Holy Father's Letter to German Bishops on Abortion CounselingIn a letter dated January 11, 1998, the Holy Father sent to the German
bishops his decision in a matter that he had discussed with them and other
Vatican officials for some time. German law requires that a woman seeking
abortion present a certificate, obtained from a state-approved social services
center, showing she has received counseling. This puts counseling centers in the
dilemma that while such women need our assistance and should be counseled, the
issuing of the certificate becomes a necessary step in the procuring of an
abortion. The Holy Father's direction was therefore sought regarding whether
Catholic counseling centers should be allowed to issue such certificates.
The text of the Pope's decision follows. He has asked that Catholic
counseling agencies not issue the certificates, but at the same time find ways
to continue, and in fact increase, their outreach to women tempted to have
abortions.
Priests for Life is grateful to the Holy Father for his letter to the German
bishops, which, as he points out, has implications for the whole Church. We take
special note of his insistence on preserving the clarity and vigor of the
Church's witness to the Gospel of Life. This purpose and motivation are what
stand behind both the decision not to allow the "certificates" to be issued, and
the vigorous call to both continue and increase the Church's assistance to women
tempted to abort.
What unites these two aspects of the Holy Father's position is precisely the
fact that love is indivisible. The Gospel of Life calls for equal and
uncompromising love for the woman and the child. We cannot love one without
loving the other.
Therefore, the witness of an absolute refusal to do anything to permit an
abortion to happen is, at the same time, exactly what the mother of that child
needs to help her to do what is right, and to avoid the destructive impact of
abortion not only on her child, but on her.
Priests for Life helps clergy maintain this witness by the clarity of their
teaching and their active assistance to programs providing alternatives to
abortion.
Here is the text of the Holy Father's letter.
To my Venerable Brothers in
the German Episcopate
Greetings and the Apostolic Blessing
1. On 27 May last, at the request of Bishop Karl Lehmann, President of your
Bishops' Conference, we discussed and examined together questions concerning the
correct relationship of Catholic pregnancy counseling centres with
State-regulated counseling, in accordance with the Pregnancy and Family
Assistance Act of 21 August 1995. Once again I thank you for this meeting, at
which you showed keen awareness of your responsibility for the Gospel of life,
and for your readiness to seek the right solution in union with the Successor of
Peter.
In the months since then I have again studied the various aspects of the
question, sought further consultation and laid the problem in prayer before the
Lord. So today, as I announced at the end of our conversation, I would again
like to summarize the conclusions reached and, in accordance with my
responsibility as Supreme Pastor of the Church, to give some guidelines for
future conduct in the points at issue
2. For decades your Episcopal Conference has been unequivocally to bearing
witness by word and deed to the message of the inviolable dignity of human life.
In fact, although the right to life is specifically recognized in your esteemed
country's Constitution, the legislature has nevertheless legalized the killing
of unborn children in certain cases, and in others has stated that this killing
will not be punished, although remaining illegal. Your Bishops' Conference has
rightly accepted neither the former nor the current abortion law, but has taken
an open and courageous stand against abortion. In many addresses, statements,
ecumenical initiatives and other endeavours, especially your pastoral letter of
26 September 1996, Menschenwurde und Menschenrechte von allem Anfang an
["Human Dignity and Human Rights from the Very Beginning"], you have proclaimed
and defended the value of human life from conception.
We must be in the world
but not of the world
In the fight for unborn life, the Church today must increasingly distinguish
herself from the surrounding world. She has done so since her origin (cf.
Letter to Diognetus, 5:1-6:2) and continues to do so. "in the proclamation
of this Gospel, we must not fear hostility or unpopularity, and we must refuse
any compromise or ambiguity which might conform us to the world's way of
thinking (cf. Rom 12:2). We must be in the world but not of the world (cf. Jn
15:19- 17:16), drawing our strength from Christ, who by his Death and
Resurrection has overcome the world (cf. Jn 16:33)" (Evangelium vitae, n.
82). By your many efforts in the service of life you have put these words into
practice. As a result, your country's citizens have become familiar since
childhood with the Church's position on the question of the defence of life. I
would like with all my heart to express my high regard and full gratitude to you
for this tireless effort. I also thank all those who publicly defend the right
to life of every human being. In this regard special mention should be made of
those politicians who in the past and present have not been afraid to raise
their voice on behalf of the life of unborn children.
