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A Question of Catholic Honesty
by Daniel C. Maguire
Dr. Maguire is professor of
moral theology at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and past
president of the Society of Christian Ethics. He wasthe visiting professor of
moral theology at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, during
the 1983-84 school year. This article appeared in the Christian Century, September 14-21, 1983-84 p.
803-807. Copyright by The Christian Century Foundation; used by permission.
Current articles and subscription information can be found at www.christiancentury.org. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted and Winnie Brock.
"In the
‘already but not yet’ of Christian existence, members of the church choose
different paths to move toward the realization of the kingdom in history.
Distinct moral options coexist as legitimate expressions of Christian
choice." This "prochoice" statement recently made by the
Catholic bishops of the United States has nothing to do with abortion. Rather,
it addresses the possibility of ending life on earth through nuclear war. On
that cataclysmic issue, the bishops’ pastoral letter on peace warns against
giving "a simple answer to complex questions." It calls for
"dialogue." Hand-wringingly sensitive to divergent views, the bishops
give all sides a hearing, even the winnable nuclear war hypothesis -- a
position they themselves find abhorrent. At times they merely raise questions
when, given their own views, they might well have roundly condemned.
Change the topic to abortion,
and nothing is the same. On this issue, the bishops move from the theological
mainstream to the radical religious right. Here they have only a single word to
offer us: No! No abortion ever -- yesterday, today or tomorrow. No conceivable
tragic complexity could ever make abortion moral. Here the eschaton is reached:
there is no "already but not yet"; there is only "already."
"Distinct moral options" do not exist; only unqualified opposition to
all abortions moves toward "the realization of the kingdom in
history." There is no need for dialogue with those who hold other views or
with women who have faced abortion decisions. Indeed, as Marquette University
theologian Dennis Doherty wrote some years ago, there seems to be no need even
for prayer, since no further illumination, divine or otherwise, is anticipated.
Here we have no first, second,
third and fourth drafts, no quibbles over "curbing" or
"halting." Here we have only "a simple answer to complex
questions." The fact that most Catholics, Protestants and Jews disagree
with this unnuanced absolutism is irrelevant. The moral position of those who
hold that not every abortion is murder is treated as worthless. Moreover, the
bishops would outlaw all disagreement with their view if they could, whether by
way of the Buckley-Hatfield amendment, the Helms-Hyde bill, or the Hatch
amendment.
As a Catholic theologian, I
find this situation abhorrent and unworthy of the richness of the Roman
Catholic traditions that have nourished me. I indict not only the bishops, but
also the "petulant silence" (Beverly Harrison’s phrase) or
indifference of many Catholic theologians who recognize the morality of certain
abortions, but will not address the subject publicly. I indict also the
male-dominated liberal Catholic press which does too little to dissipate the
myth of a Catholic monolith on abortion. It is a theological fact of life that
there is no one normative Catholic position on abortion. The
truth is insufficiently known in the American polity because it is
insufficiently acknowledged by American Catholic voices.
This misconception leads not
only to injustice but to civil threat, since non-Catholic as well as Catholic
citizens are affected by it. The erroneous belief that the Catholic quarter of
the American citizenry unanimously opposes all abortions influences legislative
and judicial decisions, including specific choices such as denying abortion
funding for poor women. The general public is also affected in those
communities where Catholic hospitals are the only health care facilities. The
reproductive rights of people living in such communities are curtailed if (as
is common) their hospital is administratively locked into the ultraconservative
view on abortion, and even on such reproductive issues as tubal ligation and
contraception. Physicians practicing at such hospitals are compromised.
Academic freedom is frequently inhibited at Catholic universities and colleges
-- public agencies that often are federal contractors -- with consequent
injustice to the students and to the taxpayers. (In the face of all of this,
non-Catholic citizens have been surprisingly and -- I dare aver --
uncourageously polite.)
Ten years ago, Catholic
theologian Charles Curran stated in the Jurist (32:183 [1973])
that "there is a sizable and growing number of Catholic theologians who do
disagree with some aspects of the officially proposed Catholic teaching that
direct abortion from the time of conception is always wrong." That
"sizable number" has been growing since then despite the inhibiting
atmosphere. It is safe to say that only a minority of Catholic theologians
would argue that all abortions are immoral, though many will not touch the
subject for fear of losing their academic positions. (As one woman professor at
a large eastern Catholic university said, "I could announce that I had
become a communist without causing a stir, but if I defended Roe v.
Wade [the 1973 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion in the
United States], I would not get tenure.")
