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Los Angeles Times (USA), February 4, 2005
Condom Ban Divides
Catholic Clergy as Health Concerns Grow
Faced with AIDS
crisis, some theologians justify the use of
prophylactics to save lives.
Author : Tracy Wilkinson
DATELINE: ROME
A recent furor over what appeared to be rebellious
Spanish bishops approving the use of condoms
-- and the stern Vatican response that forced
a quick retreat -- highlighted a quiet but
intense debate within the Roman Catholic Church.
When, if ever, is it permissible to use condoms
to prevent death?
Because of its rejection of prophylactics, the
church has frequently been called insensitive
to the pandemic spread of AIDS, more interested
in religious dogma than preserving the lives
of tens of millions of people.
Contrary to popular belief, however, the Vatican
has never issued a formal ban on the use of
condoms to prevent HIV infection.
What the church does advocate, as Pope John Paul
II reiterated recently (without mentioning
condoms), is abstinence and fidelity as the
best ways to combat the disease. It teaches
that in general the only acceptable sex is
between a man and a woman who are married to
each other and intend to procreate. It prohibits
the use of all artificial contraception.
This doctrine is enshrined in the 1968 encyclical
titled "Humanae Vitae," issued by
Pope Paul VI, but church historians say the
pope and his advisors at the time did not have
disease in mind when they dictated this proscription.
Official doctrine on these matters has not wavered,
yet several senior leaders have explicitly
or implicitly sanctioned the use of condoms
for cases in which life is at stake. They have
done so with a tacit acknowledgment that there
are legitimate arguments that morally justify
the apparent contravention of a church rule.
"The question is what to do when what should
not happen does happen," said Father Brian
Johnstone, a moral theologian at the Pontifical
Lateran University in Rome.
In some cases, he and other theologians argue,
a woman is justified in protecting her life
by using a condom if she must have sex with
a man who is infected with HIV, the virus that
causes acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
For example, Johnstone noted, in some societies
it is almost impossible for a woman to refuse
sex with her husband. If he is infected, she
has the absolute right to protect herself by
demanding he wear a condom.
By extension, some theologians argue, if a woman
is a prostitute, she could be justified in
protecting herself from deadly disease by having
her partner use a condom.
There is a perhaps surprising acceptance of these
real-world scenarios by many in the church,
although they may not acknowledge it publicly.
Nor do these exceptions rise to a level of
acceptance, theologians stress, that would
permit the advocacy of condom use in forums
such as schools.
The issue reveals a contrast between theology
and pastoral application of the church's teachings
amid present-day complexities, Johnstone said.
The thinking is also embodied in the principle
of double effect, a doctrine espoused most
famously by St. Thomas Aquinas in the 13th
century. The principle condones certain actions
that can be foreseen to have bad results in
the interest of a greater good.
Yet there is no consensus within the church leadership.
Echoing numerous conservative prelates, Cardinal
Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, speaking in a BBC documentary
in October 2003, said sperm could penetrate
the walls of a condom, so their use might in
fact increase rather than hinder the spread
of AIDS.
That same year, the Vatican's Congregation for
the Family, over which Trujillo presides, issued
a nearly 900-page Lexicon on issues that included
human sexuality. It stated that there is no
evidence that condoms prevent HIV infection.
But Mexican Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragan,
the Vatican's top health official, has repeatedly
spoken of exceptions.
"If an infected husband wants to have sex
with his wife who isn't infected, then she
must defend herself by whatever means necessary,"
Lozano Barragan, president of the Pontifical
Council for Health Pastoral Care, told the
National Catholic Reporter late last year.
"If a wife can defend herself from having
sex by whatever means necessary, why not with
a condom?"
And Italian Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi, often
mentioned as a possible candidate to become
pope, has for years tolerated the fact that
priests in his home parish of Genoa distribute
condoms to prostitutes (even though he has
spoken and written against using condoms).
The recent controversy involving the Spanish
bishops is the latest manifestation of the
debate, which simmers behind church walls.
It began when Bishop Juan Antonio Martinez Camino,
spokesman for the Spanish Bishops Conference,
emerged from a meeting last month with the
Spanish health minister and, in response to
reporters' questions, said condoms could have
a place in the global war on AIDS.
Although the comments were refuted the next day
when the Bishops Conference issued a statement
reiterating its opposition to condoms, Martinez
Camino apparently was doing little more than
giving a nod to the exceptions that many moral
theologians say are justified.
Quickly, however, the comments were caught up
in a highly unusual political storm between
the Vatican and Madrid's Socialist government,
which, to the church's horror, has proposed
legalizing gay marriage and liberalizing divorce
and abortion laws.
Six days after Martinez Camino's statement, the
pope lectured a group of visiting Spanish bishops
on Spain's "deep Christian roots"
that "cannot be ripped up," and he
warned them against a surge in "moral
permissiveness."
The comments were seen as directed at Spanish
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
The government shot back, summoning the Vatican's
ambassador in Madrid to receive a complaint
expressing surprise at the pope's criticism.
The Vatican stood firm. Amid local headlines
such as "Spain Against the Pope,"
the pontiff's spokesman responded huffily,
telling the Spanish government to read the
pope's "entire speech" more carefully.
<< Los Angeles Times -- 2/4/05 >>
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