences which result from it.
Decisions that go against life sometimes arise from difficult or even
tragic situations of profound suffering, loneliness, a total lack of economic
prospects, depression and anxiety about the future. Such circumstances
can mitigate even to a notable degree subjective responsibility and the
consequent culpability of those who make these choices which in themselves
are evil. But today the problem goes far beyond the necessary recognition
of these personal situations. It is a problem which exists at the cultural,
social and political level, where it reveals its more sinister and disturbing
aspect in the tendency, ever more widely shared, to interpret the above
crimes against life as legitimate expressions of individual freedom,
to be acknowledged and protected as actual rights.
In this way, and with tragic consequences, a long historical process
is reaching a turning-point. The process which once led to discovering
the idea of "human rights"-- rights inherent in every person and prior
to any Constitution and State legislation--is today marked by a surprising
contradiction. Precisely in an age when the inviolable rights of
the person are solemnly proclaimed and the value of life is publicly affirmed,
the very right to life is being denied or trampled upon, especially at
the more significant moments of existence: the moment of birth and the
moment of death.
On the one hand, the various declarations of human rights and the many
initiatives inspired by these declarations show that at the global level
there is a growing moral sensitivity, more alert to acknowledging the
value and dignity of every individual as a human being, without any distinction
of race, nationality, religion, political opinion or social class.
On the other hand, these noble proclamations are unfortunately contradicted
by a tragic repudiation of them in practice. This denial is still more
distressing, indeed more scandalous, precisely because it is occurring
in a society which makes the affirmation and protection of human rights
its primary objective and its boast. How can these repeated affirmations
of principle be reconciled with the continual increase and widespread
justification of attacks on human life? How can we reconcile these declarations
with the refusal to accept those who are weak and needy, or elderly, or
those who have just been conceived? These attacks go directly against
respect for life and they represent a direct threat to the entire
culture of human rights. It is a threat capable, in the end, of jeopardizing
the very meaning of democratic coexistence: rather than societies
of "people living together", our cities risk becoming societies of people
who are rejected, marginalized, uprooted and oppressed. If we then
look at the wider worldwide perspective, how can we fail to think that
the very affirmation of the rights of individuals and peoples made in
distinguished international assemblies is a merely futile exercise of
rhetoric, if we fail to unmask the selfishness of the rich countries which
exclude poorer countries from access to development or make such access
dependent on arbitrary prohibitions against procreation, setting up an
opposition between development and man himself? Should we not question
the very economic models often adopted by States which, also as a result
of international pressures and forms of conditioning, cause and aggravate
situations of injustice and violence in which the life of whole peoples
is degraded and trampled upon?
19. What are the roots of this remarkable contradiction?
We can find them in an overall assessment of a cultural and moral nature,
beginning with the mentality which carries the concept of subjectivity
to an extreme and even distorts it, and recognizes as a subject of
rights only the person who enjoys full or at least incipient autonomy
and who emerges from a state of total dependence on others. But how can
we reconcile this approach with the exaltation of man as a being who
is "not to be used"? The theory of human rights is based precisely
on the affirmation that the human person, unlike animals and things, cannot
be subjected to domination by others. We must also mention the mentality
which tends to equate personal dignity with the capacity for verbal
and explicit, or at least perceptible, communication. It
is clear that on the basis of these presuppositions there is no place
in the world for anyone who, like the unborn or the dying, is a weak element
in the social structure, or for anyone who appears completely at the mercy
of others and radically dependent on them, and can only communicate through
the silent language of a profound sharing of affection. In this case it
is force which becomes the criterion for choice and action in interpersonal
relations and in social life. But this is the exact opposite of what a
State ruled by law, as a community in which the "reasons of force" are
replaced by the "force of reason", historically intended to affirm.
At another level, the roots of the contradiction between the solemn affirmation
of human rights and their tragic denial in practice lies in a notion
of freedom which exalts the isolated individual in an absolute way,
and gives no place to solidarity, to openness to others and service of
them. While it is true that the taking of life not yet born or in its
final stages is sometimes marked by a mistaken sense of altruism and human
compassion, it cannot be denied that such a culture of death, taken as
a whole, betrays a completely individualistic concept of freedom, which
ends up by becoming the freedom of "the strong" against the weak who have
no choice but to submit.
It is precisely in this sense that Cain's answer to the Lord's question:
"Where is Abel your brother?" can be interpreted: "I do not know; am
I my brother's keeper?" (Gen 4:9). Yes, every man is his
"brother's keeper", because God entrusts us to one another. And it is
also in view of this entrusting that God gives everyone freedom, a freedom
which possesses an inherently relational dimension. This is a
great gift of the Creator, placed as it is at the service of the person
and of his fulfilment through the gift of self and openness to others;
but when freedom is made absolute in an individualistic way, it is emptied
of its original content, and its very meaning and dignity are contradicted.
There is an even more profound aspect which needs to be emphasized: freedom
negates and destroys itself, and becomes a factor leading to the destruction
of others, when it no longer recognizes and respects its essential
link with the truth. When freedom, out of a desire to emancipate
itself from all forms of tradition and authority, shuts out even the most
obvious evidence of an objective and universal truth, which is the foundation
of personal and social life, then the person ends up by no longer taking
as the sole and indisputable point of reference for his own choices the
truth about good and evil, but only his subjective and changeable opinion
or, indeed, his selfish interest and whim.
20. This view of freedom leads to a serious distortion of life in
society. If the promotion of the self is understood in terms of absolute
autonomy, people inevitably reach the point of rejecting one another.
Everyone else is considered an enemy from whom one has to defend oneself.
Thus society becomes a mass of individuals placed side by side, but without
any mutual bonds. Each one wishes to assert himself independently of the
other and in fact intends to make his own interests prevail. Still, in
the face of other people's analogous interests, some kind of compromise
must be found, if one wants a society in which the maximum possible freedom
is guaranteed to each individual. In this way, any reference to common
values and to a truth absolutely binding on everyone is lost, and social
life ventures on to the shifting sands of complete relativism. At that
point, everything is negotiable, everything is open to bargaining:
even the first of the fundamental rights, the right to life.
This is what is happening also at the level of politics and government:
the original and inalienable right to life is questioned or denied on
the basis of a parliamentary vote or the will of one part of the people--even
if it is the majority. This is the sinister result of a relativism which
reigns unopposed: the "right" ceases to be such, because it is no longer
firmly founded on the inviolable dignity of the person, but is made subject
to the will of the stronger part. In this way democracy, contradicting
its own principles, effectively moves towards a form of totalitarianism.
