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The Vatican and Birth Technology


Article # : 13154 

Section : MODERN THOUGHT
Issue Date : 11 / 1987  3,600 Words
Author : Dinesh D''Souza
Dinesh D'Souza is Senior Domestic Policy Analyst at the White House. Research assistance for this article was provided by Angela Grimm, director of the Catholic Center at the Free Congress Foundation.

       The recent Vatican document calling for moral restraints on birth technology has generated animated debate and controversy in the United States and abroad. This debate has been generally welcome in Rome, because it was one of the main objectives in issuing the "Instruction on Respect for Human Life in Its Origin." Many countries have not figured out how to legislate on and adjudicate controversial issues such as surrogate parenthood, in vitro fertilization, and other artificial means of creating and sustaining fetal life. The "Baby M" case and the confused response it drew from the American public, politicians and the press is the latest evidence of this. The Vatican hopes to give the technology-driven discussion a moral resonance. In this respect it seems to have succeeded.
       
        Although the Vatican's initiation of an ethical discussion of artificial conception and birth has been favorably received, the specific content of the teaching has not been so welcome. As usual, dissident Catholics have led the crusade against Rome. Former priest Daniel Maguire found the church document "another example of celibate men pronouncing on the reproductive rights of women when women's voices have not been heard." Colman McCarthy, a Trappist monk emeritus, fulminated in the Washington Post against a "heavy papal hand hitting people hard rather than offering a compassionate pastoral touch." Groups like Catholics for a Free Choice, a pro-abortion lobby, have also weighed in with derogatory remarks.
       
        Writing in the New Republic, Hendrik Hertzberg notes that the papal document is "an argument from faith, which in this case means an argument from authority. Take it or leave it." The implication is that anyone who does not share Roman Catholic theology need ... (1997 of 21750 Characters)
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