3. Apart from a few positive assertions on the defence of life and the
need for counseling, the law of 21 August 1995 provides that, in the
presence of a very vaguely described "medical indication," abortion is lawful
until birth. You rightly and severely criticized this regulation. The
legalization of abortion in the presence of a "criminal indication" is also
totally unacceptable to believing Christians and to all people with a discerning
conscience. I ask you to take all possible steps to have these legal provisions
changed.
Task of defending life
concerns the whole Church
4. I will now turn to the new regulations on the counseling of pregnant women
in difficulty, because these regulations are known to have considerable
significance for the Church's mission in service to life and for Church-State
relations in your country. Because of my concern about the new regulations, I
felt it my duty to recall in a personal Letter, dated 21 September 1995, several
principles which are extremely important in this matter. I called your
attention, among other things, to the fact that the positive legal definition of
counseling with respect to the defence of life has been weakened by some
ambiguous wording and that the counseling certificate to be issued bv the
counselors now has a different juridical status than it did in the earlier
regulations. I asked you to redefine the Church's counseling activity and thus
to take care that the Church's freedom is not impaired and that ecclesiastical
institutions do not become co-responsible for the killing of innocent children.
In your Interim Episcopal Guidelines you have further explained that,
unlike the law, Church counseling is aimed at the absolute defence of life. With
these and other measures, you have given Church counseling centres their own
clear profile. In the struggle to obtain government approval of the Interim
Episcopal Guidelines in the individual States, the Church's autonomous
position on the question has been further presented.
5. The problem of the counseling certificate is still disputed. It certainly
cannot be considered apart from the counseling programme but must be carefully
evaluated according to its objective juridical meaning. In my speech on 22 June
1996 during my Pastoral Visit to Germany, I said: It is clear from our faith
that nothing can be done by Church institutions which justifies abortion in any
way at all" (Address to the German Bishops, L'Osservatore Romano English
edition, 3 July 1996, p. 8).
To find a solution to the question of the counseling certificate--following
the meeting of 5 December 1995--a second discussion was held on 4 April 1997
between a delegation from your Bishops' Conference and representatives of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, during which, despite basic
agreement about the Church's teaching on the preservation of life and the
condemnation of abortion, as well as about the need of comprehensive counseling
for pregnant mothers in difficulty, the disputed question of the counseling
certificate could not be resolved once and for all. During the meeting of 27 May
1997, all the elements to be taken into consideration were honestly and openly
presented again.
In my task of strengthening my brethren in faith (cf. Lk 22:32), I now
address you again, dear Brothers. It is in fact a pastoral question with obvious
doctrinal implications, and is important for the Church and for society in
Germany, and even far beyond. Although the legal situation in your country is
unique, the problem of how to proclaim the Gospel of life effectively and
credibly in today's pluralistic world nevertheless concerns the Church as a
whole. The task of defending life in all its phases allows no half measures.
Consequently, the Church's teaching and way of acting in the question of
abortion must, in their essential content, be the same in all countries.
6. You attach great importance to the continued public involvement of
Catholic counseling centres in the counseling of pregnant women, in order to be
able by goal directed counseling to save many unborn babies from being killed,
and to support women in difficult living situations with all the means
available. You emphasize that in this question the Church—out of love for unborn
children—must make the broadest possible use of the room for action offered by
the State for the sake of both life and counseling, and she cannot be
responsible for having failed to give assistance. I support you in this concern
and greatly hope that ecclesiastical counseling can be vigorously continued. The
quality of this counseling, which takes very seriously both the value of unborn
life and the difficulties of the pregnant woman, seeking a solution on the basis
of truth and love, will touch the consciences of many who seek advice and will
serve as an admonishment to society.
In this context I would expressly like to emphasize the commitment of the
Catholic counselors of Caritas and the Catholic Women's Social Service,
as well as several other counseling centres. I am familiar with the goodwill of
the counselors and I know of their efforts and concerns. I would sincerely like
to thank them for their commitment and to ask them to continue fighting for
those who have no voice and are still unable to defend their own right to life.