The State is no longer the "common home" where all can live together on
the basis of principles of fundamental equality, but is transformed into
a tyrant State, which arrogates to itself the right to dispose
of the life of the weakest and most defenceless members, from the unborn
child to the elderly, in the name of a public interest which is really
nothing but the interest of one part. The appearance of the strictest
respect for legality is maintained, at least when the laws permitting
abortion and euthanasia are the result of a ballot in accordance with
what are generally seen as the rules of democracy. Really, what we have
here is only the tragic caricature of legality; the democratic ideal,
which is only truly such when it acknowledges and safeguards the dignity
of every human person, is betrayed in its very foundations: "How
is it still possible to speak of the dignity of every human person when
the killing of the weakest and most innocent is permitted? In the name
of what justice is the most unjust of discriminations practised: some
individuals are held to be deserving of defence and others are denied
that dignity?"[16] When this
happens, the process leading to the breakdown of a genuinely human co-existence
and the disintegration of the State itself has already begun.
To claim the right to abortion, infanticide and euthanasia, and to recognize
that right in law, means to attribute to human freedom a perverse
and evil significance: that of an absolute power over others
and against others. This is the death of true freedom: "Truly, truly,
I say to you, every one who commits sin is a slave to sin" (Jn
8:34).
"And from your face I shall be hidden" (Gen 4:14): the
eclipse of the sense of God and of man
21. In seeking the deepest roots of the struggle between the "culture
of life" and the "culture of death", we cannot restrict ourselves to the
perverse idea of freedom mentioned above. We have to go to the heart of
the tragedy being experienced by modern man: the eclipse of the sense
of God and of man, typical of a social and cultural climate dominated
by secularism, which, with its ubiquitous tentacles, succeeds at times
in putting Christian communities themselves to the test. Those who allow
themselves to be influenced by this climate easily fall into a sad vicious
circle: when the sense of God is lost, there is also a tendency to
lose the sense of man, of his dignity and his life; in turn, the
systematic violation of the moral law, especially in the serious matter
of respect for human life and its dignity, produces a kind of progressive
darkening of the capacity to discern God's living and saving presence.
Once again we can gain insight from the story of Abel's murder by his
brother. After the curse imposed on him by God, Cain thus addresses the
Lord: "My punishment is greater than I can bear. Behold, you have driven
me this day away from the ground; and from your face I shall be hidden;
and I shall be a fugitive and wanderer on the earth, and whoever finds
me will slay me" (Gen 4:13-14). Cain is convinced that his sin
will not obtain pardon from the Lord and that his inescapable destiny
will be to have to "hide his face" from him. If Cain is capable of confessing
that his fault is "greater than he can bear", it is because he is conscious
of being in the presence of God and before God's just judgment. It is
really only before the Lord that man can admit his sin and recognize its
full seriousness. Such was the experience of David who, after "having
committed evil in the sight of the Lord", and being rebuked by the Prophet
Nathan, exclaimed: "My offences truly I know them; my sin is always before
me. Against you, you alone, have I sinned; what is evil in your sight
I have done" (Ps 51:5-6).
22. Consequently, when the sense of God is lost, the sense of man is
also threatened and poisoned, as the Second Vatican Council concisely
states: "Without the Creator the creature would disappear . . . But when
God is forgotten the creature itself grows unintelligible".[17]
Man is no longer able to see himself as "mysteriously different" from
other earthly creatures; he regards himself merely as one more living
being, as an organism which, at most, has reached a very high stage of
perfection. Enclosed in the narrow horizon of his physical nature, he
is somehow reduced to being "a thing", and no longer grasps the "transcendent"
character of his "existence as man". He no longer considers life as a
splendid gift of God, something "sacred" entrusted to his responsibility
and thus also to his loving care and "veneration". Life itself becomes
a mere "thing", which man claims as his exclusive property, completely
subject to his control and manipulation.
Thus, in relation to life at birth or at death, man is no longer capable
of posing the question of the truest meaning of his own existence, nor
can he assimilate with genuine freedom these crucial moments of his own
history. He is concerned only with "doing", and, using all kinds of technology,
he busies himself with programming, controlling and dominating birth and
death. Birth and death, instead of being primary experiences demanding
to be "lived", become things to be merely "possessed" or "rejected".
Moreover, once all reference to God has been removed, it is not surprising
that the meaning of everything else becomes profoundly distorted. Nature
itself, from being "mater" (mother), is now reduced to being
"matter", and is subjected to every kind of manipulation. This is the
direction in which a certain technical and scientific way of thinking,
prevalent in present-day culture, appears to be leading when it rejects
the very idea that there is a truth of creation which must be acknowledged,
or a plan of God for life which must be respected. Something similar happens
when concern about the consequences of such a "freedom without law" leads
some people to the opposite position of a "law without freedom", as for
example in ideologies which consider it unlawful to interfere in any way
with nature, practically "divinizing" it. Again, this is a misunderstanding
of nature's dependence on the plan of the Creator. Thus it is clear that
the loss of contact with God's wise design is the deepest root of modern
man's confusion, both when this loss leads to a freedom without rules
and when it leaves man in "fear" of his freedom.
By living "as if God did not exist", man not only loses sight of the
mystery of God, but also of the mystery of the world and the mystery of
his own being.
23. The eclipse of the sense of God and of man inevitably leads to a
practical materialism, which breeds individualism, utilitarianism
and hedonism. Here too we see the permanent validity of the words of the
Apostle: "And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave
them up to a base mind and to improper conduct" (Rom 1:28). The
values of being are replaced by those of having. The
only goal which counts is the pursuit of one's own material well-being.
The so-called "quality of life" is interpreted primarily or exclusively
as economic efficiency, inordinate consumerism, physical beauty and pleasure,
to the neglect of the more profound dimensions--interpersonal, spiritual
and religious--of existence.
In such a context suffering, an inescapable burden of human
existence but also a factor of possible personal growth, is "censored",
rejected as useless, indeed opposed as an evil, always and in every way
to be avoided. When it cannot be avoided and the prospect of even some
future well-being vanishes, then life appears to have lost all meaning
and the temptation grows in man to claim the right to suppress it.
Within this same cultural climate, the body is no longer perceived
as a properly personal reality, a sign and place of relations with others,
with God and with the world. It is reduced to pure materiality: it is
simply a complex of organs, functions and energies to be used according
to the sole criteria of pleasure and efficiency. Consequently, sexuality
too is depersonalized and exploited: from being the sign, place and language
of love, that is, of the gift of self and acceptance of another, in all
the other's richness as a person, it increasingly becomes the occasion
and instrument for self-assertion and the selfish satisfaction of personal
desires and instincts. Thus the original import of human sexuality is
distorted and falsified, and the two meanings, unitive and procreative,
inherent in the very nature of the conjugal act, are artificially separated:
in this way the marriage union is betrayed and its fruitfulness is subjected
to the caprice of the couple. Procreation then becomes the "enemy"
to be avoided in sexual activity: if it is welcomed, this is only because
it expresses a desire, or indeed the intention, to have a child "at all
costs", and not because it signifies the complete acceptance of the other
and therefore an openness to the richness of life which the child represents.
