|
Georgetown Jesuit on Notre Dame
BY William Blazek, SJ, M.D., FACP
May 24-30, 2009 Issue |
Posted 5/15/09 at 12:42 PM
Is all this bluster over Notre Dame's commencement
ceremony honors for President Obama simply in-house spring cleaning for the
American Catholic Church? Not by a long shot.
The
deeper question is whether it is ever suitable, in Catholic environments or elsewhere,
to acclaim a man as an icon of accomplishment in the arena of civil rights when
he has proposed, instituted and funded policies which deny the fundamental
dignity of an entire category of disenfranchised human beings.
The debate over the University of
Notre Dame's plan to bestow an honorary doctorate upon Obama this month is much
more than a local tempest in a purely Catholic teapot.
The question is crucial to the
interests of all Americans. At its heart, it is a battle for the very soul of
our nation, a battle over whom we include at the table of life and how far our
society is willing to go to exclude those who are not welcome at it.
As
has been widely discussed these past weeks, some prominent educators have
supported Father Jenkins' invitation as part of a process of open academic engagement, one that recognizes Obama's significance as the first African-American
chief executive and that touches upon a broad spectrum of social and political
issues.
Others, Harvard's Mary Ann Glendon most notable among them, have cited the bishops'
2004 guidance "Catholics in Political Life" in questioning whether a premier
Catholic university can honor with
a degree a man who has acted "in
defiance of our fundamental moral principles."
The president's public record makes clear that he is no moderate on the moral
permissibility of abortion and embryonic destruction. Any suggestion otherwise
is a distortion of reality and insults the intelligence of the American people.
In his first 100 days in office, he approved federal funding for research that
destroys human embryos and repealed restrictions on the use of tax dollars to
support abortions conducted overseas.
At the same time, he appointed hard-line abortion rights supporters such as
Hillary Clinton, Kathleen Sebelius and Rahm Emanuel to the most prominent
positions in his cabinet and staff.
As a U.S. senator, Barack Obama co-sponsored the Freedom of Choice Act, which
would make it illegal for any physician or hospital to conscientiously refrain
from committing abortions.
While an Illinois legislator, he opposed a ban on partial-birth abortion, the macabre
procedure in which a near-term abortee's brains are suctioned from the skull
while arms, legs and torso dangle outside the mother's birth canal. Critics of
water boarding step aside; we are in the big time.
President Obama's general defense of a woman's control over her body rests on rock-solid
foundations, but his ethic and the policies built upon it err in failing to
recognize that there is always a "second patient" in any pregnancy.
In this administration's worldview, the mother holds all the
cards, the embryo or fetus none. Sound medical practice recognizes that, just as
the president's position on life does not exist in a vacuum, neither does a patient's
autonomy.
Both the mother's freedom of action and her unborn
child's humanity are factors at play in every decision during any pregnancy or
delivery.
Barack Obama's election was indeed a
historic event, especially as a great sign of the more complete and substantive
incorporation of a long-excluded minority in the American political and social
experiment.
That accomplishment notwithstanding,
the president's policies and publicly
stated philosophy push a profoundly marginalized
group further into the cold — his actions afford them no moral status and
moreover directly harm them.
This is a grave abrogation of the
civil rights of the unborn, and our social institutions, Catholic or otherwise,
cannot blithely ignore Mr. Obama's full cooperation in this injustice while
handing out lauds for his other achievements.
William Blazek, a Jesuit scholastic, is an
assistant professor of medicine and medical ethicist in the Center for Clinical
Bioethics at Georgetown University School of Medicine in Washington. He is a
fellow of the American College of Physicians.
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|