Fr.
Euteneuer sees ‘Irony’ in Archbishop of Canterbury’s
Abortion Statement
FRONT
ROYAL, VA — The Rev. Thomas J. Euteneuer, STL, president
of Human Life International, (HLI) today remarked on an
op-ed appearing in the British publication The Observer
on October 21, entitled, “Britain's abortion
debate lacks a moral dimension” by the Archbishop
of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams.
Father
Euteneuer said, “While not agreeing with everything
Dr. Williams said, I certainly appreciate his comments
on the tragedy of abortion in commemorating the fortieth
anniversary of the British Abortion Act. He is certainly
correct about the moral ‘slippage’ that has
occurred, where abortion is viewed far more casually today
than was foreseen in 1967.”
“However,”
Fr. Euteneuer said, “As a Roman Catholic priest
I see a genuine irony in his comments. At one point Dr.
Williams asks, ‘We may well ask what has happened’
in regard to this slippage. For a Roman Catholic what
has happened is all too clear: In 1930 The Church of England
was the first Christian church to allow the separation
of procreation from the marital act in the Lambeth decision
on contraception and gave endorsement, even if unwittingly,
to future policies which would allow the killing of children.
It's a small step from excluding children from sex to
expelling children from the womb.” Fr. Euteneuer
said.
“The
‘slippage’ Dr. Williams speaks of is precisely
what Pope Pius XI warned of in the Papal encyclical, Castii
Conubii, issued in response to Lambeth, and what
Pope Paul VI reiterated in his 1968 encyclical Humanae
Vitae. These popes said that the widespread use of
contraception would lead to ‘a general lowering
of morality’. By now we see this in our entire society.
On the social as well as the personal levels, contraception
and abortion are two sides of the same bad penny.”
Fr. Euteneuer said.
He
continued, “If you think it through, Dr. Williams’s
comments on our current moral climate tend to vindicate
the Roman Catholic position on birth control as still
the only realistic position if we hope to restore moral
sanity. HLI hopes that all good-willed people will take
a hard look at how we got where we are today and recognize
the role contraception played in it. It is my prayer that
the centuries-old Christian consensus on the sin of contraception,
which all but vanished at Lambeth, will be restored.”
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