In the materialistic perspective described so far, interpersonal
relations are seriously impoverished. The first to be harmed are
women, children, the sick or suffering, and the elderly. The criterion
of personal dignity--which demands respect, generosity and service--is
replaced by the criterion of efficiency, functionality and usefulness:
others are considered not for what they "are", but for what they "have,
do and produce". This is the supremacy of the strong over the weak.
24. It is at the heart of the moral conscience that the eclipse
of the sense of God and of man, with all its various and deadly consequences
for life, is taking place. It is a question, above all, of the individual
conscience, as it stands before God in its singleness and uniqueness.[18]
But it is also a question, in a certain sense, of the "moral conscience"
of society: in a way it too is responsible, not only because
it tolerates or fosters behaviour contrary to life, but also because it
encourages the "culture of death", creating and consolidating actual "structures
of sin" which go against life. The moral conscience, both individual and
social, is today subjected, also as a result of the penetrating influence
of the media, to an extremely serious and mortal danger: that
of confusion between good and evil, precisely in relation to
the fundamental right to life. A large part of contemporary society looks
sadly like that humanity which Paul describes in his Letter to the Romans.
It is composed "of men who by their wickedness suppress the truth" (1:18):
having denied God and believing that they can build the earthly city without
him, "they became futile in their thinking" so that "their senseless minds
were darkened" (1:21); "claiming to be wise, they became fools" (1:22),
carrying out works deserving of death, and "they not only do them but
approve those who practise them" (1:32). When conscience, this bright
lamp of the soul (cf. Mt 6:22-23), calls "evil good and good
evil" (Is 5:20), it is already on the path to the most alarming
corruption and the darkest moral blindness.
And yet all the conditioning and efforts to enforce silence fail to stifle
the voice of the Lord echoing in the conscience of every individual: it
is always from this intimate sanctuary of the conscience that a new journey
of love, openness and service to human life can begin.
"You have come to the sprinkled blood" (cf. Heb 12:22,
24): signs of hope and invitation to commitment
25. "The voice of your brother's blood is crying to me from the ground"
(Gen 4:10). It is not only the voice of the blood of Abel, the
first innocent man to be murdered, which cries to God, the source and
defender of life. The blood of every other human being who has been killed
since Abel is also a voice raised to the Lord. In an absolutely singular
way, as the author of the Letter to the Hebrews reminds us, the voice
of the blood of Christ, of whom Abel in his innocence is a prophetic
figure, cries out to God: "You have come to Mount Zion and to the city
of the living God ... to the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled
blood that speaks more graciously than the blood of Abel" (12:22, 24).
It is the sprinkled blood. A symbol and prophetic sign of it
had been the blood of the sacrifices of the Old Covenant, whereby God
expressed his will to communicate his own life to men, purifying and consecrating
them (cf. Ex 24:8; Lev 17:11). Now all of this is fulfilled
and comes true in Christ: his is the sprinkled blood which redeems, purifies
and saves; it is the blood of the Mediator of the New Covenant "poured
out for many for the forgiveness of sins" (Mt 26:28). This blood,
which flows from the pierced side of Christ on the Cross (cf. Jn
19:34), "speaks more graciously" than the blood of Abel; indeed, it expresses
and requires a more radical "justice", and above all it implores mercy,[19]
it makes intercession for the brethren before the Father (cf. Heb
7:25), and it is the source of perfect redemption and the gift of new
life.
The blood of Christ, while it reveals the grandeur of the Father's love,
shows how precious man is in God's eyes and how priceless the value
of his life. The Apostle Peter reminds us of this: "You know that
you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your fathers, not
with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious blood
of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot" (1 Pt
1:18-19). Precisely by contemplating the precious blood of Christ, the
sign of his self-giving love (cf. Jn 13:1), the believer learns
to recognize and appreciate the almost divine dignity of every human being
and can exclaim with ever renewed and grateful wonder: "How precious must
man be in the eyes of the Creator, if he 'gained so great a Redeemer'
(Exsultet of the Easter Vigil), and if God 'gave his only Son'
in order that man 'should not perish but have eternal life' (cf. Jn
3:16)!"[20]
Furthermore, Christ's blood reveals to man that his greatness, and therefore
his vocation, consists in the sincere gift of self. Precisely
because it is poured out as the gift of life, the blood of Christ is no
longer a sign of death, of definitive separation from the brethren, but
the instrument of a communion which is richness of life for all. Whoever
in the Sacrament of the Eucharist drinks this blood and abides in Jesus
(cf. Jn 6:56) is drawn into the dynamism of his love and gift
of life, in order To bring to its fullness the original vocation to love
which belongs to everyone (cf. Gen 1:27; 2:18-24).
It is from the blood of Christ that all draw the strength to commit
themselves to promoting life. It is precisely this blood that is
the most powerful source of hope, indeed it is the foundation of the
absolute certitude that in God's plan life will be victorious. "And
death shall be no more", exclaims the powerful voice which comes from
the throne of God in the Heavenly Jerusalem (Rev 21:4). And Saint
Paul assures us that the present victory over sin is a sign and anticipation
of the definitive victory over death, when there "shall come to pass the
saying that is written: 'Death is swallowed up in victory'. 'O death,
where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?"' (1 Cor
15:54-55).
26. In effect, signs which point to this victory are not lacking in our
societies and cultures, strongly marked though they are by the "culture
of death". It would therefore be to give a one-sided picture, which could
lead to sterile discouragement, if the condemnation of the threats to
life were not accompanied by the presentation of the positive signs
at work in humanity's present situation.
Unfortunately it is often hard to see and recognize these positive signs,
perhaps also because they do not receive sufficient attention in the communications
media. Yet, how many initiatives of help and support for people who are
weak and defenceless have sprung up and continue to spring up in the Christian
community and in civil society, at the local, national and international
level, through the efforts of individuals, groups, movements and organizations
of various kinds!
There are still many married couples who, with a generous sense
of responsibility, are ready to accept children as "the supreme gift of
marriage".[21] Nor is there
a lack of families which, over and above their everyday service
to life, are willing to accept abandoned children, boys and girls and
teenagers in difficulty, handicapped persons, elderly men and women who
have been left alone. Many centres in support of life, or similar
institutions, are sponsored by individuals and groups which, with admirable
dedication and sacrifice, offer moral and material support to mothers
who are in difficulty and are tempted to have recourse to abortion. Increasingly,
there are appearing in many places groups of volunteers prepared
to offer hospitality to persons without a family, who find themselves
in conditions of particular distress or who need a supportive environment
to help them to overcome destructive habits and discover anew the meaning
of life.
