Reverence for Life
A Message for the Twenty-First Century
from The Catholic Bishops of Japan
The Catholic Bishops' Conference of Japan
January 1, 2001
Foreword
The Great Holy Year celebrating the 2000th anniversary of the birth
of Christ was of special significance for the Catholic Church throughout
the world.
It goes without saying that for us who believe in him, the birth
of Jesus Christ is the basis of our reflections. In him we see the
love of God who did not hesitate to send his only Son for us. That
love is the source of our unwavering hope and joy.
Last year, the whole Church under the leadership of Pope John Paul
II renewed its faith and gave thanks to God for the mystery of Christ's
birth two thousand years ago. It was indeed a special year of great
joy for us all.
However, Japan's society shows many characteristics that go counter
to this joyful stance. Japanese society is marked today by anxiety
and sadness. Economic stagnation due to the collapse of the "bubble
economy," the weakening of family bonds, violence in schools,
shocking crimes by children and an increasing number of suicides
by middle-aged and elderly people have led many people to think
that there is no answer to our longing for light and support.
Yet, God made and loves people. Human life, God's one-time gift
to each of us, is sacred. That is the main reason the Catholic bishops
of Japan have decided to present this message regarding life and
humanity to the world.
In addition, scientific advances have made life more comfortable
and convenient. The search for material comfort and happiness never
ends and in this pursuit the life sciences and medical technology
have made great advances. However, there is a real danger that we
will try to "play God."
This world does not belong solely to human beings, nor is full happiness
to be found here. The world is God's, and the fulfillment of human
efforts will be found only in relation to God.
We hope that our reflections will give courage and hope to our sisters
and brothers throughout Japan. We pray that God's loving kindness
will be poured out on all creation and especially on the people
of Japan to whom we address this message.
Shimamoto Kaname, Archbishop of Nagasaki
Chairman, Catholic Bishops' Conference of Japan
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The Message of Scripture
- Chapter 2: The Troubled Family
- A. Couples
- B. Sex, Procreation and the Family
- C. Parents and Children
- D. Our Aging Society
- Chapter 3: Life and Death
- A. Prenatal Diagnosis and the Disabled.
- B. Suicide
- C. Euthanasia
- D. Capital Punishment
- E. The Life Sciences
- F. Brain Death and Organ Transplants
- G. Embryo Research, Gene Therapy and Cloning
- H. The Environment
- Some Final Reflections
Introduction
1. We, the Catholic bishops of Japan,
address this message not only to our fellow Catholics, but to all
with whom we share this new century.
The 20th century
2. There are many reasons to reflect
on the value of human life at the start of this new century, especially
when we recall the miserable history of humanity in the last century.
The 20th century was unprecedented in human history for the slaughter
of millions. It was a century of hi-tech murder, culminating in
the development of nuclear weapons. The Nazi attempt to wipe out
the Jews was the most famous of several attempts at mass murder.
The 20th century also saw two world wars. In the second of them,
Japanese troops were responsible for suffering and slaughter throughout
Asia, notably in Nanjing and Okinawa.
In the last century, warfare engulfed civilian populations to an
unprecedented extent, something that shows no sign of abating in
this new century.
It was a century in which human life was treated lightly, of no
more value than that of an insect. Totalitarianism, ideology, racism
and the insatiable lust for power on the part of leaders are hallmarks
of that century. In the face of all this and to help make our new
century different, we want to reaffirm our conviction that life
is more precious than anything else.
Economic priorities and the distortion of Japanese society
3. Japan rebuilt itself out of the
ashes of World War II. However, many human values were sacrificed
in the pursuit of economic development.
Placing our priority on economic development has led to putting
our children through an examination hell for places in schools and
has turned adults into cogs in an economic machine that allows no
rest. As a result, family ties have weakened.
If we listen carefully to the voices from our schools and workplaces,
we can hear the pain of those whose lives are being warped by our
economic priorities. We judge people by their usefulness in achieving
economic goals. As a result, the elderly, the handicapped and others
who are not considered useful in the pursuit of profit are shunted
out of the mainstream.
We are convinced that unless we change our values there is no meaningful
future for Japan. We must reaffirm the value of each and every person
and the sacredness of life.
Technological advances in the life sciences
4. In addition, as we prepared this
message we kept in mind the growth of new technologies that are
probing the mysteries of life itself.
Medical advances have made life more comfortable. Life spans have
increased as previously undreamed-off treatments have become common.
We admire and are grateful to the scientists who devote themselves
to this work. However, there are certain God-given principles and
boundaries, especially concerning life and death, that must not
be ignored or overstepped.
The threat of environmental pollution
5. The 20th century also saw a rapid
increase in the pollution of the environment. Auto exhaust and industry
have put dangerous chemicals in our air. Industrial drainage has
polluted the sea. Industrial waste, agricultural chemicals and sewage
pollute the soil. Acid rain damages woodlands and lakes while driving
some animal life to the verge of extinction. Dioxin and other industrial
pollutants harm human and other life. Fish and other wildlife that
live near drainage sites show alarming mutations. The life of the
planet itself is threatened.
The responsibility for this situation is ours. By making economic
progress and transient abundance our goal, it is we who have put
the earth at such risk. If we do not change our selfish ways and
give priority to life itself, there can be no hope for the future.
Chapter One: The Message
of Scripture
The gift of life that shines in a newborn child
6. All over the world today, even
close to us, new life is raising its voice. Wrapped in its mother's
arms, that little life feels safe. It has not yet been buffeted
by the world. For us to approach the mystery of life, perhaps we
should consider the life of the newborn child.
When we stand before such a child, we put aside all other thoughts
and are united in awe at the mystery before us. The naked child
has nothing to do with social position or power. Before such a defenseless
person, we all become gentler.
In addition, the parents and anyone else who sees a newborn child
realize that a child is a gift from God. This is obviously true
when the child is born as the fruit of deep love between a man and
woman, but it is also true no matter what the circumstances of its
birth. We know that each child has been given life by a Source that
transcends human power and understanding.
God created and blessed humankind
7. This feeling we all have toward
new life is a sign that, as the Bible teaches, all life is a special
gift of God's love.
God loved and chose us before the creation of the world. (cf. Ephesians
1:4)
"God created humankind in his own image." (Genesis 1:27)
Life is a work of God, a gift of God. This is the unwavering belief
of the Catholic Church. There is an absolute basis to the grandeur
of human life and we may not interfere in that grandeur, no matter
who we are.
We also wish to stress the Biblical teaching that after creating
humankind, "God blessed them" (Genesis 1:28). In this
we see God's love toward humanity.
When someone close to us enters school, marries or starts a new
job, we bless them. To bless is to hope for the best for others
and to enter into their joy. At the same time, we pray that the
new possibilities of the situation will bear good fruit. When the
Bible tells us that God blessed the creation of human life, it teaches
us that God rejoiced in our creation and hopes that the possibilities
given us with life will be fulfilled.
Led and supported by God's hand
8. The Bible clearly shows in many
places how greatly God's loving care for people supports us.
"Even the hairs of your head are all counted. So do not be
afraid; you are of more value than many sparrows." (Matthew
10:30-31)
"It is not the will of your Father in heaven that one of these
little ones should be lost." (Matthew 18:14)
"Therefore, I tell you, do not worry about your life, what
you will eat or drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Is
not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? ... Indeed
your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. But strive
first for the kingdom of God and his righteousness." (Matthew
6:25, 32-33)
Can there be any greater source of strength to a human being than
to know God rejoices in each human birth and hopes for our happiness?
No matter what sort of troubles we encounter, this knowledge is
a reliable source of hope and an encouragement to not despair.
Man and woman as cooperators in God's work of creation
9. The Bible introduces the intention
of God who created human life by saying, "be fruitful and multiply,
and fill the earth" (cf. Genesis 1:28). Clearly, God's creation
of human life is meant to be realized through the love of man and
woman. Man and woman participate in God's creating activity. While
it is true that without God there can be no human birth, it is equally
true that without the sharing of man and woman there can be no birth.
Human life is the fruit of God's work, but it is realized through
the love of a man and a woman. It is here that we must warn of the
problems of irresponsible sex and intervention in life without consideration
of God's part in creation.
We cannot live alone
10. Furthermore, in the words "It
is not good that the man should be alone" (Genesis 2:18), the
Bible teaches us that we cannot grow in isolation. The Bible makes
it clear that though we depend upon God for life, we cannot live,
grow or flourish apart from other people. It was in answer to this
basic human need that God said, "I will make him a suitable
helper" (Genesis 2:18). 1
In the Bible, the human being to whom this suitable helper is given
expresses his joy by saying, "This at last is bone of my bones
and flesh of my flesh" (Genesis 2:23). This is the joy of companionship,
a joy that is eternalized by the bonds of marriage. As soon as the
first human finds a "suitable helper," the Bible tells
us, "Therefore a man leaves his father and his mother and clings
to his wife, and they become one flesh." (Genesis 2:24).
The union of these two people is threatened by our society's emphasis
upon efficiency, economic goals and egoism. Many tendencies in our
society tear at the unity of couples. To resist these tendencies
requires a strong commitment to that unity and to prayer. New life
born of the bond between a husband and wife becomes the starting
point for family life, life that is fulfilled in the love shared
among all the members of the family.