To many, the expression
"Catholic pluralism" sounds like a contradiction in terms. The
Catholic system, however, does have a method for ensuring a liberal pluralism
in moral matters: a system called "probabilism." While it is
virtually unknown to most Catholics, probabilism became standard equipment in
Catholic moral theology during the 17th century. It applies to situations where
a rigorous consensus breaks down and people begin to ask when they may in good
conscience act on the liberal dissenting view -- precisely the situation with
regard to abortion today.
Probabilism was based on the
insight that a doubtful moral obligation may not be imposed as though it were
certain. "Where there is doubt, there is freedom" (Ubi dubium, ibi
libertas) was its cardinal principle. It gave Catholics the
right to dissent from hierarchical church teaching on a moral matter, if they
could achieve "solid probability," a technical term. Solid
probability could come about in two ways: intrinsically, in a
do-it-yourself fashion, when a person prayerfully discovered in his or her
conscience "cogent," nonfrivolous reasons for dissenting from the
hierarchically supported view; or extrinsically, when
"five or six theologians of stature held the liberal dissenting view, even
though all other Catholic theologians, including the pope, disagreed. Church
discipline required priest confessors who knew that a probable opinion existed
to so advise persons in confession even if they themselves disagreed with it.
In a very traditional book, Moral
and Pastoral Theology, written 50 years ago for the training of
seminarians, Henry Davis, S.J., touched on the wisdom of probabilism by
admitting that since "we cannot always get metaphysical certainty" in
moral matters, we must settle for consenting "freely and reasonably, to
sufficiently cogent reasons."
Three things are noteworthy
about probabilism: (1) a probable, opinion which allows dissent from the
hierarchically maintained rigorous view is entirely based on insight -- one’s own
or that of at least five or six experts. It is not based on permission, and it
cannot be forbidden. (2) No moral debate -- -and that includes the abortion
debate -- is beyond the scope of a probabilistic solution. To quote Father
Davis again: "It is the merit of Probabilism that there are no exceptions
whatever to its application; once given a really probable reason for the
lawfulness of an action in a particular case, though contrary reasons may be
stronger, there are no occasions on which I may not act in accordance with the
good probable reason that I have found." (3) Probabilism is theologically
deep, going back to John and Paul’s scriptural teaching that Spirit-filled
persons are "taught of God," and to Thomas Aquinas’s doctrine that
the primary law for the believer is the grace of the Holy Spirit poured into
the heart, while all written law -- including even Scripture, as well as the
teachings of the popes and councils -- is secondary. Probabilism allows one to
dissent from the secondary through appeal to the primary teaching of the Spirit
of God. It is dangerous, of course, but it is also biblical and thoroughly
Catholic.
There are far more than five
or six Catholic theologians today who approve abortions under a range of
circumstances, and there are many spiritual and good people who find
"cogent," nonfrivolous reasons to disagree with the hierarchy’s
absolutism on this issue. This makes their disagreement a "solidly
probable" and thoroughly respectable Catholic viewpoint. Abortion is
always tragic, but the tragedy of abortion is not always immoral.
The Bible does not forbid
abortion. Rather, the prohibition came from theological and biological views
that were seriously deficient in a number of ways and that have been largely
abandoned. There are at least nine reasons why the old taboo has lost its
footing in today’s Catholic moral theology. In a 1970 article "A
Protestant Ethical Approach," in The Morality of Abortion (with
which few Catholic theologians would quarrel), Protestant theologian James Gustafson
pointed out five of the foundational defects in the traditional Catholic
arguments against all abortions: (1) These arguments relied on "an
external judge" who would paternalistically "claim the right to judge
the past actions of others as morally right or wrong," with insufficient
concern for the experience of and impact on mothers, physicians, families and
society. (2) The old arguments were heavily "juridical," and, as
such, marked by "a low tolerance for moral ambiguity." (3) The
traditional arguments were excessively "physical" in focus, with
insufficient attention to "other aspects of human life." (I would add
that the tradition did not have the advantage of modern efforts to define
personhood more relationally. The definition of person is obviously central to
the abortion question.) (4) The arguments were "rationalistic," with
necessary nuances "squeezed out" by "timeless abstractions"
which took the traditional Catholic reasoning "far from life." (5)The
arguments were naturalistic and did not put "the great themes of the
Christian faith at a more central place in the discussion." It would be
possible to parallel Gustafson’s fair and careful criticisms with exhortations
from the Second Vatican Council, which urged correctives in precisely these areas.
