Anti-abortion protesters |
Naturally, they
ignored the people involved to focus on the idea of abortion. Everything to them is so cut and dry, black
and white.
Perhaps they
should talk to Jeremy Stodghill, a Denver prison
guard involved in a long-lasting law suit against St. Thomas More Hospital,
which is owned by Catholic Health
Initiatives, a California-based non-profit that is reportedly the third-largest
health-care provider in the nation.
In 2006, his wife and twin infant sons died because the
doctors refused to perform a caesarian.
Stodghill felt the operation would have saved the boys, two months from
birth, but the doctors argued that they were fetuses. By law, then, the boys had no rights.
Stodghill |
As a result, Stodghill lost his wife and his unborn
children. In turn, the hospital has
turned its back on Catholic theology. Health-care
directives authored by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops instruct
Catholic caregivers to “witness the sanctity of human life from the moment of
conception until death” and always to “defend the unborn.” Instead, the hospital is relying on the legal
protection afforded in the American legal code.
“I understand they got to make their bottom line. Medicine’s
not free… They’re in the business of making money. I don’t begrudge them that,”
said Stodghill, who has gone bankrupt from all the legal bills.
So far, the courts have agreed with the hospital. However, in two previous cases, judges ruled
differently.
In 2005, a judge ruled in favor of the husband after his
nine-month pregnant wife died. Summit County
District Court Judge Terry Ruckriegle said that the law was not clear, but it “came
down to the whole issue of viability. Could that fetus be a person in that it
could live independently if that were the circumstance that came
about?" He decided the answer was
yes.
Yet, a year
later, District Court Judge David Miller ruled in a similar case that the
mother could not sue after the death of her unborn child because, he
wrote, “Colorado legislature, not the
Court, is vested with determining when and how a wrongful death damages action
should be brought in the name of a fetus, whether viable or otherwise. “ Colorado law does not mention fetuses, he
noted, so no suit is possible.
St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center |
Then there’s the case involving St. Joseph's Hospital and
Medical Center in Phoenix, which lost its Catholic status in December because
doctors there performed an abortion on a woman “who had developed a life-threatening
complication,” according to published accounts.
The ACLU followed up with a letter to Medicare after the
local Bishop took away the hospital’s Catholic designation.
"The Bishop's drastic and heavy-handed actions send a
chilling message to Catholic hospitals throughout the country, as well as their
employees: If hospitals comply with federal law and provide emergency abortion
care there will be consequences," the letter states. "The dioceses
cannot be permitted to dictate who lives and who dies in Catholic-owned
hospitals."
That’s the reality of abortion. One rule doesn’t work for everyone.
Archbishop Coakley |
The Most Rev. Paul Coakley, Oklahoma City archbishop, told
reporters, “The March for Life is not a sprint.
It's a marathon because step by step I think we have to change hearts in
order to transform the culture. Ultimately
I think the end game would be that somehow Roe v. Wade would be overturned, and
our nation would begin to recognize that we don't need it, that our nation will
recognize that life is sacred and life is to be defended from the moment of
conception to its natural end.”
Even if that contradicts decisions made by Catholic
hospitals concerned about the health of their patients. Even if doctors would be hamstrung in their
efforts to provide the best possible care.
Long-time
religious historian Bill Lazarus regularly writes about religion and religious
history. He also speaks at various
religious organizations throughout Florida.
You can reach him at www.williamplazarus.net. He is the author of the famed Unauthorized
Biography of Nostradamus; The Last Testament of Simon Peter; The Gospel Truth: Where Did the Gospel
Writers Get Their Information; Noel:
The Lore and Tradition of Christmas Carols; and Dummies Guide to Comparative
Religion. His books are available on Amazon.com,
Kindle, bookstores and via various publishers.
He can also be followed on Twitter.
You
can enroll in his on-line class, Comparative Religion for Dummies, at
http://www.udemy.com/comparative-religion-for-dummies/?promote=1
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