Life-giving love
11. We want to emphasize the fact
that the Bible does not deal with human life and death merely on
the biological level.
"We know that we have passed from death to life because we
love one another. Whoever does not love abides in death." (1
John 3:14)
To love means to meet another in the uniqueness of his or her being
and to serve one another's happiness. To not love is to ignore the
existence of others, thinking only of one's own desires and needs,
the very definition of egotism. The phrase "whoever does not
love abides in death" speaks of a death that not physical,
but spiritual. It is the death that comes from being controlled
by one's own self-centered desires.
"If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do
not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I
have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge,
and if I have all faith, so as to move mountains, but do not have
love, I am nothing. If I give away all my possessions, and if I
hand over my body to death, but do not have love, I gain nothing."
(1 Corinthians 13:1-3)
These words come from St. Paul's letter to the Church in Corinth.
In that letter, he tells us that no matter how much education we
have, no matter what kind of social successes we have, no matter
how many noteworthy services we perform, if we do not have love
they are all wasted. Without love, life is sterile.
Not only does the spirit of one without love wither, but that person's
connection to other people also collapses. There is nothing else
so important as love. Japanese society, which evaluates people on
the basis of their educational background, social position and achievements,
has lost vitality and joy because it has lost sight of love. The
regeneration of Japan's homes, schools and society as well as the
life of each person depends upon reigniting the fire of love. We
must foster the conviction that love is the highest value of all.
Eternal life
12. "Do not work for the food
that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life"
(John 6:27). These words of Scripture teach us that unless our innate
desire for the everlasting God is met, we cannot live a truly fulfilling
life. Human life finds its fulfillment only in relation to God.
Our society has lost sight of this important insight.
Instead of seeking an answer to the mystery of human existence,
Japanese society has worked for "the food that perishes,"
mere economic goals. It should not surprise us, then, that we are
experiencing so much disruption and unease. We have ignored that
which would nourish our spirits in favor of this-worldly goals and
find ourselves in a rut. Christ's words show us a way out of this
dilemma.
"Work for the food that endures for eternal life." This
is a difficult command for us who are ruled by our selfish desires
and settle for immediate gratification. Christ fully understood
this difficulty and offered encouragement to his disciples. He told
the young man who asked what is necessary to have eternal life that
he must renounce his possessions, for one who does so receives a
hundredfold (cf. Matthew 19:16-30). Though it is difficult to break
our attachment to wealth and property, we must not let the difficulty
keep us from achieving salvation. Life is a challenge. No matter
how hard that challenge, meeting it is our glory. A person dies
when he or she lives only by desire. The regeneration of Japan and
we Japanese will occur only when we repent of our infatuation with
material abundance and give priority to our relationship with God.
Human responsibility
13. We want to look at yet another
passage from Genesis (1:27): "God created humankind in his
own image." In these words we find the source of our responsibility
for the earth as it endures pollution and environmental destruction.
In the ancient Middle East kings erected statues of themselves throughout
their realms to proclaim their power over the area.
Based on this, we see that God's declaration that humanity is his
image on the newly-created earth means authority over the planet
rests upon us. In other words, we are responsible for the order
and harmony of the planet.
An honest look at history shows that we have not fulfilled that
responsibility. The Biblical stories of Adam, Eve and their children
show that the ruin of the world comes through human actions. Adam
and Eve turned away from God and followed their own desires by eating
the forbidden fruit. Therefore, they were exiled from the garden
to a land of where thorns grew thick. This story shows us that the
order and harmony of the world have been shattered by human actions.
The pollution of our environment calls into question the way in
which we live. We must remember that the earth was created as a
gentle home for life and that we must change the way we live in
order to protect it.
From the cross to the resurrection
14. We wish to make it clear that
the Scriptures do not merely present pretty words and stories. The
Bible knows and shows that the world is a cruel place that echoes
with the cries of the oppressed.
"The tongue of the infant sticks to the roof of its mouth for
thirst; the children beg for food, but no one gives them anything."
(Lamentations 4:4)
"Our skin is black as an oven from the scorching heat of famine.
Women are raped in Zion, virgins in the towns of Judah. Princes
are hung up by their hands; no respect is shown to the elders. Young
men are compelled to grind, and boys stagger under loads of wood.
The old men have left the city gate, the young men their music.
The joy of our hearts has ceased; our dancing has been turned to
mourning." (Lamentations 5:10-15)
These verses refer to the state of the people during their conquest
by Babylon. However, the sad picture they paint is still true in
such places as the Nazi concentration camps, in the Nanjing massacre,
in Rwanda, in Kosovo and in East Timor.
Human life is full of pain. But that is the life Christ chose. For
those of us who know the way of the cross that Christ walked, pain
and death are not the whole story of human life.
"Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of
those who have died." (1 Corinthians 15-20)
In Christ's death and resurrection, humanity has been shown definitively
that the absurdities of life do not lead to despair, but to new
life. No matter how terrible the conditions we face, no matter how
thick the darkness that surrounds us, no matter how threatened we
are with death, we can find a hope that overcomes all this.
"Death has been swallowed up in victory. Where, O death, is
your victory? Where, O death is your sting?" (1 Corinthians
15:54-55)
This is how Paul sang out his joy over the victory of life over
death in the resurrection of Christ. In order to join in this joy,
we like Christ must love God and other people with our whole heart,
our whole soul and our whole strength.
Chapter Two: The Troubled
Family
15. We are born in a family and grow
up in a family. The family enfolds, supports and develops life.
It is a source of love and strength. In the family we learn the
importance of our unique existence and are shown the value of living
for those we love. Like a safe port that gives rest, comfort and
hope to a tired sailor, the family provides a haven to us on the
journey of life. And just as a sailor at sea takes comfort in knowing
that there is a port awaiting him, knowing we have a family is a
comfort to us even when we travel alone through the turmoil of life.
Therefore, when the family is troubled our lives are troubled, too.
This is true whether we be elderly, newborn or in the prime of life.
Holding the viewpoint that "crisis in the family is a crisis
in life," we wish to shed some light on various subjects related
to the family today.
A. Couples
I. Couples in crisis
Divorce
16. Today there is a worldwide weakening
of the bond between married people.
Until recently, the divorce rate in our country was low compared
to that in many other countries. In 1947, there were 79,551 divorces
here. In 1998 the number reached 243,000.2 The number
of young people who approve of divorce has increased. Combined with
the tendency to delay marriage, have small families and even to
avoid marriage altogether, these changes are shaking the foundations
of family life. Formerly, the village community supported big families.
Now, however, children grow up in a nuclear family with few or no
brothers or sisters. For these young people, accepting a different
person and sharing life with him or her is difficult, and it is
among them that we see many cases of divorce.
The isolation of husbands and wives
17. Furthermore, we cannot ignore
the fact that the social structure of Japan today draws couples
apart. In our competitive society, the rationalization of business
has robbed families of husbands' presence. The close ties that should
exist between a man and his family have been weakened. Time to build
relationships in the family is scarce. All of this is a big minus
factor in raising the next generation.
Statistics for 19983 showing divorce among couples married
more than twenty years doubling over the previous year indicate
the fragility of even long marriages. With the workplace absorbing
the husband's energy, he is no longer able to relate with his wife
and children. In such a fatherless family, should we wonder if a
woman loses affection for her husband and comes to consider his
existence irrelevant? Petitions for divorce by middle-aged women
increasingly contain statements like, "Staying together is
meaningless," or "Even if it means financial hardship,
I want to live as a free individual."
We see many new phenomena that contribute to the increase of divorce
today such as emotional and sexual immaturity, sexless marriages,
domestic violence and mutual dependency that prevents each of the
partners from being a responsible adult.
Women's search for independence
18. In prewar Japan when the average
life span was about 50 years, a woman's life was devoted to raising
her children and having done that, she could feel a sense of accomplishment.
However, today when the average life span for women is more than
80 years, those who have finished raising their children wonder
how to spend the remaining years. After years of a life described
as "waiting for my husband or my kids to get home," they
begin to look for some sort of self-fulfillment apart from the demands
of their families.
In this situation, marriages that used to hold together for the
sake of the children begin to weaken.4 Many people think
that it is worse for a child to live in a home where the parents
do not get along. They think that so long as they find personal
happiness and self-realization there is no problem. However, for
this to happen it is essential that a couple cooperate to realize
this sort of happiness. Patience and self-sacrifice are essential.
How a couple can live together while respecting individual differences
is the question we face.
Youth in turmoil
19. The biggest burden in the breakdown of the family is
laid upon children, especially young children. Strained relations
between parents causes anxiety in the child. A child whose home
has ceased to be a place of comfort will sooner or later seek comfort
away from home.
We must not overlook the deep wounds children suffer when their
parents' marriage fails. How is a child to choose between father
and mother when he or she wants both?
Attacked by social mores
20. It cannot be denied that the bonds between husbands and
wives are being weakened by the values of modern Japanese society
which emphasize immediate gratification and comfort. The commercialization
of sex, promiscuity among youth and marital infidelity are the result
of this emphasis and a brake on the search for true happiness.
Advances in medical technology have led to a separation between
sex and reproduction and given women more control over conception.
Gradually, people are coming to see children as products rather
than gifts. This, too, is the result of society's self-centered
values.
We must reconsider the fundamental meaning of marriage in terms
of humanity, the encounter between a man and a woman and children
as gifts of God.