Medical science, thanks to the committed efforts of researchers
and practitioners, continues in its efforts to discover ever more effective
remedies: treatments which were once inconceivable but which now offer
much promise for the future are today being developed for the unborn,
the suffering and those in an acute or terminal stage of sickness. Various
agencies and organizations are mobilizing their efforts to bring the benefits
of the most advanced medicine to countries most afflicted by poverty and
endemic diseases. In a similar way national and international associations
of physicians are being organized to bring quick relief to peoples affected
by natural disasters, epidemics or wars. Even if a just international
distribution of medical resources is still far from being a reality, how
can we not recognize in the steps taken so far the sign of a growing solidarity
among peoples, a praiseworthy human and moral sensitivity and a greater
respect for life?
27. In view of laws which permit abortion and in view of efforts, which
here and there have been successful, to legalize euthanasia, movements
and initiatives to raise social awareness in defence of life have
sprung up in many parts of the world. When, in accordance with their principles,
such movements act resolutely, but without resorting to violence, they
promote a wider and more profound consciousness of the value of life,
and evoke and bring about a more determined commitment to its defence.
Furthermore, how can we fail to mention all those daily gestures
of openness, sacrifice and unselfish care which countless people
lovingly make in families, hospitals, orphanages, homes for the elderly
and other centres or communities which defend life? Allowing herself to
be guided by the example of Jesus the "Good Samaritan" (cf. Lk
10:29-37) and upheld by his strength, the Church bas always been in the
front line in providing charitable help: so many of her sons and daughters,
especially men and women Religious, in traditional and ever new forms,
have consecrated and continue to consecrate their lives to God, freely
giving of themselves out of love for their neighbour, especially for the
weak and needy. These deeds strengthen the bases of the "civilization
of love and life", without which the life of individuals and of society
itself loses its most genuinely human quality. Even if they go unnoticed
and remain hidden to most people, faith assures us that the Father "who
sees in secret" (Mt 6:6) not only will reward these actions but
already here and now makes them produce lasting fruit for the good of
all.
Among the signs of hope we should also count the spread, at many levels
of public opinion, of a new sensitivity ever more opposed to war
as an instrument for the resolution of conflicts between peoples, and
increasingly oriented to finding effective but "non-violent" means to
counter the armed aggressor. In the same perspective there is evidence
of a growing public opposition to the death penalty, even when
such a penalty is seen as a kind of "legitimate defence" on the part of
society. Modern society in fact has the means of effectively suppressing
crime by rendering criminals harmless without definitively denying them
the chance to reform.
Another welcome sign is the growing attention being paid to the quality
of life and to ecology, especially in more developed societies,
where people's expectations are no longer concentrated so much on problems
of survival as on the search for an overall improvement of living conditions.
Especially significant is the reawakening of an ethical reflection on
issues affecting life. The emergence and ever more widespread development
of bioethics is promoting more reflection and dialogue--between
believers and non-believers, as well as between followers of different
religions--on ethical problems, including fundamental issues pertaining
to human life.
28. This situation, with its lights and shadows, ought to make us all
fully aware that we are facing an enormous and dramatic clash between
good and evil, death and life, the "culture of death" and the "culture
of life". We find ourselves not only "faced with" but necessarily "in
the midst of" this conflict: we are all involved and we all share in it,
with the inescapable responsibility of choosing to be unconditionally
pro-life.
For us too Moses' invitation rings out loud and clear: "See, I have set
before you this day life and good, death and evil.... I have set before
you life and death, blessing and curse; therefore choose life, that
you and your descendants may live" (Dt 30:15,19). This invitation
is very appropriate for us who are called day by day to the duty of choosing
between the "culture of life" and the "culture of death". But the call
of Deuteronomy goes even deeper, for it urges us to make a choice which
is properly religious and moral. It is a question of giving our own existence
a basic orientation and living the law of the Lord faithfully and consistently:
"If you obey the commandments of the Lord your God which I command you
this day, by loving the Lord your God, by walking in his
ways, and by keeping his commandments and his statutes and
his ordinances, then you shall live ... therefore choose life, that you
and your descendants may live, loving the Lord your God, obeying his voice,
and cleaving to him; for that means life to you and length of days"
(30:16,19-20).
The unconditional choice for life reaches its full religious and moral
meaning when it flows from, is formed by and nourished by faith in
Christ. Nothing helps us so much to face positively the conflict
between death and life in which we are engaged as faith in the Son of
God who became man and dwelt among men so "that they may have life, and
have it abundantly" (Jn 10:10). It is a matter of faith in
the Risen Lord, who has conquered death; faith in the blood of Christ
"that speaks more graciously than the blood of Abel" (Heb 12:24).
With the light and strength of this faith, therefore, in facing the challenges
of the present situation, the Church is becoming more aware of the grace
and responsibility which come to her from her Lord of proclaiming, celebrating
and serving the Gospel of life.
CHAPTER II
I CAME THAT THEY MAY HAVE LIFE
The Christian Message Concerning Life
"The life was made manifest, and we saw it" (1 Jn 1:2):
with our gaze fixed on Christ) "the Word of life"
29. Faced with the countless grave threats to life present in the modern
world, one could feel overwhelmed by sheer powerlessness: good can never
be powerful enough to triumph over evil!
At such times the People of God, and this includes every believer, is
called to profess with humility and courage its faith in Jesus Christ,
"the Word of life" (1 Jn 1:1). The Gospel of life is
not simply a reflection, however new and profound, on human life. Nor
is it merely a commandment aimed at raising awareness and bringing about
significant changes in society. Still less is it an illusory promise of
a better future. The Gospel of life is something concrete and
personal, for it consists in the proclamation of the very person of
Jesus. Jesus made himself known to the Apostle Thomas, and in him
to every person, with the words: "I am the way, and the truth, and the
life" (Jn 14:6). This is also how he spoke of himself to Martha,
the sister of Lazarus: "I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes
in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and whoever lives and believes
in me shall never die" (Jn 11:25-26). Jesus is the Son who from
all eternity receives life from the Father (cf. Jn 5:26), and
who has come among men to make them sharers in this gift: "I came that
they may have life, and have it abundantly" (Jn 10:10).