7. Regarding the question of the counseling certificate, I would like to
repeat what I previously wrote to you in my Letter of 21 September 1995: "It
certifies that counseling has taken place, but it is also a necessary document
for an unpunishable abortion during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. You
yourselves have several times described this contradictory meaning of the
counseling certificate, which is based on the law as a "dilemma." The "dilemma"
lies in the fact that the certificate attests that counseling has been given in
the defence of life, but it remains a necessary condition for having an abortion
performed with impunity, even though it is certainly not the decisive cause.
The positive text that you have provided for the counseling certificate
issued by Catholic centres does not in principle eliminate this contradictory
tension. On the basis of the legal requirements, after three days have passed
the woman can use the certificate to have her child aborted with impunity in
public institutions and in part with public funds. It should not be overlooked
that the legally required counseling certificate, which of course is primarily
meant to guarantee that mandatory counseling takes place, has in fact acquired a
key role in carrying out unpunishable abortions. Catholic counselors and the
Church, on whose behalf counselors act in many cases, are thus faced with a
situation that conflicts with their basic position on the question of defending
life and with the goal of their counseling. Against their intentions they are
involved in carrying out a law that leads to the killing of innocent human
beings and offends many people.
Church cannot shirk her public responsibility
After careful consideration of all the arguments, I cannot avoid the
conclusion that there is an ambiguity here which obscures the clear and
uncompromising witness of the Church and her counseling centres. I would
therefore urgently ask you, dear Brothers, to find a way so that a certificate
of this kind will no longer be issued at Church counseling centres or those
connected with the Church. I urge you, however, to ensure that in any event the
Church maintains an effective presence in the counseling of women seeking help.
8. Venerable Brothers, I know that my request touches on a difficult problem.
For quite some time and especially since the meeting on 27 May 1997, many
people, including those who are involved in and support the Church, have firmly
warned against a decision that would leave women in conflict situations without
the assistance of the faith community. With equal firmness believers of every
rank and station have also pointed out that the certificate involves the Church
in the killing of innocent children and makes her absolute opposition to
abortion less credible.
I have taken both opinions very seriously and I respect the impassioned
search by both sides for the right path for the Church in this important matter;
nevertheless, I feel compelled, because of the dignity of life, to make this
request of you. I recognize at the same time that the Church cannot shirk her
public responsibility, especially where it is a question of the life and dignity
of man whom God created and for whom Christ died. The Pregnancy and Family
Assistance Act offers many opportunities for remaining involved in counseling;
the Church's presence must not ultimately depend on issuing a certificate. It
should not only be the force of a regulation that brings women to Church
counseling centres, but especially the professional competence, human concern
and availability of concrete help that are found in them. I trust that with the
variety of possibilities offered by your institutions and your organizations,
with their rich potential of intellectual forces and capacity for innovation and
creativity, you will find ways not only to prevent the Church's involvement in
counseling from being diminished but to reinforce it even further. I am
convinced that, in the discussion which is already under way in German society
and will now continue, you can mobilize all your forces to make the Church's
approach understandable to those in and outside her, so that it will at least be
respected even where it is not thought possible to approve it.
That the Church cannot go along with the legislator on a given point will be
a sign which, precisely by her opposition, will help to sharpen the public
conscience, and will thereby ultimately serve the good of the State: "The
Gospel of life is not for believers alone: it is for everyone ... Consequently,
all that we do as the 'people of life and for life' should be interpreted
correctly and welcomed with favour. When the Church declares that unconditional
respect for the right to life of every innocent person --from conception to
natural death--is one of the pillars on which every civil society stands, she
'wants simply to promote a human State. A State which recognizes the defence of
the fundamental rights of the human person, especially of the weakest, as its
primary duty' " (Evangelium vitae, n. 101).
I thank you once again for your various efforts to defend the life of unborn
children and for your readiness to modify Catholic counseling activity. To Mary,
Mother of Good Counsel, I commend the faithful in your care, especially the men
and women involved in counseling, as well as all pregnant women in need, and I
cordially impart to you a special Apostolic Blessing.
From the Vatican, 11 January 1998, the feast of the Baptism of the Lord.
Teachings of the
Magisterium on Abortion