II. Building a truly good life
True encounter
21. More than anything else, what we need is a renewed strengthening
of couples' bonds. The first step toward restoring these bonds is
a deep encounter between husbands and wives. Mother Teresa spoke
of the importance of this family encounter.
"Many factors in the industrial world suffocate the joy of
loving. People have too much and they want more. They are discontent.
"A family in Australia with six or seven children talked together
and decided not to buy a new television. They wanted to enjoy each
other more completely. They had enough of what they needed for each
other in each other.
"Instead of buying the television, they gave the money to me
to do something for the poor Aborigines there."5
Regard for one's life companion and children is more important than
work and financial gain. When we feel the warm care of another,
our hearts find peace. When we know we have such support from our
family, we find the strength and hope we need to face the storms
of life.
We need to work together at this. We cannot make excuses, claiming
to be too busy to engage in this encounter. We must not grudge the
time it takes. It is no exaggeration to say that such attitudes
kill the family bond.
A couple that really cares for each other becomes a model for their
children who will be responsible for building the loving families
of the future.
We need to renew the sense of partnership among couples. We need
a deeper awareness that child care and "couple care" are
a shared responsibility of a husband and wife. Therefore we must
reexamine the common attitude that a man's responsibility is outside
the home while a woman's is within it. Pregnancy, childbirth, childcare
and the care of aged parents constitute a heavy burden that is placed
upon women. They need much more understanding and cooperation from
men. It is no longer unusual that women work outside the home and
it is natural that they desire to continue in their work. In such
cases, a husband must change his old idea of "man's work."
Childcare, housekeeping and other chores must be shared and mutual
understanding and cooperation are essential if the wife is to have
a fulfilling life.
Achieving love
22. It is not merely sweet pleasures that await two people
who marry. Disappointment and disillusionment sometimes sweep through
their lives like angry waves. Their affectionate feelings for one
another can be easily hurt. At times when they sense a wall between
them they are tempted to despair and even are tempted to give up
walking through life together. At times, it even seems as if their
relationship is a heavy burden that cannot be put down.
If they give priority to their individual fulfillment, then it is
natural to see the partner as a hindrance from which one should
be free. They might even decide that divorce is a way to rescue
their children from the disturbing influence of the parents' bad
relationship. However, though it goes against the current "wisdom,"
we insist on the importance of maintaining the marriage. One reason
for this insistence is that we are convinced that real human growth
comes through loving self-sacrifice.
When we speak of love, we are not referring merely to the emotional
level of likes and dislikes or personal pleasure. By love we mean
striving for the happiness of another.
"Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful
or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not
irritable or resentful." (1 Corinthians 13:4-5)
A person grows through adversity and distress. When we give up on
a marriage, saying, "I am disillusioned," or "Our
relationship was damaged," or "Staying together has no
meaning any more," we are in fact straying from the way that
leads to real human growth.
Some may rationalize their challenge to the possibility of promising
unending love for another, but we know it is possible because love
is a blessing from God. This is our faith. God blesses the vows
a man and woman make before the altar: "I promise to be true
to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health. I will
love you and honor you all the days of my life."
Furthermore, those who have been united to Christ in baptism are
united to his willingness to face the Cross through the power of
love. He gives his followers that same strength.
We can live like Christ. It is not easy. But, believing that Christ
walks with a couple in their joys and pains gives them the hope
they need to move forward. Through the unique experiences of each
person, Christ shows each one's special mission. For the couple,
the blessings of baptism are lived out through their relationship
and their shared mission.
"As God's chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe yourselves
with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience. Bear
with one another and, if anyone has a complaint against another,
forgive each other; just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also
must forgive. Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds
everything together in perfect harmony. And let the peace of Christ
rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in the one
body. And be thankful." (Colossians 3:12-15)
Led by God
23. Yet another reason we say couples should not part easily
is our faith that it is God's guidance that brings them together.
We are convinced that this is true not only of Catholics couples.
The proverbial saying that a particular couple have been "linked
by a red thread since a previous life" shows that even in society
at large there is a sense that the encounter of a given man and
woman involves some guidance that goes beyond human understanding.
Our faith proclaims it more clearly: "God has brought these
two together."
God has definite reasons for bringing the two together. One is to
continue the work of creation through the man and woman (cf. "Parents
and Children," below). Another is to give human beings
suitable lifetime helpers since we cannot survive in isolation.
It is God who gives us our partner, and that partner is God's greatest
gift to us.
To put it another way, my spouse is a special creation entrusted
to me by God. The marriage vow is a trusting promise to God who
asks each of the partners to take lifetime care of the other.
When we realize that the marriage bond is born of the overflowing
love of God, we also realize that we cannot choose to break that
bond when it encounters difficulties.
Before making the marriage vow, therefore, the man and woman must
prayerfully discern if their union is indeed God's will for them
and if they can offer themselves to each other for a lifetime.
When love fails
24. Even while affirming what we have said above, we recognize
the fact that many men and women are unable to fulfill the pledge
of love they made in marriage. There are couples who no longer communicate
because of differences in taste or ideals. There are couples whose
interest in one another has faded because of differences in the
pattern of their day-to-day life. There are couples whose love has
chilled because of betrayal. There are couples who merely live together
out of habit but without joy or affection. In short, many couples
suffer because of the difficulty of living as spouses. Perhaps they
might have found someone early on to help them through their difficulties,
but unfortunately many couple do not find such help. In that case,
opportunities are lost, solutions are not found, troubles increase
and often a breakup looms.
Here we want to propose that in each area communities be developed
that couples can approach with confidence for consultation and help.
More than anywhere else, we sincerely want our local churches to
be such communities where people's joys and pains are met and shared
in love and friendship. The Church has a vocation to accept these
people and give them new light and hope.
Even with such community support and their own efforts, however,
there are situations where for various reasons a breakup is unavoidable
and people must try to live while bearing deep wounds in their hearts.
These people especially need comfort, encouragement and support.
We repent of the fact that until now the Church has often been judgmental
of such people. We must embrace those who suffer the pain of not
being able to fulfill the vows they made, encouraging them with
the warm love of Jesus Christ as they continue their life journey.
We hope that those who have gone through the misfortune of divorce
and have found someone else to be their companion on life's journey
will be supported by the Church with a mother's embracing love.
B. Sex, Procreation and the Family
I. Alienated sexuality
Sex as a commodity
25. We human beings exist as distinct unified persons. We
cannot isolate sex from the totality of human existence as when,
for example, it is turned it into a commodity that can be bought
and sold. Yet, in many countries where consumerism prevails this
is precisely what is happening. Posters, magazines, and advertizing
that stimulate sexual desire are found throughout towns and cities.
On television and the Internet we can see the global presentation
of sex as a commodity. The easy availability of methods of contraception
encourages this tendency even further. This merchandising of sexuality
is one we view with grave anxiety and misgiving.
Ever since Japan entered its period of accelerated economic growth
many Japanese have sexually exploited poor women in the developing
countries of Asia.6 As a result, our entire nation's
view of the sexuality of women in Third World nations has become
abnormal. It is also from this period that discussion arose about
the forced use of "comfort women" by the Japanese military
during World War II. More than disputing whether or not it was a
national crime, we must face the fact that aggressive lust for power
permitted treating women like commodities to be used for sexual
pleasure. It is not just a matter of history; the question of a
culture that could allow such a thing is one we must face today.
In the prosperity of the "bubble economy" talk of enjo
kosai (school girls becoming "dates" for older men in
return for money) became common among middle- and high-school students,
something shocking beyond belief. When they asked the simple question
"Why is it wrong for me to sell my own body?" the adults
of Japan could not give a clear answer! Japanese society is sick.
One-time free love
26. Hiding their commercialism under the title of "free
love," television, movies, magazines and comic books aimed
at young people irresponsibly encourage one-time sexual encounters,
sex with many partners and behavior that violates the marriage bond.
The increase in abortions, the weakening of marital ties, divorce
and remarriage also raise heart-breaking doubts among the young
about the possibility of permanent love. Those children grow up
in and inherit this culture we have created. For the sake of the
next generation should we not be thinking creatively about how to
challenge today's culture of inhuman sex?
Sex separated from reproduction
27. Sex between a man and woman necessarily includes the
possibility of pregnancy and birth. However, in today's climate
of consumerism emphasis is placed solely upon sex as an expression
of a couple's emotional attraction to the exclusion of its reproductive
aspects. With this background, unwanted pregnancies are quickly
terminated. There are more than one million abortions in Japan each
year, giving the country the title "Abortion Heaven."
What has happened to the values of Japanese society?
In the face of the unquestioned acceptance of the separation of
sex from reproduction and a lack of a sense of responsibility toward
the children who are born we think it essential that we seriously
reflect upon whether our present situation contributes to human
life and fulfillment.
II. Recovering the real meaning and power of sexuality
Sex is blessed
28. We human beings are sexual creatures from the moment
of our birth. Even so, when we look back at history we can point
out many religions that have made sex a taboo and even a crime.
Even today there are religions that follow that line of thought.
However, as the Bible says, God created humankind as man and woman
(cf. Genesis 1:27). In other words, from the beginning of
creation sex has been part of God's blessings.
