“The crisis of faith in Christ has led to a crisis of faith in absolute norms, in the existence of intrinsically evil acts, and therefore in the fact that certain principles are not negotiable.”
>Your Eminence, in Italy after laws permitting divorce, abortion, in vitro fertilization, gay civil unions, there was a law passed which more or less directly opens the door to euthanasia. What do you think of this law?
Human laws ought to be based on the natural moral law, which finds its roots in the inalienable dignity of the human person, created by God in His image. As soon as a human law offers an opening, however minimal, to an act which violates the dignity of the human person, there will be a risk of undermining all respect for this dignity.
>In Holland, this secularization has been happening for some time, how did it start?
After the introduction of hormonal contraception in 1964, the problem of unwanted pregnancies arose, for which procured abortion was prescribed as a remedy. In the mid-1960s, there was an idea that this would only be a few cases each year, but today and for some time the number of procured abortions is more than 30,000 per year. Even this number is relatively low, because the majority of young women use the pill starting at age 13-14 through the initiative of their parents, who are afraid that their daughters will get pregnant. Thus Holland remains very proud of having relatively few adolescent pregnancies. This situation also generates a problem with the formation of youth, because the widespread use of the pill at such a young age does not help with the formation of the virtue of chastity, that is, the integration of impulses and sexual feelings into a mutual total gift of self which is done in marriage, or in a celibate life.
>Regarding euthanasia, your country is probably one of the most “advanced” in the world.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s in Holland, the application of euthanasia was discussed (defined as the suppression of life on the part of a doctor at the request of a patient) as well as assisted suicide, but only in the case of the terminal phase of an incurable physical malady. Afterwards, the suppression of life outside of terminal cases also came to be accepted. Thus, in the 1990s, they began to speak about euthanasia, or giving assistance in suicide, in cases of patients suffering from psychiatric illnesses or in the case of dementia. A new barrier fell with the so-callled “Groningen Protocol,” an agreement between neonatologists and the attorney for the city of Groningen, according to which a doctor, who ended the life of a handicapped newborn baby, would not be able to be prosecuted, provided that he had respected a series of cautionary requests. From this local protocol, a regulation was created at the national level for the suppression of life of handicapped newborn children. In October 2016, the preceding government to our present one announced that it wanted to develop a new law which would have made possible assisted suicide for persons who are not suffering from any kind of psychiatric or somatic illness, but who are of the opinion that, due to feelings of loneliness, old age, or a reduced mobility, their life is “accomplished,” that is, it no longer has any sense in being lived and thus may be ended. In our present government there are now two Christian parties which are against such a law. However, a member of Parliament from a left-leaning liberal party intends to present legislation which involves permitting assistance in suicide, not necessarily by a doctor, in the case of a life considered “fulfilled,” for persons at least 75 years old.
This brief example demonstrates that the criteria for the suppression of life are growing ever broader, and that respect for human life and for the dignity of the person is growing ever less. The door, once it is left ajar, in the end is completely opened. Beginning to admit euthanasia for certain well-defined cases, puts us on a inclined plane, which in English is called “the slippery slope.” Once you put your feet on this slippery slope, you slip more rapidly than you thought you would.