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Manhattan Declaration

Right or Wrong?

Published: Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Updated: Wednesday, January 13, 2010 20:01

 One hundred fifty-two Catholic, Orthodox and Evangelical leaders recently issued the Manhattan Declaration (MD) in defense of "the sanctity of human life, the dignity of marriage as a union of husband and wife, and the freedom of conscience and religion." MD was drafted by Princeton Professor Robert George, Dean Timothy George of Samford University and Chuck Colson, founder of the Center for Christian Worldview. Online signers of MD exceed 400,000.

MD tells it like it is: "[I]n our nation … the lives of the unborn, the disabled, and the elderly are … threatened; … the institution of marriage, already buffeted by promiscuity, infidelity and divorce, is … redefined to accommodate fashionable ideologies; … the rights of conscience are … jeopardized by those who would … compel persons of faith to compromise their deepest convictions." MD relies on reasoned argument, consistent with Benedict XVI's view that the Church contributes to "discussion of the … questions shaping America's future by proposing respectful and reasonable arguments grounded in the natural law and confirmed by the perspective of faith" (Oct. 2, 2009).

MD spares neither political party: "[S]ince Roe v. Wade, … both … parties have been complicit in giving legal sanction to what Pope John Paul II described as ‘the culture of death.'" MD presents a bill of particulars: "[H]uman embryo-destructive research and its public funding are promoted ... The President and many in Congress favor … funding of … ‘therapeutic cloning' … the … mass production of human embryos to be killed [to produce] … customized stem cell lines and tissues. At the other end of life, [a] movement to promote assisted suicide and ‘voluntary' euthanasia threatens the lives of vulnerable … persons."

MD, unfortunately, misreads the origins of the "culture of death." MD describes "the cheapening of life that began with abortion" and "the license to kill that began with the abandonment of the unborn to abortion." Legalized abortion, however, and the other evils denounced by MD, are not origins, but rather symptoms of the contraceptive ethic that dominates our secularist, relativist and individualist culture. 

Until the Anglican Lambeth Conference of 1930, no Christian denomination had ever held that contraception could ever be objectively right. Contraception requires abortion as a backup. And the declining number of young is a factor in promoting euthanasia. If you make yourself the arbiter of whether and when life shall begin, you will predictably make yourself the arbiter of when, as in abortion or euthanasia, life shall end. In Evangelium Vitae, John Paul II noted that "contraception and abortion are often closely connected, as fruits of the same tree … [I]n very many … instances such practices … imply a self-centered concept of freedom, which regards procreation as an obstacle to personal fulfillment. The life which could result from a sexual encounter thus becomes an enemy to be avoided at all costs, and abortion becomes the only possible decisive response to contraception" (No. 13).

MD eloquently affirms that "the marital relationship is shaped and structured by its intrinsic orientation to … procreation." But it mentions neither contraception nor the defining aggression by which the federal government intruded itself, on the side of preventing life, into private reproductive decisions especially among the poor. During the 1960s, federal funding of family planning was limited. In 1970, Title X of the Family Planning and Population Services Act authorized grants and contracts to provide, in President Nixon's words, "family planning services … to all those who want them but cannot afford them." Abortifacients that prevent implantation of the embryo in the womb can be defined and funded as contraceptives under Title X and under Medicaid which, according to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, is now "the primary source of public funding for contraceptive services." Federal subsidies of birth control are directed primarily toward low-income persons in the United States, and abroad in foreign aid programs. Pending health care and other programs are likely to increase such funding.

In Humanae Vitae, Pope Paul VI predicted that the acceptance of contraception would place "a dangerous weapon … in the hands of … public authorities ….  for applying to … problems of the community those means acknowledged to be licit for married couples ... Who will stop rulers from … imposing upon their peoples … the method of contraception which they judge to be most efficacious? In such a way men would [place] at the mercy of … public authorities the most personal … sector of conjugal intimacy" (No. 17).

The failure of MD, in its catalogue of legalized promotions of the "culture of death," even to mention the entry by government into the business of subsidizing by contraception the rejection of new life, is inexcusable. Once that role of government was conceded, the other evils denounced by MD were predictable. Perhaps the purpose of MD was to put together a coalition of signers that would include proponents of public funding of contraception. If so, MD politicized and trivialized itself.

On another concern of MD, same-sex marriage, the impact of contraception was spelled out by Methodist Pastor Donald Sensing of Franklin, Tenn: "Since the invention of the Pill … human beings have … been able to control reproduction … The … acceptance of these changes is impelling the move toward homosexual marriage. Men and women living together … became … the dominant lifestyle in the under-30 demographic …  Because they … control their reproductive abilities — that is, have sex without sex's results — the arguments against homosexual consanguinity began to wilt.

"When society decided — and we have decided, this fight is over — that society would no longer decide the legitimacy of sexual relations between particular men and women, weddings became … symbolic rather than substantive … the shortcut way to make the legal compact regarding property rights, inheritance and … other … benefits … Sex, childbearing and marriage now have no necessary connection to one another, because the biological connection between sex and childbearing is controllable … If society has abandoned regulating heterosexual conduct of men and women, what right does it have to regulate homosexual conduct, including the regulation of their legal and property relationship with one another to mirror exactly that of hetero, married couples? I believe that this … is contrary to the will of God. But … same-sex marriage, if it comes about, will not cause the degeneration of … marriage; it is the result of it" (Wall Street Journal, March 15, 2004).