In biblical thought, however, there is neither separation of sex
from reproduction nor valuing sex solely as a means of reproduction;
sex is related to all aspects of human life. The naked openness
that hides nothing between a man and a woman in sex symbolizes the
depth of the mutual support and encouragement that human beings
give one another as they walk through life. Through the sharing
of sex, a man and a woman find comfort and joy for their tired hearts
and discover the vitality and hope they need to face tomorrow. In
sharing sex, a man and woman deepen their joy in loving and being
loved and find the courage to face whatever trials life brings.
The foundation of the marriage bond
29. Sexuality is one of God's great blessings to humankind.
That blessing finds its perfection in marriage, a sacrament blessed
by God and the world. Sex continually deepens and renews the life-giving
bonds of shared love between a married man and woman.7
A man and woman who have been united by God deepen their respect
and care and love for one another through their sexual relations.
Sexuality is the strong foundation of the important community called
family.8
Sexual incompatibility is one of the reasons given for the failure
of marriages of middle-aged couples. Though we agree that there
may be many reasons for this, we cannot ignore the fact that the
structure of modern Japanese society makes communication between
a man and a woman difficult. Fatigue in the man brought on by overwork,
anxiety in the woman brought on by the man's lack of understanding
regarding housework and child care, job postings of men away from
home, etc. all make a couple's communication and sharing difficult.
The environment in which couples live is not at all suitable soil
for human relationships.
Perhaps many men have the illusion that the gaps in their marital
relationship, the lack of any sharing from the heart, can be filled
by sex. These men must understand that sex cannot replace the dialogue
and sharing that is lacking in their too-busy lives. Sex is not
a replacement for communication. Restoring the real meaning and
power of sex will require resisting the present reality of our society.
The first step toward achieving that is to restore heart-to-heart
communication.
Responsibility for new life
30. The sharing of sex necessarily entails the possibility
of conception and birth. While sex is an expression of the close
love between a man and woman, it is also the means by which humanity
gives birth to the next generation. And so, the nature of sex requires
an openness to accepting responsibility for new life.9
We believe that no one can forget that God's will and activity are
involved in sex. Therefore, we want to reaffirm what we said above:
"While it is true that without God there can be no human birth,
it is equally true that without the sharing of man and woman there
can be no birth."
When we approach birth as a work of God's creation, we have grave
misgivings about our society's easy acceptance of a couple's selfish
use of sex. We wish to point out that among those who accept a "contraceptive
mentality"10 are those who erroneously place the
self or human beings at the center of creation.
However, we do not favor the opposite extreme that would say, "the
more children, the better," and thereby avoid making responsible
choices.11 Recent popes have emphasized that for the
sake of their children couples must prayerfully, lovingly and responsibly
consider their situation regarding the number of children they already
have, child care, education, finances and environmental factors.12
Since birth is connected intimately with the will of God and the
conscientious choice of the couple, governments and other public
bodies may not interfere in the matter.13
Family planning
31. The Catholic Church has recommended that natural methods
be chosen when birth control is necessary.14 This is
based upon a desire to respect the needs of the woman's health and
the physical condition of the partners, but with the added desire
for mutual respect and love between the couple and in the hope that
in accordance with the will of God they may be blessed with children
at a suitable time.15
Of course, abortion and decisions based upon selfish thoughts of
personal comfort go against this orientation and must be avoided.16
C. Parents and Children
I. Parents and children facing crisis
The lost sense of the mystery of life
32. We would now like to touch upon the problems of parents
and children. First of all, we are made uneasy by the modern loss
of a heartfelt sense of awe at the mystery of childbirth. As we
have said above, the creation of a human being is an act of God
in which a man and a woman cooperate. However, as a result of technological
progress in family planning, the life sciences and medicine, some
people have come to the opinion that "We make children"
or "We can do with them as we please." The ability to
easily produce children through artificial insemination from sperm
banks and the ability to choose the sex of a child has intensified
that prideful way of thinking.
This kind of attitude, which has had a deep impact upon modern consciousness,
has extremely dangerous aspects. Already it has led to such selfish
reasoning as "I want to prevent the birth of a handicapped
child." As such a child grows up, he or she faces rejection
in comments like "hideous" or "useless existence"
that dismiss another's life.
Life comes from God. We are born and guided through life according
to God's will. Our unlooked-for joys and pains come from God. Our
task is to discern how to accept and live with them. We strongly
affirm that human life and personality must be viewed in relation
to God and eternal life.
Mothers at a loss in child rearing
33. In Japan we no longer see people suffering from hunger
as we did just after the war. However, what we do see are many parents,
especially mothers, who were raised without ever feeling the joy
of being loved and therefore have never learned to love. When they
run up against the difficulties of raising a child, they are at
a loss for what to do. Many fathers live as company men and simply
take it for granted that they can leave child rearing to their wives.
These men turn their eyes from their lonely wives worn out trying
to raise children in isolation.
Many parents who do not have a clear idea of what it is to be human
fall into thinking that showering children with money is how one
shows love. They spend money to send their children to good cram
schools, diligently push to get them into prestigious schools, follow
their children's commands regarding televisions and air conditioners
in their private rooms and give them mobile phones, thinking they
are valuing the child's freedom. This is not love.17
In this situation, mothers vie with one another in meeting social
standards of ability, chasing after early education programs and
comparing their children's intelligence, increasing the trend toward
isolation. It is no exaggeration to say that more than anyone those
who need help in raising children are women.
Having few children ignores human nature
34. In our society where there is so little shared joy at
the existence of life, the great stresses and financial costs of
rearing children lead increasing numbers of people to think that
even if they marry there is no need to bear children.18
We sometimes hear comments about how the shift to small families
has a good side in that it will lessen urban congestion, improve
the housing situation and alleviate competition for places in schools.
Some ask if, given the problem of the world population explosion,
reducing the birth rate in developed countries might not be a way
to reduce environmental damage.
In Japan's case, however, the shift to small families aggravates
the problems associated with the aging of our population, lessens
the rich diversity that children should encounter in society and
causes a loss in vitality among children. The trend to having few
children involves many problems that must not be easily disregarded.
"Selfish." "Out of control." "Can't take
care of themselves." "Unable to express emotions."
"No concentration or perseverance." "Always think
it's others and society that are in the wrong." "No sense
of perspective." These are frequently pointed out as characteristics
of today's children. On the other hand, regarding parents we hear
"Overprotective," "They spoil their kids," "They
have no standards for raising children."
Overprotectiveness and excessive parental interference have produced
parents and children who cannot function apart each other. Now we
see the spectacle of people raised in such circumstances becoming
parents without ever having grown up, and abandoning their own child-rearing
responsibilities at a loss for how to go about them. We cannot ignore
the minuses arising from the phenomenon of small families.
When people encounter a variety of ways of living, most of us are
stimulated and deepen our understanding of humanity. In raising
children, making a priority of economic abundance and the enjoyment
of a pleasant life gnaws away at their true happiness and neglects
their humanity.
Parents consumed by the desire to live in comfort and freedom
35. We cannot deny the fact that our society does not provide
hope and joy in marriage or family.19 There are, of course,
reasons to say "I'll lose my freedom," "It's expensive"
or "The responsibility is heavy." However, there is a
problem in modern society when thought stops there. It is sad when
a society has lost the ability to experience the fullness of life
and the dynamism of love and sees responsibilities only as burdens.
Parents who become enemies
36. Recently there have been many cruel crimes perpetrated by children.
Even though in each case there are unique motives for the crime,
when we analyze them we find common elements. Among them are problems
at school and their parents' attitudes.
When parents are imbued with the value society puts on educational
background and think that having a good academic record is the highest
human aspiration, this attitude makes a strong impression on their
children from an early age. For children who are under the illusion
that getting good grades is the most important thing in life it
is natural to feel lost at school and at home when they hit a wall
and feel they cannot make progress. In a sense, it is understandable
that a child unable to live up to parents' expectations and feeling
cornered directs its anger at the parents and various third parties.
To rescue such children what is needed more than anything else is
a courageous change of values on the part of parents.
II. Protecting life
First of all, love
37. Living is not easy in any age. The responsibility of
parents is to give their children the strength to lead a truly human
life through teaching them that their life is a gift from God richly
blessed with possibilities, giving them a sense of hope and gratitude,
and nurturing their innate kindness. This requires first of all
giving children a sense of their parents' warm and unwavering love.
This becomes the foundation upon which the child can build a life.
Children are looking for emotional attachment. It is not enough
to give them "things"; we must give our hearts. This is
the basis of love. A child must realize in the depths of its heart
that she or he is truly loved. It is important that an infant experience
frequent physical contact, being held closely, embraced and petted.
This gives the child the conviction that he or she is loved. As
children grow, it is important to see things from their point of
view, playing and enjoying conversation with them. We must not forget
to make time for children. Parents who encounter each child as an
individual, letting them see that just like the child adults feel
joy and anger and are enthusiastic about life, make their relationship
tender and show the way to be kind and thoughtful.
When this happens, a child finds being with his or her parents attractive,
something we need these days when many children live with pent-up
anger.
Breaking the spell of academics
38. There is a 19th century poem that says that to teach
a child one should it praise three times out of five and scold it
twice. The saying taught the importance not only of teaching, but
also of the need to both praise and correct.
A negative self image is characteristic of Japanese children.20
Behind this is the fact that from an early age most Japanese children
are thrown into the world of entrance exams and competition for
places in school. Always being rated according to one's grades or
what kindergarten or school one got into, children have no other
standard by which to judge themselves.
