Archbishop urges Ottawa Catholics to speak out against assisted dying - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 01:18 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Archbishop urges Ottawa Catholics to speak out against assisted dying

"From not only a Catholic perspective but any rational perspective, the intentional, willful act of killing oneself or another human being is clearly morally wrong," says Ottawa Archbishop Terrence Prendergast.

'All human life has value. The law should protect all life,' writes Archbishop Terrence Prendergast

Archbishop Terrence Prendergast is urging Catholics to share concerns about doctor-assisted suicide with their MPs and MPPs. (CBC)

Thearchbishop of Ottawa callsassisted suicide"morally wrong"andis asking Catholics in Ottawa to voicetheir concerns about pending doctor-assisted deathlegislation with federal and provincial politicians.

"How can a just society permit the state-sanctioned taking of lives by our physicians?" Terrence Prendergast asked in a two-page statement. "When any life is vulnerable and can be taken at will, the dignity of all lives is seriously eroded. Respect for all human life in our society is jeopardized."

"To formally cooperate in the killing of the disabled, frail, sick, or suffering, even if motivated by a misplaced compassion, requires a prior judgement that such lives do not have value and are not worth living," he continued.

"But all human life has value. The law should protect all life."

Priests would findfuneral rites 'difficult'

At a recent meeting,Prendergast and area priests also discussed how difficult it would be to perform last rites or a funeralfor someone who asked a doctor to help them die.

"You cannot decide to put an end to your life as a Catholic," explained episcopal vicar Daniel Berniquez. "The teaching of the church is to respect life from conception to natural death."

In 20 years as a priest, Berniquez has never never refused to perform a funeral.

Should someone seeking assisted suicide make that request,Berniquez said, a priest would try to get thatperson not to go through with it.

Archbishop Prendergastclarified thatclergy agree to do funeral services for peoplewho commit suicide "for the sake of the grieving family, presuming the person was not in their right mind."

The church might refuse ifan individual or a family said such aservice validated assisted suicideas morally sound.

Archbishops make case against 'grave threat'

Catholics at churches across the Archdiocese of Ottawa were readPrendergast'sstatement this pastweekend, at the same timethatparishioners in Toronto wereshown a video of their archbishop giving a similar message.

Both archbishops areconcerned about how parliamentarians will interpret the 2015 Supreme Court decision giving people the right to have a doctor help them die, in certain cases.

The church sees medication not as a way to hasten death, but to ease pain, Prendergast wrote.

Prendergast worried "society would abandon people at their most vulnerable stage, rather than provide proper medical care for their suffering and need."

Yet that's what he sees happening after aspecial committee of MPs and senators took inareport tabled Feb. 25.

It suggested mature minors and people withmentalillnessesshould have right to doctor-assisted death.

Catholics encouragedto take a stand

Prendergastcalled on Ottawa Catholicsto talk to friends and co-workers about "the grave threat to human dignity and life that assisted suicide and euthanasia pose to our most vulnerable neighbours," and to explain to children and grandchildren about revering life from womb to natural death.

He also called on them to pray for parliamentarians, and to take part in the political process to protect life.

Toronto'sarchbishop asked thosewho share his concerns to join the Coalition for HealthCARE and Conscience, an organization he saidincludes more than 5,000 Canadian doctors with "a common mission to respect the sanctity of human life."