Through the words, the actions and the very person of Jesus, man is given
the possibility of "knowing" the complete truth concerning the
value of human life. From this "source" he receives, in particular, the
capacity to "accomplish" this truth perfectly (cf. Jn 3:21),
that is, to accept and fulfil completely the responsibility of loving
and serving, of defending and promoting human life. In Christ, the Gospel
of life is definitively proclaimed and fully given. This is the Gospel
which, already present in the Revelation of the Old Testament, and indeed
written in the heart of every man and woman, has echoed in every conscience
"from the beginning", from the time of creation itself, in such a way
that, despite the negative consequences of sin, it can also be known
in its essential traits by human reason. As the Second Vatican Council
teaches, Christ "perfected revelation by fulfilling it through his whole
work of making himself present and manifesting himself; through his words
and deeds, his signs and wonders, but especially through his death and
glorious Resurrection from the dead and final sending of the Spirit of
truth. Moreover, he confirmed with divine testimony what revelation proclaimed:
that God is with us to free us from the darkness of sin and death, and
to raise us up to life eternal".[22]
30. Hence, with our attention fixed on the Lord Jesus, we wish to hear
from him once again "the words of God" (Jn 3:34) and meditate
anew on the Gospel of life. The deepest and most original meaning
of this meditation on what revelation tells us about human life was taken
up by the Apostle John in the opening words of his First Letter: "That
which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen
with our eyes, which we have looked upon and touched with our hands, concerning
the word of life--the life was made manifest, and we saw it, and testify
to it, and proclaim to you the eternal life which was with the Father
and was made manifest to us--that which we have seen and heard we proclaim
also to you, so that you may have fellowship with us" (1:1-3).
In Jesus, the "Word of life", God's eternal life is thus proclaimed and
given. Thanks to this proclamation and gift, our physical and spiritual
life, also in its earthly phase, acquires its full value and meaning,
for God's eternal life is in fact the end to which our living in this
world is directed and called. In this way the Gospel of life
includes everything that human experience and reason tell us about the
value of human life, accepting it, purifying it, exalting it and bringing
it to fulfilment.
"The Lord is my strength and my song, and he has become my
salvation" (Ex 15:2): life is always a good
31. The fullness of the Gospel message about life was prepared for in
the Old Testament. Especially in the events of the Exodus, the centre
of the Old Testament faith experience, Israel discovered the preciousness
of its life in the eyes of God. When it seemed doomed to extermination
because of the threat of death hanging over all its newborn males (cf.
Ex 1:15-22), the Lord revealed himself to Israel as its Saviour,
with the power to ensure a future to those without hope. Israel thus comes
to know clearly that its existence is not at the mercy of a Pharaoh
who can exploit it at his despotic whim. On the contrary, Israel's life
is the object of God's gentle and intense love.
Freedom from slavery meant the gift of an identity, the recognition of
an indestructible dignity and the beginning of a new history,
in which the discovery of God and discovery of self go hand in hand. The
Exodus was a foundational experience and a model for the future. Through
it, Israel comes to learn that whenever its existence is threatened it
need only turn to God with renewed trust in order to find in him effective
help: "I formed you, you are my servant; O Israel, you will not be forgotten
by me" (Is 44:21).
Thus, in coming to know the value of its own existence as a people, Israel
also grows in its perception of the meaning and value of life itself.
This reflection is developed more specifically in the Wisdom Literature,
on the basis of daily experience of the precariousness of life and awareness
of the threats which assail it. Faced with the contradictions of life,
faith is challenged to respond.
More than anything else, it is the problem of suffering which challenges
faith and puts it to the test. How can we fail to appreciate the universal
anguish of man when we meditate on the Book of Job? The innocent man overwhelmed
by suffering is understandably led to wonder: "Why is light given to him
that is in misery, and life to the bitter in soul, who long for death,
but it comes not, and dig for it more than for hid treasures?" (3:20-21).
But even when the darkness is deepest, faith points to a trusting and
adoring acknowledgment of the "mystery": "I know that you can do all things,
and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted" (Job 42:2).
Revelation progressively allows the first notion of immortal life planted
by the Creator in the human heart to be grasped with ever greater clarity:
"He has made everything beautiful in its time; also he has put eternity
into man's mind" (Ec 3:11). This first notion of totality
and fullness is waiting to be manifested in love and brought to perfection,
by God's free gift, through sharing in his eternal life.
"The name of Jesus... has made this man strong" (Acts
3:16): in the uncertainties of human life, Jesus brings life's meaning
to fulfilment
32. The experience of the people of the Covenant is renewed in the experience
of all the "poor" who meet Jesus of Nazareth. Just as God who "loves the
living" (cf. Wis 11:26) had reassured Israel in the midst of
danger, so now the Son of God proclaims to all who feel threatened and
hindered that their lives too are a good to which the Father's love gives
meaning and value.
"The blind receive their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, and
the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have good news preached
to them" (Lk 7:22). With these words of the Prophet Isaiah (35:5-6,
61:1), Jesus sets forth the meaning of his own mission: all who suffer
because their lives are in some way "diminished" thus hear from him the
"good news" of God's concern for them, and they know for certain that
their lives too are a gift carefully guarded in the hands of the Father
(cf. Mt 6:25-34).
It is above all the "poor" to whom Jesus speaks in his preaching and
actions. The crowds of the sick and the outcasts who follow him and seek
him out (cf. Mt 4:23-25) find in his words and actions a revelation
of the great value of their lives and of how their hope of salvation is
well-founded.
The same thing has taken place in the Church's mission from the beginning.
When the Church proclaims Christ as the one who "went about doing good
and healing all that were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him"
(Acts 10:38), she is conscious of being the bearer of a message
of salvation which resounds in all its newness precisely amid the hardships
and poverty of human life. Peter cured the cripple who daily sought alms
at the "Beautiful Gate" of the Temple in Jerusalem, saying: "I have no
silver and gold, but I give you what I have; in the name of Jesus Christ
of Nazareth, walk" (Acts 3:6). By faith in Jesus, "the Author
of life" (Acts 3:15), life which lies abandoned and cries out
for help regains self-esteem and full dignity.
The words and deeds of Jesus and those of his Church are not meant only
for those who are sick or suffering or in some way neglected by society.
On a deeper level they affect the very meaning of every person's life
in its moral and spiritual dimensions. Only those who recognize that
their life is marked by the evil of sin can discover in an encounter with
Jesus the Saviour the truth and the authenticity of their own existence.
Jesus himself says as much: "Those who are well have no need of a physician,
but those who are sick; I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners
to repentance" (Lk 5:31-32).
But the person who, like the rich land-owner in the Gospel parable, thinks
that he can make his life secure by the possession of material goods alone,
is deluding himself. Life is slipping away from him, and very soon he
will find himself bereft of it without ever having appreciated its real
meaning: "Fool! This night your soul is required of you; and the things
you have prepared, whose will they be?" (Lk 12:20).
33. In Jesus' own life, from beginning to end, we find a singular "dialectic"
between the experience of the uncertainty of human life and the affirmation
of its value. Jesus' life is marked by uncertainty from the very moment
of his birth. He is certainly accepted by the righteous, who
echo Mary's immediate and joyful "yes" (cf. Lk 1:38). But there
is also, from the start, rejection on the part of a world which
grows hostile and looks for the child in order "to destroy him" (Mt
2:13); a world which remains indifferent and unconcerned about the fulfilment
of the mystery of this life entering the world: "there was no place for
them in the inn" (Lk 2:7). In this contrast between threats and
insecurity on the one hand and the power of God's gift on the other, there
shines forth all the more dearly the glory which radiates from the house
at Nazareth and from the manger at Bethlehem: this life which is born
is salvation for all humanity (cf. Lk 2:11).