If parents would sincerely tell their children, "School isn't
everything," "Even if you can't study or your grades are
bad, you are special," "Everybody has different talents
and you have your own," many children would be saved. Children
whose parents compare them with other children and try to control
them for self-centered reasons lose the joyous energy that comes
from knowing they are loved and it becomes hard for them to find
any meaning in life. If children are to find life-giving hope, parents
must first free themselves from the spell of academic achievement.
Teaching values and humanity
39. It is clear that television, mobile phones, the Internet
and the speedy development of new information and communication
systems are in fact reducing communications between young people
and their families.21 We do not wish to attack scientific
progress. However, we have misgivings about growing children who
are just beginning to think about life being swallowed up by its
influence. Information is important, but there is something more
important: person-to-person encounter. A heart that can sympathize
with the pains, sorrows, joys and hope of others is the most important
thing. The first place one learns and experiences that is the family.
While recognizing that in a modern society that gives importance
to diverse values it is difficult to show children basic values,
we want to stress that parents must make more effort to instill
in their children the values and vision of humanity by which they
themselves live. In light of the fact that norms for virtue and
logic have become fuzzy, we believe that more than anything else
the most important work of parents is to teach children the firm
conviction that there is a transcendent being, that human life is
a journey toward God who hopes and works for the happiness of each
person throughout life, and that through love for one another we
are united with eternal life.
Raising children requires the cooperation of all
40. People do not become exemplary parents all of a sudden.
Inexperienced parents need time to grow through their experience
and mistakes. A generation ago, the local community provided the
support they needed. Even when problems arose between parents and
children and the children were more than the parents could handle,
the loving care and support of the community helped the child and
encouraged the parents. But nowadays urbanization has lead to the
isolation of families. Communities that can provide a familiar setting
for parents to work out difficulties and where things can be discussed
when they seem to reach a dead end have disappeared. The isolation
of mothers perplexed by difficulties is an especially big problem
today.
We want to challenge fathers to get more actively involved in child
care. We also challenge neighborhoods to develop into communities
that can nurture parents and children.
Even when a father and mother realize and actively share responsibility
for child care, that is not enough. In order that couples need not
limit the number of their children against their will, the social
welfare system must be quickly improved to provide more nursery
schools, improved child care, etc. Then parents can give birth to
and raise children with peace of mind.
We in the Church also have a serious responsibility. There is a
pressing need for us to establish networks of cooperation and communication
regarding child care. Community building must be accepted as a basic
mission of the Church. Human relations in the Church are different
from those in companies or schools. Directing its efforts toward
the people of the neighboring community and going through various
trials with that community has deep meaning for it as an open Church.
Children also raise their parents
41. A child is the greatest blessing that God gives to the
life of a man and woman who love each other. Parents who are blessed
with a child are given a new reason for living through their relationship,
they learn many things and grow. They experience the joy of loving
and can taste the fullness of life through their relationship with
their child. Parents must not forget to be grateful to their children
for what they bring to the relationship.
However, there are also couples who are not blessed with children.
We must be more aware of the deep pain of couples, especially of
women, who bear this burden. Moreover, when her husband fails to
understand her pain and refuses to do what might be done for the
sake of conception, the wife is driven deeper into loneliness. In
this situation it is essential that the couple talk and share with
each other and cooperate in finding a solution. Regarding this,
we wish to stress the importance of the husband's understanding
and cooperation.
When we maintain that the birth of a human being is the will of
God, we are not making a negative judgement upon those who are not
so blessed. We are only recommending that everyone have a positive
attitude toward the situation in which they find themselves. There
are many families that have adopted children from other countries
who have been abandoned or orphaned by war. Even without ties of
blood, these families are tightly united by ties of love. There
are also childless couples who devote their energy to serving their
community. In any case, one way to deal with this situation is for
couples to discuss what they can do to share their love with the
community and unfortunate children.
D. Our Aging Society
I. A sense of unease
An aging society
42. Along with remarkable economic development and progress
in medical technology, we have seen a great increase in the average
life span. The average Japanese life span is now the longest in
the world. On the one hand this is reason to rejoice, but on the
other hand many people are confused about how to live in an aging
society. Japanese society does not have a model for how to handle
or evaluate this phenomenon. What kind of heart is needed in this
sort of society?
In the past there were people who were blessed with a remarkably
long life, however they were exceptions. There has never before
in history been a situation where the majority of people lived beyond
the age of 80. In other words, there is no place or time in history
to which we can turn for an example of how to deal with our aging
society.
From the point of view of history, the past few decades are no more
than a moment. Before any preparations could be made, the confusion
caused by the aging of society has reached every element of Japanese
society all at once. We are presented with the challenge to deal
with and live in an aging society.
Neglected by society
43. The extraordinary economic development we have achieved
is built upon efficiency, management and utilitarianism, the survival
of the fittest. That survival depends upon taking care to maximize
one's abilities. People with abilities and achievements are praised
and given status; those with less ability or disabilities are shunted
aside. The elderly find themselves in this situation. In a society
where such values are the main stream, it is impossible to develop
a view that values the elderly.
The fact of the matter is that when someone reaches a set age he
is removed from the labor market by an almost mechanical process,
is removed from the social flow and is forced to live in uncertain
financial conditions on an inadequate pension. When he leaves the
"front lines" the retiree is removed from involvement
in society and cultural stimulation and information. Furthermore,
as strength and memory gradually decline, whether he wants to or
not, he has to depend upon other people. In order to live old age
serenely and without negative feelings, he needs a new set of values
to replace the competitive values of society.
Families have no leeway
44. It must be pointed out that the environment that surrounds
the elderly, especially the family, is not a hope-filled place.
At the same time that Japan has become the country with the longest
average life span in the world, there has been a serious decline
in the birth rate. The ability of the family to provide for its
elderly members has seriously weakened. Children in their 50's and
60's who take care of parents in their 80's and beyond are no longer
rare. Because of the tendency to have small families the number
of marriages between only children has increased, resulting in a
single couple's having to care for four parents. The question of
who in the family will take care of the parents is becoming a serious
problem.
In the traditional patriarchal family the care of parents was entirely
entrusted to the women. The number of women who are overcome by
fatigue from bearing this great burden is not small and cases of
family collapse resulting from that are not rare either. It is also
clear that men who must fulfill their quota of work at their jobs
do not have the emotional leeway to care for their parents. Nor
can it be overlooked that in families where children are preparing
for school entrance exams the presence of an elderly person can
be considered an annoyance. There are also many elderly people who
have entered homes for the aged but then suffer loneliness because
they are neglected by their families.
Financial fears
45. Financial worries darken the lives of more and more of
the elderly. In a society shaped and controlled by consumerism and
commercialism the fear arises that elderly people might not have
the financial wherewithal to spend their old age with peace of mind.
Only a small percentage of people are guaranteed an adequate pension.
The majority live uneasily on an insufficient income. Most elderly
people without financial resources feel humiliated and powerless
when they must receive publicly-provided medical care.
The increase in local activities directed toward the elderly and
the creation of ways to involve them is good, however it is a disturbing
fact that some of this is driven by commercial interests that target
the elderly. Even if that is not always the case, it is sad that
these opportunities can only be taken advantage of by those who
are financially comfortable. The weakened ability of families to
handle the financial burdens is a problem beyond the scope of the
family. It is a problem for local and national government.
II. Toward the fulfillment of life
Acceptance
46. There are seasons in a person's life. The Bible says
the following about the various times of life:
"For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter
under heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant,
and a time to pluck up what is planted; ... a time to seek, and
a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to throw away; a time
to tear, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to
speak; a time to love, and a time to hate; a time for war, and a
time for peace." (Ecclesiastes 3:1-8)
Old age comes to all. There is no human being who can avoid
it. Nonetheless, it thrusts new challenges upon us. First of all,
the qualities of youth we once gloried in - vitality, strength,
quick wits, agility, fertility, beauty - must all be given up bit
by bit. No one likes that.
When you let go of the work that has been your occupation and preoccupation
contacts with other people lessen, you need the help of others in
all sorts of circumstances and you see the world you built being
changed by your juniors. Eventually as you grow older, you become
unable to eat without assistance and even need help going to the
toilet. Looked at from the perspective of one's values as a youth,
it is an absolutely humiliating situation to always see the faces
of people you must rely upon.
Prerequisite to accepting such conditions positively as a gateway
on the way to completing the journey to God are definite values,
a certain view of life.
Drawing life from the experience of the aged
47. Japan today is ruled by principles of efficiency and
utilitarianism. When viewed by those standards, the elderly whose
powers of mind and body are in decline have no contribution to make
to society. However, human society is supported and enriched not
only by such "usefulness." The elderly have a rich fund
of experience and wisdom that comes with years. The existence of
elderly people who have passed through and accumulated many rich
experiences is in itself a human treasure, a source of riches. Their
presence provides answers to many of life's problems and becomes
a light on life's journey. In addition, they show us the way to
restore humanity in today's society which is becoming more and more
inhuman as it heads down a blind alley.
In the face of the modern propensity to build society based upon
information offered by the mass media, the experience of the elderly
offers a great service in conveying the culture, traditions and
view of life of a people. From this point of view, both at home
and in society we must respect the elderly, and develop a willingness
to listen to their voices.
