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AIDS and Condoms: Morality and Lives
BY Donald DeMarco
April 19-25, 2009 Issue |
Posted 4/9/09 at 11:44 AM
An associate professor of political science at a
Catholic university has ruffled a few feathers with a newspaper article
entitled “Pope Puts Doctrine Ahead of Lives.”
The
author was referring to Benedict XVI’s recent visit to Africa and his
“stubborn” opposition to the use of condoms. This is enough, according to the
author, to make the Holy Father “a preacher of death.” So now we know that the
Pope is promoting the culture of death while, presumably, the secular world is
promoting the culture of life.
The
Sixth Commandment forbids adultery. Does the use of the condom rescind this
interdict? Does the modernized version read: “You may commit adultery as long
as you use a condom”? Does latex replace the confessional? Was it a shock to
the major media that Benedict XVI did not toss aside the Sixth Commandment?
It
is an extraordinary thing to place greater faith in a band of latex than in
Christianity, prayer, virtue and Catholic teaching. Where a program of chastity
and premarital abstinence is used, such as in Uganda, the rate of AIDS has gone
down by half during the last decade. Congressman Chris Smith has witnessed and
reported on the positive results of the abstinence message when he toured
Uganda.
Dorothy
Kwanze, a HIV activist in Kenya, has reported, “Abstinence education remains
the best strategy, especially for the risk group aged 15-25. The concept has
worked well for Uganda and can work for other African countries.” Fortunately,
Ms. Kwanze is not influenced by gross media distortions such as what is found
in some American newspapers.
Our
misguided political scientist suggests, rhetorically, that, “Perhaps the Pope
doesn’t know that 12 million people in sub-Saharan Africa are suffering with
the disease [HIV/AIDS].” What the Pope does know is that the promotion of
premarital abstinence works very nicely. Uganda once had the highest HIV
infection rate in the world. In the 1990’s, 30% of the country’s population was
infected. Today’s rate (2009) is down to about 8%.
The
headline, accusing the Pope of putting “doctrine ahead of lives,” is scurrilous
journalism at its worst.
The
author, of course, is not without his own doctrine, which is barbaric in its
essence. Widespread fornication, together with its negative impact on marriage,
the family and personal integrity, appears to be of no concern to him. Would a
wife be satisfied to know that her philandering husband always uses a condom?
The
author feigns an interest in the lives of those infected or those who may be
infected by the HIV virus, but his unremittingly vicious attack on the Holy
Father certainly calls into question his supposed altruism.
He
refers to the Holy Father as “immoral,” offering a “ridiculous belief,” expressing
an “abhorrent motive,” and spreading a “general fear of sexuality,” while
showing a “disregard if not contempt” for the people of Africa,” and, “instead
of praying for those in need,” “preying on them.”
This
is a fairly comprehensive, though recklessly intemperate, swipe that is seldom
levied against even the most villainous of criminals.
The
Church is concerned about saving souls as well as lives.
Condoms
do not always work. They have both user as well as product failure rates. To be
concerned exclusively with lives, but not with their moral quality, is not only
irresponsible, but a sin against charity. The Church is vitally concerned about
both, but the moral dimension must take precedence. To those who are good, good
things will follow: “Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God”
(Matthew 5:8).
This
is surely the message of Christ when he bids us to seek first justice and the
Kingdom of heaven. To countenance out-of-control sex is not an expression of
love. But to believe that a thin layer of latex is Africa’s most pressing need
is superstition in its most virulent form.
Morality
must come first. If it does not, immorality will grow without check.
And
this is why Pope Benedict stated that the distribution of condoms “increases
the problem.” When morality is ignored, immorality grows by leaps and bounds.
The
Church is supposed to move the world, though the world is certainly intent on
moving the Church. The Church is a light.
Yet,
that light is sometimes sent into a darkness that is so impenetrable that it
cannot receive it. The venomous and slanderous attack on the Holy Father is a
recurrence of the attack against Christ, which is also an attack against the
light. “Let there be light” should be the maxim of all newspapers, secular as well
as religious.
Donald
DeMarco is a professor emeritus at St. Jerome’s University and an adjunct
professor at Holy Apostles College and Seminary
and Mater
Ecclesiae College.
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