Life's contradictions and risks were fully accepted by Jesus: "though
he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that by his poverty
you might become rich" (2 Cor 8:9). The poverty of which Paul
speaks is not only a stripping of divine privileges, but also a sharing
in the lowliest and most vulnerable conditions of human life (cf. Phil
2:6-7). Jesus lived this poverty throughout his life, until the culminating
moment of the Cross: "he humbled himself and became obedient unto death,
even death on a cross. Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed
on him the name which is above every name" (Phil 2:8-9). It is
precisely by his death that Jesus reveals all the splendour
and value of life, inasmuch as his self-oblation on the Cross becomes
the source of new life for all people (cf. Jn 12:32). In his
journeying amid contradictions and in the very loss of his life, Jesus
is guided by the certainty that his life is in the hands of the Father.
Consequently, on the Cross, he can say to him: "Father, into your hands
I commend my spirit!" (Lk 23:46), that is, my life. Truly great
must be the value of human life if the Son of God has taken it up and
made it the instrument of the salvation of all humanity!
"Called... to be conformed to the image of his Son" (Rom
8:28-29): God's glory shines on the face of man
34. Life is always a good. This is an instinctive perception and a fact
of experience, and man is called to grasp the profound reason why this
is so.
Why is life a good? This question is found everywhere in the
Bible, and from the very first pages it receives a powerful and amazing
answer. The life which God gives man is quite different from the life
of all other living creatures, inasmuch as man, although formed from the
dust of the earth (cf. Gen 2:7, 3:19; Job 34:15; Ps
103:14; 104:29), is a manifestation of God in the world, a sign of
his presence, a trace of his glory (cf. Gen 1:26-27; Ps
8:6). This is what Saint Irenaeus of Lyons wanted to emphasize in his
celebrated definition: "Man, living man, is the glory of God".[23]
Man has been given a sublime dignity, based on the intimate bond
which unites him to his Creator: in man there shines forth a reflection
of God himself.
The Book of Genesis affirms this when, in the first account of creation,
it places man at the summit of God's creative activity, as its crown,
at the culmination of a process which leads from indistinct chaos to the
most perfect of creatures. Everything in creation is ordered to man
and everything is made subject to him: "Fill the earth and subdue
it; and have dominion over . . . every living thing" (1:28); this is God's
command to the man and the woman. A similar message is found also in the
other account of creation: "The Lord God took the man and put him in the
garden of Eden to till it and keep it" (Gen 2:15). We see here
a clear affirmation of the primacy of man over things; these are made
subject to him and entrusted to his responsible care, whereas for no reason
can he be made subject to other men and almost reduced to the level of
a thing.
In the biblical narrative, the difference between man and other creatures
is shown above all by the fact that only the creation of man is presented
as the result of a special decision on the part of God, a deliberation
to establish a particular and specific bond with the Creator:
"Let us make man in our image, after our likeness" (Gen 1:26).
The life which God offers to man is a gift by which God shares
something of himself with his creature.
Israel would ponder at length the meaning of this particular bond between
man and God. The Book of Sirach too recognizes that God, in creating human
beings, "endowed them with strength like his own, and made them in his
own image" (17:3). The biblical author sees as part of this image not
only man's dominion over the world but also those spiritual faculties
which are distinctively human, such as reason, discernment between
good and evil, and free will: "He filled them with knowledge and understanding,
and showed them good and evil" (Sir 17:7). The ability to
attain truth and freedom are human prerogatives inasmuch as man is
created in the image of his Creator, God who is true and just (cf. Dt
32:4). Man alone, among all visible creatures, is "capable of knowing
and loving his Creator".[24]
The life which God bestows upon man is much more than mere existence in
time. It is a drive towards fullness of life; it is the seed of an
existence which transcends the very limits of time: "For God created
man for incorruption, and made him in the image of his own eternity" (Wis
2:23).
35. The Yahwist account of creation expresses the same conviction. This
ancient narrative speaks of a divine breath which is breathed
into man so that he may come to life: "The Lord God formed man of
dust from the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life;
and man became a living being" (Gen 2:7).
The divine origin of this spirit of life explains the perennial dissatisfaction
which man feels throughout his days on earth. Because he is made by God
and bears within himself an indelible imprint of God, man is naturally
drawn to God. When he heeds the deepest yearnings of the heart, every
man must make his own the words of truth expressed by Saint Augustine:
"You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until
they rest in you".[25]
How very significant is the dissatisfaction which marks man's life in
Eden as long as his sole point of reference is the world of plants and
animals (cf. Gen 2:20). Only the appearance of the woman, a being
who is flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones (cf. Gen 2:23),
and in whom the spirit of God the Creator is also alive, can satisfy the
need for interpersonal dialogue, so vital for human existence. In the
other, whether man or woman, there is a reflection of God himself, the
definitive goal and fulfilment of every person.
"What is man that you are mindful of him, and the son of man that you
care for him?", the Psalmist wonders (Ps 8:4). Compared to the
immensity of the universe, man is very small, and yet this very contrast
reveals his greatness: "You have made him little less than a god, and
crown him with glory and honour" (Ps 8:5). The glory of God
shines on the face of man. In man the Creator finds his rest, as
Saint Ambrose comments with a sense of awe: "The sixth day is finished
and the creation of the world ends with the formation of that masterpiece
which is man, who exercises dominion over all living creatures and is
as it were the crown of the universe and the supreme beauty of every created
being. Truly we should maintain a reverential silence, since the Lord
rested from every work he had undertaken in the world. He rested then
in the depths of man, he rested in man's mind and in his thought; after
all, he had created man endowed with reason, capable of imitating him,
of emulating his virtue, of hungering for heavenly graces. In these his
gifts God reposes, who has said: 'Upon whom shall I rest, if not upon
the one who is humble, contrite in spirit and trembles at my word?' (Is
66:1-2). I thank the Lord our God who has created so wonderful a work
in which to take his rest"[26]
36. Unfortunately, God's marvellous plan was marred by the appearance
of sin in history. Through sin, man rebels against his Creator and ends
up by worshipping creatures: "They exchanged the truth about
God for a lie and worshipped and served the creature rather than the Creator"
(Rom 1:25). As a result man not only deforms the image of God
in his own person, but is tempted to offences against it in others as
well, replacing relationships of communion by attitudes of distrust, indifference,
hostility and even murderous hatred. When God is not acknowledged
as God, the profound meaning of man is betrayed and communion
between people is compromised.