Viewing the far shore
48. The young generation is expected to put its abilities
and energy to use for their families, their workplace and for society.
Everyone around them expects that and their contribution to society
must be highly valued. However, they are turned into cogs on the
gears of industry, made to work without the leisure they need to
restore their tired bodies and spirits. Though they are human beings
whose life is a journey to God there is no for leeway for them to
think about the most important questions because they are absorbed
in worldly occupations.
Looked at from that point of view, liberation from the workplace
is a blessing for the elderly. They have been given the freedom
and time to reflect freely on the most important human issues of
life and death.22
The ultimate goal of our lives is encounter with the eternal God.
Old age and death are gateways through which we all must pass on
the way to that definitive encounter. Old age is a special time
to squarely face that gate. While accepting the various negative
aspects of aging, we look beyond them to God who guides and with
open arms warmly welcomes us.
"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. ... Even though
I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil,
for you are with me; your rod and your staff - they comfort me"
(Psalm 23:1, 4).
From the viewpoint of the eternal God, do not the elderly who appreciate
each day of life bring a richness to our modern society that values
worldly profit while neglecting humanity?
Prayer
49. A priest who came to Japan and worked generously as a
beloved missionary introduced the following poem before he peacefully
left this world:
- The Greatest Task
- What is the greatest task in this world?
- To grow old with a joyful heart,
- To rest when you want to work,
- To be silent when you want to speak,
- To be hopeful in the face of despair,
- To meekly and tranquilly bear one's cross.
To bit by bit loose the bonds that tie us to this world is indeed
a great work.
- When one cannot do anything else, to humbly give in.
In the end, God leaves us the best work, prayer.
- Even when they can do nothing else, to the last we can put our
hands together in prayer,
Praying for God's blessings upon those we love.
And when it is all over and I am on my death bed, I may hear God's
voice saying, "Come, my friend, I have not abandoned you."23
For the elderly, prayer is the indispensable activity of directing
one's life toward God. At the same time, their prayers for the happiness
of those they love and the whole world is a service by which they
break through the walls of loneliness and alienation and are connected
with God and all humankind.
From the Cross to the Resurrection
50. Realistically speaking, old age is not a light burden;
at times it is a heavy cross for both the elderly and those who
live with them. Actually caring for old people involves many unattractive
elements. Sometimes when they have hurt each other or when the pain
of having to live in the situation becomes unbearable, care givers
may hope to be free of the burden of the elderly person. Likewise,
the elderly are sometimes tormented to the point of despair, thinking
it would be best to die quickly. In this situation, it is essential
that neither the old person who must accept the assistance of others
nor the helpers lose sight of each other as individuals. As Christ's
words "just as you did to one of the least of these, you did
to me" (Matthew 25:40) make clear, in giving heartfelt service
to an old person we really do encounter God and enrich our own lives.
Looking at the reality of how Japanese society has cared for the
elderly until now, we wish to challenge men to recognize their serious
responsibility in this regard so that this heavy burden will not
fall solely upon women. The whole family, especially the husband
and wife, must discuss how to cooperate and supplement each other's
efforts.
In order that the family caring for old persons not be isolated,
the need for neighborhood support must not be forgotten.
We often see how trying to bear the burden by themselves can lead
to an unfortunate conclusion when a family's best efforts exhaust
their energy. There are limits to what a family can do by itself
in caring for the elderly. In order to provide a place where those
caring for the elderly can find someone with whom to discuss their
problems, offices must be set up in neighborhoods to provide the
necessary assistance. In addition, family members and local support
groups must make active use of such assistance ranging from daycare
and short-stay care to residential group- and nursing homes.
However, the elderly person separated from the family for either
a short or a long time by entering some special care facility must
still feel independent and a real member of the family; therefore
the family must make frequent opportunities to gather. The old person
as well as the rest of the family are asked to show love, forgiveness
and gratitude. It is that which leads each of them to the eternal
life of God.
Chapter Three: Life and Death
A. Prenatal Diagnosis and
the Disabled
Prenatal diagnosis
51. When newspapers and magazines deal with prenatal diagnosis,
they present many voices of people who point out prejudice and discrimination
toward handicapped persons.24 Among those people are
people with disabilities who, considering the discrimination they
themselves have faced, say that prenatal diagnosis is kinder than
making children face such discrimination. Our society has reached
the point where such unthinkable things can be said. Our attitude
toward disabled persons is the problem.
There was a report that a father whose child had Down's Syndrome
asked for and received a transfer to the United States in the late
1980's. There the child was neither stared or pointed at, nor refused
admission to swimming pools or gym classes. The father wrote, "They
accepted him as he is. Imagine how much this lightened our burdens."
After seven years, the family returned from America. Their impression
at that time was that Japan is uninformed about Down's Syndrome
and that there are not enough workplaces for people with the syndrome.
The father said that Japanese still tend to view the disabled coldly.
In this, Japan is still a country where people with disabilities
cannot live easily. We cannot think about prenatal diagnosis without
reference to this situation.
At present, we can see both advantages and disadvantages in prenatal
diagnosis. Among the advantages are the possibility that early discovery
of hereditary diseases can make preventive measures possible, the
prediction and prevention of difficulties in delivery, treatment
of hereditary problems in utero, and in the case of children whose
congenital defects cannot be corrected, the parents can prepare
themselves before the birth by securing the necessary social and
spiritual support in advance. There are also, however, disadvantages.
When it becomes known that someone is a carrier of some health problem,
that person may face discrimination in insurance, employment and
marriage. A decision to have an abortion because of a diagnosis
of a defect in the child not only ignores the dignity of life, it
also denies the disabled person's right to live. And, what advantage
is there in knowing in advance about conditions for which there
is as yet no prevention or cure? Doesn't it merely increase discrimination
against the disabled?
At present, many pregnant women receive prenatal diagnosis and when
some chromosomal abnormality is diagnosed most of them choose to
abort the pregnancy.25
Though at first prenatal diagnosis was introduced as a way to examine
the possibility that a child might be born with a serious disability,
nowadays it has become accepted as a means to prevent the birth
of disabled persons. In our society, it is essential that we realize
the existence of the sort of severe discrimination against the disabled
that we referred to above. There are people who even think that
certain kinds of human beings should not live. This is a big influence
on the way people see the disabled and becomes social pressure leading
to the easy acceptance of abortion.
As we saw above, the progress of medical science that allows us
to know if a child has a possible genetic disability before it is
born is praiseworthy. However, we must sound a warning against it
when prenatal diagnosis becomes an easy way to choose abortion.
Such eugenic selection of which children can be born drives people's
consciousness of the disabled further into the background and encourages
discrimination.
The burden of disability
52. When parents come to know that the child in the womb
has a handicap, in their perplexity they ask, "Why us?"
Some are driven to uneasily worry, "What will the child's future
be? How can this child live in a cruel world?" Some in their
suffering think, "This child is pitiful. It might be better
off not being born." Their emotions gradually become more and
more negative.
Living with a handicap is certainly not easy. Those who do so have
said such things to us as, "Why am I the only one like this?
Sometimes I want to curse my luck, and even God," "What
caused me to be like this? Is it my fate from a previous life? Is
it someone's fault?" "Sometimes I want to throw it all
away and die" When they speak so directly of the many hardships
they endure, we are overwhelmed and cannot offer glib words of comfort
Why God, the loving creator, gave these persons such handicaps is
a divine mystery. Faced with such a great question, we cannot provide
answers that will fully satisfy the hearts of those who bear disabilities.
However, we can clearly affirm that human happiness and value and
the splendor of a truly human life are not linked to whether or
not one is disabled. Furthermore, when viewed in the light of faith,
we can proclaim that everything is in the loving hands of God.
From burden to liberation
53. We know disabled persons who look positively at their
disabilities, think their lives good and say, "I'm grateful
to my parents for giving me birth." There are parents who proudly
say, "It is good to have lived with this child. My own vision
has been expanded and I have met many people. This would have been
impossible in an ordinary life. This child has changed my life and
helped me grow." There are even handicapped people who assert
that "disability is uniqueness," like a strong will, a
good memory, height, singing ability etc. For people to develop
that attitude means they have made extraordinary efforts, been supported
by those around them and have had wonderful encounters with others.
Happiness is something we find for ourselves. We want to affirm
that no matter how great the painful burdens of living with a disability,
life is far greater. Life is a gift from God. It is a mistake to
make negative value judgements like "Children born with a disability
are unfortunate" or "They're pitiful" and to weigh
the richness of a whole life simply in terms of a disability.
Life is very rich. It enfolds wonderful possibilities. The disabled
person, too, learns many things through encountering other people
and is liberated from confinement. Parents of children with disabilities
as well as those who encounter disabled persons in the community
find that their vision is broadened and liberated. In that liberating
journey, each person learns to love and finds his or her life enriched.
Discrimination against the disabled and a new view of disability
54. Unfortunately, it cannot be denied that discriminatory
attitudes toward the disabled are still deeply rooted in modern
Japanese society. These attitudes are demonstrated by parents who
say "It's embarrassing" or in-laws' barbed words to the
mother like, "Our family has never had anything like this before.
