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Abortion
The Catholic
Church has always condemned abortion as a grave evil.
Christian writers from the first-century author of the
Didache to Pope John Paul II in his encyclical Evangelium
Vitae ("The Gospel of Life") have maintained
that the Bible forbids abortion, just as it forbids
murder. This tract will provide some examples of this
consistent witness from the writings of the Fathers
of the Church.
As the early Christian writer Tertullian pointed out,
the law of Moses ordered strict penalties for causing
an abortion. We read, "If men who are fighting
hit a pregnant woman and she gives birth prematurely
[Hebrew: "so that her child comes out"], but
there is no serious injury, the offender must be fined
whatever the woman’s husband demands and the court
allows. But if there is serious injury, you are to take
life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for
hand, foot for foot" (Ex. 21:22–24).
This applies the lex talionis or "law of retribution"
to abortion. The lex talionis establishes the just punishment
for an injury (eye for eye, tooth for tooth, life for
life, compared to the much greater retributions that
had been common before, such as life for eye, life for
tooth, lives of the offender’s family for one
life).
The lex talionis would already have been applied to
a woman who was injured in a fight. The distinguishing
point in this passage is that a pregnant woman is hurt
"so that her child comes out"; the child is
the focus of the lex talionis in this passage. Aborted
babies must have justice, too.
This is because they, like older children, have souls,
even though marred by original sin. David tells us,
"Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the
time my mother conceived me" (Ps. 51:5, NIV). Since
sinfulness is a spiritual rather than a physical condition,
David must have had a spiritual nature from the time
of conception.
The same is shown in James 2:26, which tells us that
"the body without the spirit is dead": The
soul is the life-principle of the human body. Since
from the time of conception the child’s body is
alive (as shown by the fact it is growing), the child’s
body must already have its spirit.
Thus, in 1995 Pope John Paul II declared that the Church’s
teaching on abortion "is unchanged and unchangeable.
Therefore, by the authority which Christ conferred upon
Peter and his successors . . . I declare that direct
abortion, that is, abortion willed as an end or as a
means, always constitutes a grave moral disorder, since
it is the deliberate killing of an innocent human being.
This doctrine is based upon the natural law and upon
the written word of God, is transmitted by the Church’s
tradition and taught by the ordinary and universal magisterium.
No circumstance, no purpose, no law whatsoever can ever
make licit an act which is intrinsically illicit, since
it is contrary to the law of God which is written in
every human heart, knowable by reason itself, and proclaimed
by the Church" (Evangelium Vitae 62).
The early Church Fathers agreed. Fortunately, abortion,
like all sins, is forgivable; and forgiveness is as
close as the nearest confessional.
The Didache
"The second commandment of the teaching:
You shall not murder. You shall not commit adultery.
You shall not seduce boys. You shall not commit fornication.
You shall not steal. You shall not practice magic. You
shall not use potions. You shall not procure [an] abortion,
nor destroy a newborn child" (Didache 2:1–2
[A.D. 70]).
The Letter of Barnabas
"The way of light, then, is as follows.
If anyone desires to travel to the appointed place,
he must be zealous in his works. The knowledge, therefore,
which is given to us for the purpose of walking in this
way, is the following. . . . Thou shalt not slay the
child by procuring abortion; nor, again, shalt thou
destroy it after it is born" (Letter of Barnabas
19 [A.D. 74]).
The Apocalypse of Peter
"And near that place I saw another strait
place . . . and there sat women. . . . And over against
them many children who were born to them out of due
time sat crying. And there came forth from them rays
of fire and smote the women in the eyes. And these were
the accursed who conceived and caused abortion"
(The Apocalypse of Peter 25 [A.D. 137]).
Athenagoras
"What man of sound mind, therefore, will
affirm, while such is our character, that we are murderers?
. . . [W]hen we say that those women who use drugs to
bring on abortion commit murder, and will have to give
an account to God for the abortion, on what principle
should we commit murder? For it does not belong to the
same person to regard the very fetus in the womb as
a created being, and therefore an object of God’s
care, and when it has passed into life, to kill it;
and not to expose an infant, because those who expose
them are chargeable with child-murder, and on the other
hand, when it has been reared to destroy it" (A
Plea for the Christians 35 [A.D. 177]).
Tertullian
"In our case, a murder being once for
all forbidden, we may not destroy even the fetus in
the womb, while as yet the human being derives blood
from the other parts of the body for its sustenance.
To hinder a birth is merely a speedier man-killing;
nor does it matter whether you take away a life that
is born, or destroy one that is coming to birth. That
is a man which is going to be one; you have the fruit
already in its seed" (Apology 9:8 [A.D. 197]).
"Among surgeons’ tools there is a certain
instrument, which is formed with a nicely-adjusted flexible
frame for opening the uterus first of all and keeping
it open; it is further furnished with an annular blade,
by means of which the limbs [of the child] within the
womb are dissected with anxious but unfaltering care;
its last appendage being a blunted or covered hook,
wherewith the entire fetus is extracted by a violent
delivery.