In the life of man, God's image shines forth anew and is again revealed
in all its fullness at the coming of the Son of God in human flesh. "Christ
is the image of the invisible God" (Col 1:15), he "reflects the
glory of God and bears the very stamp of his nature" (Heb 1:3).
He is the perfect image of the Father.
The plan of life given to the first Adam finds at last its fulfilment
in Christ. Whereas the disobedience of Adam had ruined and marred God's
plan for human life and introduced death into the world, the redemptive
obedience of Christ is the source of grace poured out upon the human race,
opening wide to everyone the gates of the kingdom of life (cf. Rom
5:12-21). As the Apostle Paul states: "The first man Adam became a living
being; the last Adam became a life-giving spirit" (1 Cor 15:45).
All who commit themselves to following Christ are given the fullness
of life: the divine image is restored, renewed and brought to perfection
in them. God's plan for human beings is this, that they should "be conformed
to the image of his Son" (Rom 8:29). Only thus, in the splendour
of this image, can man be freed from the slavery of idolatry, rebuild
lost fellowship and rediscover his true identity.
"Whoever lives and believes in me shall never die" (Jn
11:26): the gift of eternal life
37. The life which the Son of God came to give to human beings cannot
be reduced to mere existence in time. The life which was always "in him"
and which is the "light of men" (Jn 1:4) consists in being
begotten of God and sharing in the fullness of his love: "To all
who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children
of God; who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of
the will of man, but of God" (Jn 1:12-13).
Sometimes Jesus refers to this life which he came to give simply as "life",
and he presents being born of God as a necessary condition if man is to
attain the end for which God has created him: "Unless one is born anew,
he cannot see the kingdom of God" (Jn 3:3). To give this life
is the real object of Jesus' mission: he is the one who "comes down from
heaven, and gives life to the world" (Jn 6:33). Thus can he truly
say: "He who follows me ... will have the light of life" (Jn
8:12).
At other times, Jesus speaks of "eternal life". Here the adjective does
more than merely evoke a perspective which is beyond time. The life which
Jesus promises and gives is "eternal" because it is a full participation
in the life of the "Eternal One". Whoever believes in Jesus and enters
into communion with him has eternal life (cf. Jn 3:15; 6:40)
because he hears from Jesus the only words which reveal and communicate
to his existence the fullness of life. These are the "words of eternal
life" which Peter acknowledges in his confession of faith: "Lord, to whom
shall we go? You have the words of eternal life; and we have believed,
and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God" (Jn
6:68-69). Jesus himself, addressing the Father in the great priestly prayer,
declares what eternal life consists in: "This is eternal life, that they
may know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent" (Jn
17:3). To know God and his Son is to accept the mystery of the loving
communion of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit into one's own life,
which even now is open to eternal life because it shares
in the life of God.
38. Eternal life is therefore the life of God himself and at the same
time the life of the children of God. As they ponder this unexpected
and inexpressible truth which comes to us from God in Christ, believers
cannot fail to be filled with ever new wonder and unbounded gratitude.
They can say in the words of the Apostle John: "See what love the Father
has given us, that we should be called children of God; and so we are....
Beloved, we are God's children now; it does not yet appear what we shall
be, but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, for we shall
see him as he is" (1 Jn 3:1-2).
Here the Christian truth about life becomes most sublime. The
dignity of this life is linked not only to its beginning, to the fact
that it comes from God, but also to its final end, to its destiny of fellowship
with God in knowledge and love of him.
In the light of this truth Saint Irenaeus qualifies and completes his
praise of man: "the glory of God" is indeed, "man, living man", but "the
life of man consists in the vision of God".[27]
Immediate consequences arise from this for human life in its earthly
state, in which, for that matter, eternal life already springs forth
and begins to grow. Although man instinctively loves life because it is
a good, this love will find further inspiration and strength, and new
breadth and depth, in the divine dimensions of this good Similarly, the
love which every human being has for life cannot be reduced simply to
a desire to have sufficient space for self-expression and for entering
into relationships with others; rather, it develops in a joyous awareness
that life can become the "place" where God manifests himself, where we
meet him and enter into communion with him. The life which Jesus gives
in no way lessens the value of our existence in time; it takes it and
directs it to its final destiny: "I am the resurrection and the life ...
whoever lives and believes in me shall never die" (Jn 11:25-26).
"From man in regard to his fellow man I will demand an accounting"
(Gen 9:5): reverence and love for every human life
39. Man's life comes from God; it is his gift, his image and imprint,
a sharing in his breath of life. God therefore is the sole
Lord of this life: man cannot do with it as he wills. God himself
makes this clear to Noah after the Flood: "For your own lifeblood, too,
I will demand an accounting ... and from man in regard to his fellow man
I will demand an accounting for human life" (Gen 9:5). The biblical
text is concerned to emphasize how the sacredness of life has its foundation
in God and in his creative activity: "For God made man in his own image"
(Gen 9:6).
Human life and death are thus in the hands of God, in his power: "In
his hand is the life of every living thing and the breath of all mankind",
exclaims Job (12:10). "The Lord brings to death and brings to life; he
brings down to Sheol and raises up" (1 Sam 2:6). He alone can
say: "It is I who bring both death and life" (Dt 32:39).
But God does not exercise this power in an arbitrary and threatening
way, but rather as part of his care and loving concern for his creatures.
If it is true that human life is in the hands of God, it is no less true
that these are loving hands, like those of a mother who accepts, nurtures
and takes care of her child: "I have calmed and quieted my soul, like
a child quieted at its mother's breast; like a child that is quieted is
my soul" (Ps 131:2; cf. Is 49:15; 66:12-13; Hos
11:4). Thus Israel does not see in the history of peoples and in the destiny
of individuals the outcome of mere chance or of blind fate, but rather
the results of a loving plan by which God brings together all the possibilities
of life and opposes the powers of death arising from sin: "God did not
make death, and he does not delight in the death of the living. For he
created all things that they might exist" (Wis 1:13-14).
40. The sacredness of life gives rise to its inviolability, written
from the beginning in man's heart, in his conscience. The question:
"What have you done?" (Gen 4:10), which God addresses to Cain
after he has killed his brother Abel, interprets the experience of every
person: in the depths of his conscience, man is always reminded of the
inviolability of life--his own life and that of others--as something which
does not belong to him, because it is the property and gift of God the
Creator and Father.
The commandment regarding the inviolability of human life reverberates
at the heart of the "ten words" in the covenant of Sinai (cf.