It's your fault the child was born this way." Further, society's
mistaken values that measure human worth in terms of abilities and
school records are at work in the words of ordinary parents who
protest to kindergarten principals and school teachers, "Don't
put anyone with a handicap in class with my child. They will hold
the class back." Even in such casual phrases as "How sad,
I want to help," there is at work a sense of superiority on
the part of people who are not disabled.
Fortunately, in recent times our society is asking how we can understand
handicaps and attitudes toward disability are changing greatly.
Though ignorance, prejudice and discrimination are still firmly
planted in society, generally speaking they are being gradually
overcome. Furthermore, as people approach disabled persons with
an attitude and posture of compassion and sympathy, they will come
to understand that "disability is uniqueness."26
Aiming for a barrier-free society
55. All of us, whether we have disabilities or not, have
been given a precious lifetime through which to journey toward God.
While deeply respecting one another's unique existence, we must
share our strengths to help each other through that journey. Building
an environment in which persons with disabilities can live with
hope is the responsibility of all of us. There are limits to what
families can do.27 We need to move from a social service
system that focuses on the family to one that actively involves
the community. The increasing phenomenon of disabled persons who
achieve independence from their families' care through group homes
and voluntary assistance programs is a very hopeful sign. As a fellowship
with roots in the local community, the Church has a responsibility
not only to applaud those efforts but also to actively involve itself
in them.
When "the powerless" become actively involved in schools,
workplaces and society, we all experience anew the splendor of human
life. Our interpersonal encounters are enriched. In Japan today,
poisoned by materialism, the emphasis on productivity and humanity-destroying
fierce competition, the presence of disabled people is a treasure
that shows the basic beauty of life.
The Vatican's message for the International Year for Disabled Persons
says, "The quality of a society and a civilization are measured
by the respect shown to the weakest of its members."28
We want to see Japan become a barrier-free society where everyone's
individuality is respected without regard for disabilities and where
everyone has free access to involvement in society and the Church.29
B: Suicide
I. The Difficulty of Living
The growing number of suicides
56. According to the National Police Agency, in 1999 the
number of suicides exceeded 30,000 for the second year in a row.30
This is the number of those who actually killed themselves, but
it is only the tip of the iceberg compared to the number of those
who seriously considered or attempted suicide. The number of those
who were discovered by others while attempting suicide and were
taken to hospitals for treatment is probably extremely high.
It is tragic when someone who has lived many years and has the possibility
of a rich future decides to cut life short. There is no way any
else can understand the deep suffering that drives a person to attempt
suicide.
A middle-school student bullied by classmates, despairing of help
from cowardly teachers and unable to speak with his parents runs
away from home and ends his life. A young woman in her 20's, entangled
in a romantic problem and betrayed by the man she trusted, in a
fit of despair throws herself from the platform in front of an oncoming
train. An 18-year-old woman abused by a parent in childhood and
anxious about an eating disorder resulting from that trauma is rushed
to the hospital after taking an overdose of sleeping pills. A middle-aged
man worn out by overwork and unable to meet the expectations of
his boss and coworkers decides to kill himself. An old person jumps
from the roof of an expensive nursing home, disappointed at the
lack of visits from children and grandchildren. There are many examples
of such motives.
What is suicide?
57. When we try to think anew about what suicide actually
is, we get a not easily explained glimpse of the human mystery.
Generally speaking, suicide can be defined as "the act of intentionally
ending one's own life," but there are other ways of putting
it.31
How a human being completes a lifetime is a serious subject. There
have been ages and cultures in which it was considered a duty to
follow one's master in death. In our own country's history, generals
defeated in battle would often commit suicide by "harakiri."
Even today we see cases where a person stakes his life as a way
to protest doubts about his innocence. Such situations are suicides,
but they can be considered special cases that involve self-assertion
based upon convictions. In addition, there are many cases when people
who suffer from depression or addiction kill themselves. Doubts
remain as to whether or not these people are really able to consider
and make normal judgements about life and death and whether their
suicide is clearly a matter of their own will. Suicide is an important
subject upon which more careful research in every field is necessary
both now and in the future.
Without forgetting these problems regarding suicide, we want to
convey our reflections on the option for death in the face of deep
suffering.
Loneliness
58. Even when their motives differ, the common thread among
those who commit suicide is the fact that they have "hit a
wall." Others look at them and say things like, "Why can't
you handle a bit of pain?" or "If you die, it's all over;
hang in there a bit and things will get better," or "Hey,
there are lots of people worse off than you." But those voices
do not get through to the sufferers. As far as they are concerned,
their pain is hell. They are in agony and do not know why. Crushed
by the weight of their suffering, they cannot see anything else.
"If I die, this will end. There is nothing else for me."
This is the common rationale for suicide.
Psychiatrists and counselors point out that though people who attempt
suicide really want to die, they also really want someone to help
them.
Tragedy ensues when these people are unable to find someone in their
community to help and understand them. Even when physically it appears
that because they live in a family and go to work or school they
are not isolated, they are in fact mentally isolated. The conviction
that there is no one to turn to and that they must bear their suffering
all alone is the root of their sickness.
II. Living the life we have received
If we turn our eyes to God
59. We know that life is full of thorns and briers and that
for weak and easily hurt humankind it is difficult to get through
life. There are indeed times when all comfort disappears from our
lives and terrible darkness envelops us. We can find no light by
which to carry on life in the face of despair.
No matter how great the pain, no matter how deep the darkness, we
must not give up on life. Even when life seems to be one huge pain,
it still contains infinite possibilities. It is said that in the
darkness of suffering there are two doors. One opens easily and
leads to a world of despair. The other, though hard to open, leads
to hope. No matter how heavy it might be, we must struggle to open
that door. It may seem like an agonizing struggle to accept death
but when we pass through that darkness, we find the light of life
awaits us. Just as Christ who was swallowed up by death was then
wrapped in the brightness of the Resurrection, those who bravely
face their suffering in the here and now will later say, "It
is good that I did not die then." Such times are a necessary
preparation for knowing the wonder of life in the depths of our
hearts.
Life is a gift from God. God who gave us life certainly gives us
the strength we need to live it. No matter how much the earth seems
darkened by thick clouds, beyond those clouds shines the light of
God who loves us eternally. Raising our gaze to that and finding
hope is the blessing of faith that becomes strength.
"When I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers, the
moon and the stars that you have established; what are human beings
that you are mindful of them, mortals that you care for them?"
(Psalm 8:3-4)
The Catholic Church has always disapproved of suicide because it
goes against the will of God who gives life.32 This is
based upon our faith that if we set our sights on God's eternal
love, then absolute despair is impossible.
Answering the cry for help
60. On the other hand, as we have already mentioned, there
are many cases where responsibility for suicide does not rest solely
with the person who commits the act. We who share responsibility
for the circumstances that drove the person to suicide are challenged
to examine the situation. If while desiring death suicidal persons
also have a deep desire for someone to help, then it is our responsibility
when suicide is not prevented.
Since the advent of modern times, the world has focused on economic
activities. Human values that do not contribute to economic activities
have not been appreciated. As a result, our society focused on economics
severs the relations between people, gradually erodes an atmosphere
where neighbors support one another, and now even endangers relationships
within families. Human relations are supposed to be the most important
thing in this world, yet we have built a society that cripples them.
People who commit suicide are victims of that society.
In Japan, several activities are being carried on with the hope
of somehow preventing suicide. There are the police and independent
groups, especially citizens' groups like Life Line, that provide
telephone counseling. The medical profession has grappled for many
years with the problem of suicide prevention and an unknown number
of people have been saved, a source of courage and hope. We want
to build a society that draws near to suicidal people, sincerely
listening to their anguished cries, courageously looking into their
hearts and sympathizing with their pain and suffering. This is the
responsibility of each of us.
To the families left behind
61. The suicide of a family member or friend is painful for
those who are left behind. The suicide of a parent or child or that
of a close friend at work or school is an especially big shock.
The majority of people wonder, "Was it my fault?" "Was
it something I said or did that caused it?" "Why couldn't
I see it coming?" "If I had only done such-and-such."
They blame themselves in their helplessness. The closer the relationship,
the harder it is to free oneself from such doubts.
We understand this and recommend that people place their concerns
in the hands of God who knows all. Life does not end in this world,
and we are connected to God's world. This is our faith. After our
journey through this world, all of us are liberated from earthly
pains and burdens and are embraced in God's eternal life.
62. God is just, but also merciful. We wonder about people
whose life in this world has ended. "How does God judge them?"
"How does God see it?" The answer is a mystery that transcends
human understanding. We should leave judgement to God who knows
all. When we consider the complicated reality of our world and human
weakness, we believe that God's mercy is richly poured out upon
those who have committed suicide.
Sadly, the Church's position that "suicide is a mortal sin
against God who is the Lord of life" has been cold, judgmental
and discriminatory. We admit that and repent.
Therefore, we appeal to each and every member of the Church to offer
funeral Masses and prayers for the deceased who need God's mercy
and forgiveness and for the bereaved who need comfort and encouragement.
63. For those who have been bereft of a loved one through
suicide we recommend prayer more than anything else. We understand
the feelings of those who torture themselves in anguish over thoughts
of the past, but remaining trapped in those thoughts leads nowhere.
Prayer rescues hearts shut up in darkness and opens the way to life.
