Showing posts with label Euthanasia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Euthanasia. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

QUOTATION: God's Existence is the Real Issue

Bishop Robert Barron


The denial of God—or the blithe bracketing of the question of God—is not a harmless parlor game. Rather, it carries with it the gravest implications. If there is no God, then our lives do indeed belong to us, and we can do with them what we want. If there is no God, our lives have no ultimate meaning or transcendent purpose, and they become simply artifacts of our own designing. Accordingly, when they become too painful or too shallow or just too boring, we ought to have the prerogative to end them. We can argue the legality and even the morality of assisted suicide until the cows come home, but the real issue that has to be engaged is that of God’s existence.


--Bishop Robert Barron, Vibrant Paradoxes: The Both/And of Catholicism

Monday, April 3, 2017

QUOTATION: Euthanasia

I have always been mystified how so many libertarians, who do not trust the government to pick up garbage, trust the authorities to create a system in which doctors get to murder their patients.
--Charles Lewis, “Autonomy’s Open Road”, National Catholic Register, June 9th, 2016.

Friday, March 17, 2017

QUOTATION: Assisted Suicide

Archbishop Terence Prendergast
The constant teaching of the Catholic Church is life must be respected from conception to natural death. To kill an innocent person is always morally wrong, and Catholics must understand requesting an assisted suicide or euthanasia is also morally wrong and puts their souls at risk.

--Archbishop Terence Prendergast, “Why the assisted dying bill will hurt Canada and is morally wrong”, Ottawa Sun,  April 15, 2016

Sunday, June 21, 2015

QUOTATION: Pro-Life

Pope St. John Paul II
Abortion and euthanasia are thus crimes which no human law can claim to legitimize.

--St. Pope John Paul II

Monday, June 30, 2014

QUOTATION: Claiming the Right to Kill

Pope John Paul II
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

--Pope John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae

Thursday, November 10, 2011

QUOTATION: Freedom is not Absolute

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.

-- Pope John Paul II

Sunday, August 28, 2011

QUOTATION: The Culture of Death

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.

-- Pope John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae

Monday, August 22, 2011

QUOTATION: Euthanasia

If you establish and apply the principle that you can kill ‘unproductive’ fellow human beings then woe betide us all when we become old and frail! If one is allowed to kill the unproductive people then woe betide the invalids who have used up, sacrificed and lost their health and strength in the productive process. If one is allowed forcibly to remove one’s unproductive fellow human beings then woe betide loyal soldiers who return to the homeland seriously disabled, as cripples, as invalids. If it is once accepted that people have the right to kill ‘unproductive’ fellow humans–and even if initially it only affects the poor defenseless mentally ill–then as a matter of principle murder is permitted for all unproductive people, in other words for the incurably sick, the people who have become invalids through labor and war, for us all when we become old, frail and therefore unproductive.

Then, it is only necessary for some secret edict to order that the method developed for the mentally ill should be extended to other ‘unproductive’ people, that it should be applied to those suffering from incurable lung disease, to the elderly who are frail or invalids, to the severely disabled soldiers. Then none of our lives will be safe any more. Some commission can put us on the list of the ‘unproductive,’ who in their opinion have become worthless life. And no police force will protect us and no court will investigate our murder and give the murderer the punishment he deserves.

Who will be able to trust his doctor any more?

He may report his patient as ‘unproductive’ and receive instructions to kill him. It is impossible to imagine the degree of moral depravity, of general mistrust that would then spread even through families if this dreadful doctrine is tolerated, accepted and followed.

--Bishop Clemens von Galen

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

QUOTATION: Moral Issues

Not all moral issues have the same moral weight as abortion and euthanasia.... There may be a legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war and applying the death penalty, but not however with regard to abortion and euthanasia.

--Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI), in 2004