Ex 34:28). In the first place that commandment prohibits murder:
"You shall not kill" (Ex 20:13); "do not slay the innocent and
righteous" (Ex 23:7). But, as is brought out in Israel's later
legislation, it also prohibits all personal injury inflicted on another
(cf. Ex 21:12-27). Of course we must recognize that in the Old
Testament this sense of the value of life, though already quite marked,
does not yet reach the refinement found in the Sermon on the Mount. This
is apparent in some aspects of the current penal legislation, which provided
for severe forms of corporal punishment and even the death penalty. But
the overall message, which the New Testament will bring to perfection,
is a forceful appeal for respect for the inviolability of physical life
and the integrity of the person. It culminates in the positive commandment
which obliges us to be responsible for our neighbour as for ourselves:
"You shall love your neighbour as yourself" (Lev 19:18).
41. The commandment "You shall not kill", included and more fully expressed
in the positive command of love for one's neighbour, is reaffirmed
in all its force by the Lord Jesus. To the rich young man who asks
him: "Teacher, what good deed must I do, to have eternal life?", Jesus
replies: "If you would enter life, keep the commandments" (Mt
19:16,17). And he quotes, as the first of these: "You shall not kill"
(Mt 19:18). In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus demands from his
disciples a righteousness which surpasses that of the Scribes
and Pharisees, also with regard to respect for life: "You have heard that
it was said to the men of old, 'You shall not kill; and whoever kills
shall be liable to judgment'. But I say to you that every one who is angry
with his brother shall be liable to judgment" (Mt 5:21-22).
By his words and actions Jesus further unveils the positive requirements
of the commandment regarding the inviolability of life. These requirements
were already present in the Old Testament, where legislation dealt with
protecting and defending life when it was weak and threatened: in the
case of foreigners, widows, orphans, the sick and the poor in general,
including children in the womb (cf. Ex 21:22; 22:20-26). With
Jesus these positive requirements assume new force and urgency, and are
revealed in all their breadth and depth: they range from caring for the
life of one's brother (whether a blood brother, someone belonging
to the same people, or a foreigner living in the land of Israel) to showing
concern for the stranger, even to the point of loving one's enemy.
A stranger is no longer a stranger for the person who must become
a neighbour to someone in need, to the point of accepting responsibility
for his life, as the parable of the Good Samaritan shows so clearly (cf.
Lk 10:25-37). Even an enemy ceases to be an enemy for the person
who is obliged to love him (cf. Mt 5:38-48; Lk 6:27-35),
to "do good" to him (cf. Lk 6:27, 33, 35) and to respond to his
immediate needs promptly and with no expectation of repayment (cf. Lk
6:34-35). The height of this love is to pray for one's enemy. By so doing
we achieve harmony with the providential love of God: "But I say to you,
love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may
be children of your Father who is in heaven; for he makes his sun rise
on the evil and on the good and sends rain on the just and on the unjust"
(Mt 5:44-45; cf. Lk 6:28, 35).
Thus the deepest element of God's commandment to protect human life is
the requirement to show reverence and love for every person and
the life of every person. This is the teaching which the Apostle Paul,
echoing the words of Jesus, addresses to the Christians in Rome: "The
commandments, 'You shall not commit adultery, You shall not kill, You
shall not steal, You shall not covet', and any other commandment, are
summed up in this sentence, 'You shall love your neighbour as yourself.
Love does no wrong to a neighbour; therefore love is the fulfilling; of
the law" (Rom 13:9-10).
"Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue
it" (Gen 1:28): man's responsibility for life
42. To defend and promote life, to show reverence and love for it, is
a task which God entrusts to every man, calling him as his living image
to share in his own lordship over the world: "God blessed them, and God
said to them, 'Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue
it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the
air and over every living thing that moves upon the earth'" (Gen
1:28).
The biblical text clearly shows the breadth and depth of the lordship
which God bestows on man. It is a matter first of all of dominion
over the earth and over every living creature, as the Book of Wisdom
makes clear: "O God of my fathers and Lord of mercy... by your wisdom
you have formed man, to have dominion over the creatures you have made,
and rule the world in holiness and righteousness" (Wis 9:1,2-3).
The Psalmist too extols the dominion given to man as a sign of glory and
honour from his Creator: "You have given him dominion over the works of
your hands; you have put all things under his feet, all sheep and oxen,
and also the beasts of the field, the birds of the air, and the fish of
the sea, whatever passes along the paths of the sea" (Ps 8:6-8).
As one called to till and look after the garden of the world (cf. Gen
2:15), man has a specific responsibility towards the environment in
which he lives, towards the creation which God has put at the service
of his personal dignity, of his life, not only for the present but also
for future generations. It is the ecological question--ranging
from the preservation of the natural habitats of the different species
of animals and of other forms of life to "human ecology" properly speaking[28]--which
finds in the Bible clear and strong ethical direction, leading to a solution
which respects the great good of life, of every life. In fact, "the dominion
granted to man by the Creator is not an absolute power, nor can one speak
of a freedom to 'use and misuse', or to dispose of things as one pleases.
The limitation imposed from the beginning by the Creator himself and expressed
symbolically by the prohibition not to 'eat of the fruit of the tree'
(cf. Gen 2:16-17) shows clearly enough that, when it comes to
the natural world, we are subject not only to biological laws but also
to moral ones, which cannot be violated with impunity".[29]
43. A certain sharing by man in God's lordship is also evident in the
specific responsibility which he is given for human life
as such. It is a responsibility which reaches its highest point in
the giving of life through procreation by man and woman in marriage.
As the Second Vatican Council teaches: "God himself who said, 'It is not
good for man to be alone' (Gen 2:18) and 'who made man from the
beginning male and female' (Mt 19:4), wished to share with man
a certain special participation in his own creative work. Thus he blessed
male and female saying: 'Increase and multiply' (Gen 1:28).[30]
By speaking of "a certain special participation" of man and woman in
the "creative work" of God, the Council wishes to point out that having
a child is an event which is deeply human and full of religious meaning,
insofar as it involves both the spouses, who form "one flesh" (Gen
2:24), and God who makes himself present. As I wrote in my Letter
to Families: "When a new person is born of the conjugal union of
the two, he brings with him into the world a particular image and likeness
of God himself: the genealogy of the person is inscribed in the very
biology of generation. In affirming that the spouses, as parents,
cooperate with God the Creator in conceiving and giving birth to a new
human being, we are not speaking merely with reference to the laws of
biology. Instead, we wish to emphasize that God himself is present
in human fatherhood and motherhood quite differently than he is present
in all other instances of begetting 'on earth'. Indeed, God alone is the
source of that 'image and likeness' which is proper to the human being,
as it was received at Creation. Begetting is the continuation of Creation".[31]
This is what the Bible teaches in direct and eloquent language when it
reports the joyful cry of the first woman, "the mother of all the living"
(Gen 3:20). Aware that God has intervened, Eve exclaims: "I have
begotten a man with the help of the Lord" (Gen 4:1). In procreation
therefore, through the communication of life from parents to child, God's