2010 Archive
- A Legal Bombshell Hits Stem Cell Science
- Have Stem Cells Become Passé?
- Illegal Immigration and Catholic Social Teaching
- The Difference God Makes
- How are Christians to Engage the Culture?
- In Vitro Fertilization - Why Not?
- The Long Ascent to Calvary
- Healthcare, Human Life and America
- Why I Didn’t Give Up Facebook for Lent
- Our Sex-Crazed Culture
- The Unimportance of Sex
- Recovery in the Big Easy
- Catholic Teaching on Assisted Nutrition and Hydration
- Haiti
- What’s Wrong With Us?
- Challenging Totalitarianism in 2010
| Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 8 "God saw...And behold it was very good." |
|
Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 8
This is why "the abortion issue" is not simply one issue among many. Respect for human life and the egregious violations of that respect which are commonplace in westerns societies constitute a grave threat to our own continued existence: we risk losing our own identity; we risk estrangement from our own humanity. Benedict points out that such estrangement occurs when the value of human life is consistently run through the sieve of that primordial and sacrosanct of all values "the right of the individual to express himself freely." He further points out that this dynamic presupposes the misconception-theoretically or at least implicitly-that rights, including the right to life, are to be conferred on others, rather than being recognized as already inhering in them from the very first moment of their existence. Such a misconception, furthermore, goes hand in hand with the historically tragic tendency to view other human beings-at least potentially or at some stages of their existence-as objects . Human beings, however, are distinct from all other animals in the world for the precise reason that we engage in-or posses the active potential to engage in-conscious, self-directive, free action. Only human animals are rational, free subjects by nature , which is to say, of all the species of animals on the earth, only human beings are persons . In order to recognize other human beings as subjects and not objects-even at their very earliest stages of development-the Holy Father says we must "open our eyes":
Recognizing the dignity of others is that much easier, the Holy Father points out, when I have been able to rejoice in the experience of how "Good looks at us in love." "And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good" (Gen 1:26, 3 I). ***
|