Other criticisms can be added
to Gustafson’s list: (6) The theology that produced the traditional ban on all
abortions was not ecumenically sensitive. The witness of Protestant Christians
was, to say the least, underesteemed. Vatican II condemned such an approach and
insisted that Protestants are "joined with us in the Holy Spirit, for to
them also He gives His gifts and graces, and is thereby operative among them
with His sanctifying power." The bishops and others who condemn all
abortion tout court should show some honest readiness to
listen in the halls of conscience to Protestant views on abortion before they
try to outlaw them in the halls of Congress.
(7) Furthermore, the old
theology of abortion proceeded from a primitive knowledge of biology. The ovum
was not discovered until the 19th century. Because modern embryology was
unknown to the tradition, the traditional arguments were spawned in ignorance
of such things as twinning and recombination in primitive fetal tissue and of
the development of the cortex.
On the other hand, the
teachings about abortion contained some remarkable scientific premonitions,
including the insight that the early fetus could not have personal status. Said
St. Augustine: "The law does not provide that the act [abortion] pertains
to homicide. For there cannot yet be said to be a live soul in a body that
lacks sensation when it is not formed in flesh and so is not endowed with
sense." As Joseph Donceel, S.J., notes, up until the end of the 18th
century "the law of the Roman Catholic Church forbade one to baptize an
aborted fetus that showed no human shape or outline." If it were a
personal human being, it would deserve baptism. On the question of a rational
soul entering the fetus, Donceel notes that Thomas Aquinas "spoke of six
weeks for the male embryo and three months for the female embryo." In
Aquinas’s hylomorphic theory, thematter had to be ready to receive
the appropriate form. According to such principles, as
Rosemary Ruether points out, "Thomas Aquinas might well have had to place
the point of human ensoulment in the last trimester if he had been acquainted
with modern embryology."
If the bishops and other
negative absolutists would speak of tradition, let them speak of it in its full
ambiguity and subtlety, instead of acting as though the tradition were a
simplistic, Platonic negative floating through time untouched by contradiction,
nuance or complexity.
(8) Vatican II urged priests
and church officers to have "continuous dialogue with the laity." The
arguments prohibiting all abortion did not grow out of such dialogue, nor are
the bishops in dialogue today. If they were, they would find that few are
dancing to the episcopal piping. A November 1982 Yankelovich poll of Catholic
women shows that fewer than one-fifth would call abortion morally wrong if a
woman has been raped, if her health is at risk, or if she is carrying a
genetically damaged fetus. Only 27 per cent judge abortion as wrong when a
physically handicapped woman becomes pregnant. A majority of Catholic women
would allow a teen-ager, a welfare mother who can’t work, or a married woman
who already has a large family to have an abortion.
Since the tradition has been
shaped by the inseminators of the species (all Catholic theologians, priests
and bishops have been men), is the implication that there is no value in the
witness of the bearers? Why has all authority on this issue been assumed by men
who have not been assigned by biology to bear children or by history to rear
them? Are the Catholic women who disagree with the bishops all weak-minded or
evil? Is it possible that not a single Catholic bishop can see any ambiguity in
any abortion decision? The bishops are not unsubtle or unintelligent, and their
pastoral letter on peace shows a surefooted approach to complexity. Their
apparent 100 per cent unanimity against all abortion is neither admirable nor
even plausible. It seems, rather, imposed.
(9) This leads to the question
of sin and sexism. Beverly Harrison (professor of Christian ethics at Union
Theological Seminary in New York) charges that "much discussion of
abortion betrays the heavy hand of the hatred of women." Are the negative
absolutists sinlessly immune to that criticism? Since the so-called
"prolife" movement is not dominated by vegetarian pacifists who find
even nonpersonal life sacred, is the "prolife" fetal fixation
innocent? Does it not make the fertilized egg the legal and moral peer of a
woman? Indeed, in the moral calculus of those who oppose all abortion, does not
the potential person outweigh the actual person
of the woman? Why is the intense concern over the 1.5 million abortions not
matched by an equal concern over the male-related causes of these 1.5 million
unwanted pregnancies? Has the abortion ban been miraculously immune to the
sexism rife in Christian history?
Feminist scholars have
documented the long record of men’s efforts to control the sexuality and
reproductivity of women. Laws showcase our biases. Is there no sexist bias in
the new Catholic Code of Canon Law? Is that code for life or against women’s
control of their reproductivity? After all, canon law excommunicates a person
for aborting a fertilized egg, but not for killing a baby after birth. One
senses here an agenda other than the simple concern for life. What obsessions
are operating? A person could push the nuclear button and blow the ozone lid
off the earth or assassinate the president (but not the pope) without being
excommunicated. But aborting a five-week-old precerebrate, prepersonal fetus
would excommunicate him or her. May we uncritically allow such an embarrassing
position to posture as "prolife"? Does it not assume that women cannot
be trusted to make honorable decisions, and that only male-made laws and
male-controlled funding can make women responsible and moral about their
reproductivity?
