Resolution on
Abortion
National Conference of
Catholic Bishops
November 7, 1989
The
decision of the U. S. Supreme Court in Webster v. Reproductive Health
Services provides reason to hope that our nation is moving toward a time
when unborn children will again enjoy the protection of law. The Court
recognized states' legitimate interest in protecting prenatal life and their
authority to adopt laws favoring childbirth over abortion. The Court
indicated that a state's interest in protecting life might well exist
throughout pregnancy, not only after viability. We are encouraged by this.
Yet abortion on demand
remains our nation's legal policy because the 1973 Supreme Court decisions
that legalized abortion throughout pregnancy have not been overturned.
Because of those decisions many citizens believe that women have a moral
right to abort their unborn children. This has led to erosion of respect for
the right to life, which is bestowed by the Creator and cannot legitimately
be denied by any nation or court. More than one and a half million unborn
children in the United States continue to die each year by abortion, and
increasing numbers of women suffer abortion's physical, emotional and
spiritual pain. Often they suffer alone, deserted by men unwilling to
acknowledge their own responsibilities as fathers.
Most Americans believe that
abortion should be illegal except in certain limited circumstances; an
overwhelming majority agrees that unmarried minors should not obtain
abortions without parental knowledge or consent. Nonetheless, pro-abortion
or so-called "pro-choice" groups have mounted a campaign to convince
legislators and others that Americans want abortion on demand. These
organizations have formed new political arms and have intensified efforts to
defeat politicians who do not support permissive abortion. Because of the
critical importance of the issue and the need for a timely response, we wish
to reaffirm our conviction that all human life is sacred whether born or
unborn. With the Second Vatican Council we declare that "from the moment of
conception life must be guarded with the greatest care, while abortion and
infanticide are unspeakable crimes" (Gaudium et Spes, para. 51).
As leaders of the Catholic
community in the United States, we acknowledge our right and responsibility
to help establish laws and social policies protecting the right to life of
unborn children, providing care and services for women and children, and
safeguarding human life at every stage and in every circumstance. At this
particular time, abortion has become the fundamental human rights issue for
all men and women of good will. The duty to respect life in all its stages
and especially in the womb is evident when one appreciates the unborn
child's membership in our human family, and the grave consequences of
denying moral or legal status to any class of human beings because of their
age or condition of dependency.
We who revere human life as
created in the image and likeness of God have all the more reason to take a
stand. For us abortion is of overriding concern because it negates two of
our most fundamental moral imperatives: respect for innocent life, and
preferential concern for the weak and defenseless. As we said three years
ago in reaffirming our Pastoral Plan for Pro-Life Activities: "Because
victims of abortion are the most vulnerable and defenseless members of the
human family, it is imperative that we, as Christians called to serve the
least among us, give urgent attention and priority to this issue. Our
concern is intensified by the realization that a policy and practice
allowing over one and a half million abortions annually cannot but diminish
respect for life in other areas." No Catholic can responsibly take a
"pro-choice" stand when the "choice" in question involves the taking of
innocent human life.
We therefore call upon
Catholics to commit themselves vigorously to the implementation of all three
elements of the Pastoral Plan—an education and public information effort,
pastoral care for pregnant women and their children, and a public policy
program in defense of human life in all its stages, especially the unborn.
Our long and short range public policy goals include: (1) constitutional
protection for the right to life of unborn children to the maximum degree
possible; (2) federal and state laws and administrative policies that
restrict support for and the practice of abortion; (3) continual refinement
and ultimate reversal of Supreme Court and other court decisions that deny
the inalienable right to life; (4) supportive legislation to provide morally
acceptable alternatives to abortion, and social policy initiatives which
provide support to pregnant women for prenatal care and extended support for
low-income women and their children. We urge public officials, especially
Catholics, to advance these goals in recognition of their moral
responsibility to protect the weak and defenseless among us.
Our concern about the
national debate on the legal dimension of this vital issue should not
distract us from the continuing need within our own community to educate, to
form, to encourage people on life issues, most specifically, the right to
life of the unborn. This right of the unborn to life demands legal
protection and we will continue to insist on this. At the same time we
recognize, as we rightfully engage in this debate, that we must hear the
issues the struggles, and the anguish of women who face issues in a way that
we never will. As we continue to teach clearly and forcefully the moral evil
of abortion, we must also—as our Pastoral Plan suggests—speak to them a word
of understanding and encouragement, a word of solidarity and support. Both
in word and deed, we must inspire the entire community to help carry the
burdens of all our sisters in need.
Above all, we ask people to
commit themselves to daily prayer and sacrifice so that our nation might
soon witness the end of the scourge of abortion. We continue to ask God's
merciful assistance, without which we labor in vain. May the patroness of
our nation, Mary, the Mother of God, who herself said "yes" to life,
intercede before her son for the restoration of respect for all human life
in our day.
Resolution adopted
unanimously by the U.S. Catholic bishops at their annual meeting in November
1989.
__________________________
Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington, DC 20017-1194 (202) 541-3070