"There is also [another instrument in the shape
of] a copper needle or spike, by which the actual death
is managed in this furtive robbery of life: They give
it, from its infanticide function, the name of embruosphaktes,
[meaning] "the slayer of the infant," which
of course was alive. . . .
"[The doctors who performed abortions] all knew
well enough that a living being had been conceived,
and [they] pitied this most luckless infant state, which
had first to be put to death, to escape being tortured
alive" (The Soul 25 [A.D. 210]).
"Now we allow that life begins with conception
because we contend that the soul also begins from conception;
life taking its commencement at the same moment and
place that the soul does" (ibid., 27).
"The law of Moses, indeed, punishes with due penalties
the man who shall cause abortion [Ex. 21:22–24]"
(ibid., 37).
Minucius Felix
"There are some [pagan] women who, by
drinking medical preparations, extinguish the source
of the future man in their very bowels and thus commit
a parricide before they bring forth. And these things
assuredly come down from the teaching of your [false]
gods. . . . To us [Christians] it is not lawful either
to see or hear of homicide" (Octavius 30 [A.D.
226]).
Hippolytus
"Women who were reputed to be believers
began to take drugs to render themselves sterile, and
to bind themselves tightly so as to expel what was being
conceived, since they would not, on account of relatives
and excess wealth, want to have a child by a slave or
by any insignificant person. See, then, into what great
impiety that lawless one has proceeded, by teaching
adultery and murder at the same time!" (Refutation
of All Heresies [A.D. 228]).
Lactantius
"When God forbids us to kill, he not
only prohibits us from open violence, which is not even
allowed by the public laws, but he warns us against
the commission of those things which are esteemed lawful
among men. . . . Therefore, let no one imagine that
even this is allowed, to strangle newly-born children,
which is the greatest impiety; for God breathes into
their souls for life, and not for death. But men, that
there may be no crime with which they may not pollute
their hands, deprive [unborn] souls as yet innocent
and simple of the light which they themselves have not
given.
"Can anyone, indeed, expect that they would abstain
from the blood of others who do not abstain even from
their own? But these are, without any controversy, wicked
and unjust" (Divine Institutes 6:20 [A.D. 307]).
Council of Ancyra
"Concerning women who commit fornication,
and destroy that which they have conceived, or who are
employed in making drugs for abortion, a former decree
excluded them until the hour of death, and to this some
have assented. Nevertheless, being desirous to use somewhat
greater lenity, we have ordained that they fulfill ten
years [of penance], according to the prescribed degrees"
(canon 21 [A.D. 314]).
Basil the Great
"Let her that procures abortion undergo
ten years’ penance, whether the embryo were perfectly
formed, or not" (First Canonical Letter, canon
2 [A.D. 374]).
"He that kills another with a sword, or hurls an
axe at his own wife and kills her, is guilty of willful
murder; not he who throws a stone at a dog, and unintentionally
kills a man, or who corrects one with a rod, or scourge,
in order to reform him, or who kills a man in his own
defense, when he only designed to hurt him. But the
man, or woman, is a murderer that gives a philtrum,
if the man that takes it dies upon it; so are they who
take medicines to procure abortion; and so are they
who kill on the highway, and rapparees" (ibid.,
canon 8).
John Chrysostom
"Wherefore I beseech you, flee fornication.
. . . Why sow where the ground makes it its care to
destroy the fruit?—where there are many efforts
at abortion?—where there is murder before the
birth? For even the harlot you do not let continue a
mere harlot, but make her a murderess also. You see
how drunkenness leads to prostitution, prostitution
to adultery, adultery to murder; or rather to a something
even worse than murder. For I have no name to give it,
since it does not take off the thing born, but prevents
its being born. Why then do thou abuse the gift of God,
and fight with his laws, and follow after what is a
curse as if a blessing, and make the chamber of procreation
a chamber for murder, and arm the woman that was given
for childbearing unto slaughter? For with a view to
drawing more money by being agreeable and an object
of longing to her lovers, even this she is not backward
to do, so heaping upon thy head a great pile of fire.
For even if the daring deed be hers, yet the causing
of it is thine" (Homilies on Romans 24 [A.D. 391]).
Jerome
"I cannot bring myself to speak of the
many virgins who daily fall and are lost to the bosom
of the Church, their mother. . . . Some go so far as
to take potions, that they may insure barrenness, and
thus murder human beings almost before their conception.
Some, when they find themselves with child through their
sin, use drugs to procure abortion, and when, as often
happens, they die with their offspring, they enter the
lower world laden with the guilt not only of adultery
against Christ but also of suicide and child murder"
(Letters 22:13 [A.D. 396]).
The Apostolic Constitutions
"Thou shalt not use magic. Thou shalt
not use witchcraft; for he says, ‘You shall not
suffer a witch to live’ [Ex. 22:18]. Thou shall
not slay thy child by causing abortion, nor kill that
which is begotten. . . . [I]f it be slain, [it] shall
be avenged, as being unjustly destroyed" (Apostolic
Constitutions 7:3 [A.D. 400]).
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