The moral dilemma of choosing
whether to have an abortion faces only some women between their teens and their
40s. The self-styled "prolife" movement is made up mainly of men and
postfertile women. Is there nothing suspicious about passionately locating
one’s orthodoxy in an area where one will never be personally challenged or
inconvenienced?
A moral opinion merits
respectable debate if it is supported by serious reasons which commend
themselves to many people and if it has been endorsed by a number of reputable
religious or other humanitarian bodies. Note the two requirements: good
reasons and reliable authorities.The principle of
respectable debate is based on some confidence in the capacity of free minds to
come to the truth, and on a distrust of authoritarian shortcuts to consensus
and uniformity. This principle is integral to American political thought and to
the Catholic doctrine of probabilism. On the other hand, prohibition represents
a despairing effort to compel those whom one cannot convince; it can only raise
new and unnecessary doubts about Catholic compatibility with democratic political
life.
But what of legislators who
personally believe that all abortion is wrong? Those legislators must recognize
that it is not their function to impose their own private moral beliefs on a
pluralistic society. St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas both found
prostitution morally repugnant, but felt that it should be legalized for the
greater good of the society. St. Thomas wryly but wisely suggested that a good
legislator should imitate God, who could eliminate certain evils but does not
do so for the sake of the greater good. The greater good supported by the
principle of respectable debate is the good of a free society where conscience
is not unduly constrained on complex matters where good persons disagree. Thus
a Catholic legislator who judges all abortions to be immoral may in good
conscience support the decisions of Roe v. Wade, since that
ruling is permissive rather than coercive. It forces no one to have an
abortion, while it respects the moral freedom of those who judge some abortions
to be moral.
Good government insists that
essential freedoms be denied to no one. Essential freedoms concern basic goods
such as the right to marry, the right to a trial by jury, the right to vote,
the right to some education and the right to bear or not to bear children.
The right not to bear children includes abortion as a means of last resort.
Concerning such goods, government should not act to limit freedom along income
lines, and should ensure that poverty takes no essential freedoms from any
citizen. Furthermore, the denial of abortion funding to poor women is not a
neutral stance, but a natalist one. The government takes sides on .the abortion
debate by continuing to pay for births while denying poor women funds for the
abortion alternative that is available to the rich. Funding cutbacks are also
forcing many to have later abortions, since they have to spend some months
scraping up the funds denied them by the government. The denial of funding is
an elitist denial of moral freedom to the poor and a stimulus for later or
unsafe abortions.
Abortion has become the
Catholic orthodoxy’s stakeout. In January 1983, California Bishop Joseph Madera
threatened excommunication for "lawmakers who support the effective
ejection from the womb of an unviable fetus." (His warning also extended
to "owners and managers of drugstores" where abortion-related
materials are sold.) In a bypass of due process, Sister Agnes Mary Mansour was
pressured out of her identity as a Sister of Mercy because her work for the
poor of Michigan involved some funding for abortions. Despite his distinguished
record in working for justice and peace, Robert Drinan, S.J., was ordered out
of politics by the most politically involved pope of recent memory. I am not
alone in seeing a link between this and the, antecedent right-wing furor over
Father Drinan’s position on abortion funding. The 4,000 Sisters of Mercy (who
operate the second-largest hospital system in the U.S., after the Veterans
Administration) were ordered, under threat of ecclesiastical penalties, to
abandon their plan to permit tubal ligations in their hospitals. A Washington,
D.C., group called Catholics for Free Choice had its paid advertisements turned
down by Commonweal, the National Catholic Reporter and America. This
group is not promoting abortions, but simply honestly acknowledging Catholic
pluralism on the issue. (Interestingly, the only "secular" magazine
to refuse their advertisement was the National Review.) In
June 1983, Lynn Hilliard, a part-time nurse in a Winnipeg, Manitoba, clinic
where abortions are performed, had her planned marriage in a Catholic parish
peremptorily canceled by Archbishop Adam Exner two weeks before the event, even
though the archbishop admitted he did not know whether Ms. Hilliard was
formally responsible for any abortions. In the face of all this injustice,
Catholic theologians remain remarkably silent; they exhibit no signs of anger.
Seven hundred years ago, Thomas Aquinas lamented that we had no name for the
virtue of anger in our religious lexicon. He quoted the words of St. John
Chrysostom, words that are still pertinent today: "Whoever is without
anger, when there is cause for anger, sins."
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