The signers of MD commendably pledge, in accord with St. Thomas Aquinas and Martin Luther King, to disobey any edict that would compel them or their institutions to participate in "any … anti-life act," treat "immoral sexual partnerships … as marriages or … refrain from proclaiming the truth." They also voice a prayer for their own perseverance: "May God help us not to fail in [our] duty" to proclaim the Gospel. Regrettably, MD did not go further and call upon the American people to pray for their country. 

MD forthrightly calls attention to evils that transcend the political as a challenge to reason, nature and God himself. MD itself would have transcended the political if it had called on the American people to put their primary reliance on prayer. Without a confrontation of contraception and its promotion by government, and without a serious call to prayer, MD invites dismissal as just another syncretistic manifesto cast in powerful prose that misses the point. 

 

Professor Emeritus Charles Rice is on the law school faculty. He can be reached at rice.1@nd.edu or 574-633-4415.

The views expressed in this column are those of the author and not necessarily those of The Observer.

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8 comments

Chuck Colbert
Tue Feb 2 2010 06:27
Mr. Rice, We all got the message here in the LGBT community. The bishops intend to drop an atomic bomb on our struggle for full equality. When will the Church leadership madness stop? Why such a fixation on the pelvic zone to the exclusion of the rest of the body -- heart, mind, and soul. If the bishops are egging for a fight, they may well get one. Stay tuned
Chris
Mon Feb 1 2010 23:53
Sex has 2 purposes, one of them is to procreate, when sex is used without this intention then it stops being "natural". This isn't about controlling anyone, imposing rules on people or anything of the like, this is about trying to keep sex as a sacred and beautiful thing and using it for the purposes for which it was created.
Dave
Fri Jan 15 2010 18:11
If the sole purpose of marriage and sex is the production of offspring, does that invalidate the marriages of people who are infertile?

My sister had ovarian cancer recently and had to have her reproductive organs removed. Does the church intend to break up her rather happy marriage of over 20 years, since she can no longer bear a child?

If that sounds absurd to you, how much more absurd is the notion that gay people are not allowed to marry because they cannot bear children either?

the basis of marriage is not reproduction, but a public declaration of love.

You've heard of love before, right? As in, "God is love"?

Or does the church even bother with God anymore? Perhaps you've decided you'd rather worship politics.

Elizabeth J. Mostrom
Fri Jan 15 2010 00:25
Thank you, Dr. Rice, for sharing your viewpoint on the contraceptive ethic as the root problem of the culture of death which has brought so much chaos within our families and culture over a relatively short period of time. You speak a truth that I hope we can begin to address first within our Church and then to the world.
As a woman in my vocation as wife and mother and as a nurse who has studied the medical effects of hormonal contraceptives I strongly believe the Pill (and other hormonal contraceptives) are poison, to the woman's body and soul, her marriage and to our society. I would urge all young women to reject the anti-life carcinogenic poison and embrace health and dignity as women. Please read the recent research (April 2009) by Jessica Dolle of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center which examines the relationship between oral contraceptives and triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) in women under 45 years. TNBC is an aggressive form of breast cancer associated with high mortality. This study and other reputable studies that have been available for years provide critical information that belongs in every high school health curriculum because the lives of women are at stake.
Enough
Thu Jan 14 2010 21:57
The Catholic Church has for decades shielded criminal pedophile priests. It is high time for this corrupt institution to stop pontificating on 'the sanctity of life'. An institution that protects criminals, systematically covers up their appalling sexual transgressions, and welcomes holocaust deniers back into their midst, is the most reactionary authoritarian structure one can imagine, and it has no business whatsoever telling others what is 'right or wrong' in matters of sexuality or morality in general.
Jose
Thu Jan 14 2010 14:23
Sex is apart of life and natural. Stop trying to control other people's bodies.
Karen Stein, AVOW International Center, Advocating the Vocation of Women
Thu Jan 14 2010 10:19
Your words about contraception are right. It is most unfortunate because now we are seeing the aggravated effects of contraception in our culture and in the Church because many in leadership failed to heed the words of a man in Rome. There is hope, though, in our young people. Many of them have first-hand experience of his prophecy. They do not want to live that kind of life. They are determined. They met a new man in Rome and listened. With his teaching of Theology of the Body they will lead their children to understand God's plan in a deeper way. They are the hope and future of our society.
Karen Stein, AVOW International Center, Advocating the Vocation of Women
Thu Jan 14 2010 09:51
Charlie, you are absolutely right! This is the truth even many in our own Church have failed to see. I am sorry but many couples have been fed a pack of lies, even those graduating from Our Lady's University over the last 50 years, including alums in our own family. It is no wonder the Church has permitted annulments. Many couple's marriages have been damaged from the start. Contraception is not only a barrier to new life, but it is an impediment in the life of the marriage. Communication between the couple is altered and stifled. The gift they offer to the marriage - themselves - is not accepted in the fullest. Unknowingly, they are saying, "I love you, but not your fertility, not your whole body." This is something the couple never discuss because they are not even aware that the pill will or is damaging their marriage. They believe they have done the right thing by "planning" their children. In a particular way this harms the woman. She is the first to experience this void in the relationship. She feels she is not being listened to. She begins to feel marginalized and used.. It effects the way she parents her children. Often she doesn't even realize that the root of her displeasure is the pill she takes every morning. She doesn't know that it is keeping her body in a suspended state of pseudo-pregnancy. The hormones in the birth control pill alter the hormonal balance of her body wreaking havoc on her emotionally and physically. Physically, she isn't even aware of what is actually happening to her body, but emotionally she is asking, "Why won't he listen to me?"






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