It is a conversation with God that leads to a conversation with
the deceased. Conversation with God comforts us with the conviction
that human life does not end in this world. Moreover, to converse
with the deceased in the light of God lets us look calmly at the
truth about the deceased and ourselves, and crosses the gap between
the next life and this to open a new world of relationship. Where
there is a prayer there is peace and tranquility. In prayer hope
is born.
C. Euthanasia
The context
64. In the American state of Oregon, the Netherlands and
elsewhere laws approving euthanasia have been enacted. In Japan,
though things are not this clear-cut, there have been several cases
of euthanasia and there are groups here that advocate it.33
So long as freedom of choice is misinterpreted to mean that we can
do with our lives as we please and if we are ruled by standards
of efficiency and utility even in regard to human life, then in
the near future even in Japan euthanasia will "catch up"
with those places.
We are gladdened on the other hand to see that the hospice movement's
philosophy of providing care "so that one may live until death
as comfortably as possible by one's own will and choice" has
spread throughout Japan.34 Doctors who work in hospices
say that in the past euthanasia was chosen in many cases of terminal
illness when pain management and care were not well handled. On
the other hand, they say, patients who receive sufficient care in
a hospice are able to suppress the pain and meet death. We sincerely
hope to see hospices and hospice care, which have their origins
in Christian tradition and thought, spread throughout Japan. We
must work to ensure that everyone receives care that enables them
to die with true human dignity.
The meaning of death
65. For modern people, death has become something far away.
It is hated, excluded from daily life and seems to have been hidden
away. But as it is often said, death is a part of life. From the
moment we receive life, we journey step by step toward death. To
ask "How should I die?" is linked to asking "How
should I live?" "Why is a human able to keep living, knowing
death is inevitable?"
We are convinced that when we think about death we must begin by
answering this sort of fundamental question. Thinking about euthanasia
is not merely a question of about how one dies.
In Hori Tatsuo's novel Kaze Tachinu (The Wind Has Risen)
the hero joins his fiancee in a sanatorium as she meets death and
through death he gradually learns to really see things, replacing
his everyday view of life with a new set of values. The writer describes
seeing through death for the first time with the words, "Such
a beautiful sky! If this were not such a cold, windy day we couldn't
see it, could we?" As in this novel, the living learn much
from the dying, and develop a new consciousness of one's own life
and death.
Viewing the meaning of death this way, we think that for someone
to recklessly choose euthanasia is to not give proper respect to
human life.
Death with dignity
66. We think that euthanasia and dying with dignity are two
different things.
Meeting death with dignity is different from murder through euthanasia.
Rejecting excessive treatment while providing as much pain relief
as is necessary for patients with no likelihood of recovery35
must not be confused with euthanasia.36 In other words,
it is allowable to stop excessive medical treatment and administer
sufficient pain killers even if doing so hastens death.37
Stopping medical treatment that merely prolongs life and giving
appropriate pain relief is not done for the sake of letting the
patient die, nor in order to kill the patient, but out of respect
for the dignity of a living being.38
Using this distinction as a base, direct action intended to cause
death, intentional euthanasia, is "a serious violation of divine
law"39 and cannot be accepted.40
D. Capital Punishment
Abolition of the death penalty and Japan
67. Human beings cannot live alone; they need the help of
others. This is a fact we have already stated and which cannot be
denied. With the cooperation and support of one another we can fulfill
our lives. Sadly, though, it happens that we sinful human beings
are led by our selfish desires to betray the expectations of others,
harming those who would help us and others, depriving them of life,
disrupting society and forcing upon many people an indelible anxiety
and fear.
Throughout history and in various kinds of society, it has clearly
been considered natural to inflict the death penalty upon people
who give priority to their desires and have ignored the rights of
others, deprived them of life, and greatly disturbed social order
and harmony. Even today, the death penalty is accepted in many countries.
In many developed countries, however, the death penalty has been
abolished.
The only developed nations in which the death penalty endures are
the United States (where it has been abolished in some states) and
Japan.41 A recent opinion poll shows that about 80% of
Japanese accept the death penalty, perhaps influenced by a serious
of particularly atrocious crimes.42
Is "A death deserves a death" right?
68. There are various reasons for people's approving the
death penalty. The argument that "a death deserves a death"
is one of them. Another is anger and the desire for revenge on the
part of the family and friends of a murder victim. There is also
an opinion that the death penalty is a deterrent to crime. Further,
there are those who maintain that the death penalty protects society
from having dangerous people at large.
We do not object to a criminal's being punished for a crime and
having to make restitution. For a person who has committed a crime
to receive an appropriate judgment of punishment and compensation
in a fair court is natural. A criminal cannot escape responsibility
for a crime. However, in a society based on a constitutional system
the reasons given for approving of the death penalty are losing
their persuasive power.
The United Nations General Assembly in 1989 adopted a treaty calling
for the abolition of the death penalty. (Japan voted against the
treaty and has still not ratified it.) Contrary to the idea that
the death penalty continues to act as a deterrent to crime, there
are many reports that show that the death penalty does not deter
crime.43 We think we should respect these reports. In
addition, some people think that when we consider the feelings of
the bereaved, the death penalty is unavoidable. However, we doubt
that the death of the assailant heals their pain.44 We
think that another way must be thought of if the healing of the
victims' hearts is the real aim. As for the argument that the death
penalty prevents further crimes by the criminal, we want to emphasize
the fact that today the facilities for incarcerating criminals are
run in such a way as to make escape very difficult, and if an inmate
does manage to escape, it is nearly impossible to live as a fugitive
in a society run by law.
In a world where countries are governed by law, and in light of
the dignity of every human life, we maintain that the rationale
for the death penalty is disappearing.45
In cases of serious crimes society does not solve anything
by executing the guilty party. We must think more deeply about the
human rights of the victims and their families.
Life belongs to God
69. As we have already pointed out, life belongs to God.
The Bible says, "Vengeance is mine" (Deuteronomy32:35).
The power of life and death is in God's hands. Do we not usurp God's
authority when in the name of the state we deprive someone of life
even for the best and most just of reasons?
We should pay attention to the scene in Genesis of God's words upon
banishing Cain for the murder of his brother: "The Lord put
a mark on Cain so that no one who came upon him would kill him"
(Genesis 4:15). In these words we can see a denial of the death
penalty. The mark of Cain is a call to him to reflect upon his crime.
No matter how terrible their crimes, God's love gives everyone the
possibility to live a whole life. By opening the way to life, the
way to repentance is opened.
"Forgive one another" - the way to full growth
70. We want to point out that making a decisive judgment
upon someone through the death penalty blocks the way to full growth
as human beings. As followers of Christ who said, "forgive
seventy times seven times" (Matthew 18:22), we think
that our maturity and completion as human beings are based not only
on respect for basic human rights and duties but also in the gratuitous
love and service found in the forgiveness of sinners. In forgiving
what is hard to forgive, we show the true glory of humanity.
This is the road Christ walked when as he faced his crucifixion
he ordered his disciples to give up the sword and later died praying
for the pardon of those who nailed him to the cross. The attraction
of Christ that draws and questions the hearts of people is not in
revenge, but in his choice to give his life for the sake of forgiveness.
In a fortunate historical process many countries, especially in
Europe, are following the path of abolition of capital punishment.
Recently, whenever there is an opportunity, Pope John Paul II has
called for the abolition of the death penalty.47 We believe
that a nation truly matures when society forgives the criminal and
accompanies him on the road to repentance.
E. The Life Sciences
An affirmation of scientific progress
71. Rapid progress in science and medical technology has
opened new possibilities for the birth of human life as well as
its death. We can now manipulate life as we wish, giving birth to
life by using extracted sperm and ova, using genetic manipulation,
cloning, performing organ transplants and improving treatment at
the end of life. Just a few decades ago such things were unthought
of. It is not at all our intention here to attack such progress
in science and medical technology.
Respect for honest research
72. Human intelligence is a precious gift from God.
The universe created by God still contains many mysteries and an
order that are hidden from humankind. They are deep and limitless.
With heartfelt respect we highly value all efforts in honest pursuit
of the truth behind nature. To discover, understand and use it for
humanity's happiness is no violation of the Creator's authority.
God made humankind in the divine image to be the protector of the
order and harmony of creation. Science is one way to fulfill that
vocation.
For the sake of human happiness
73. As the Catholic Church approached the new century, Pope John
Paul II apologized to the world for the errors of the Church in
the past. We unite our hearts with him in this. We sincerely repent
of those words and deeds such as the suppression of Galileo that
disregarded the progress of the natural sciences. Searching out
the laws that move the universe, respecting that order and then
putting that knowledge to work for human happiness and development
is not only permitted to humankind, it is a responsibility given
us by God.
How can we fulfill that responsibility?
74. The problem is how to fulfill that responsibility, how
to use science. Ethics, morality, our view of life - in short, how
we live - are all called into question by science.
The results of science and medical technology are at times like
the fruit in the garden provided for Adam and Eve. Such progress
seems like a charm that truly promises to bring us happiness, but
if we reach out for it blindly, we may find ourselves like Adam
and Eve, exiled from paradise. No matter what attractions it may
hold, when it is used without reference to values scientific progress
also carries the possibility of death and destruction for humankind.
The two faces of the new technology
75. The discovery and use of nuclear energy is a prime example
of this ambiguity. It is claimed that in the 20th century physics
has taken the lead in the sciences. The climax of that has been
the development of nuclear energy. It has provided a totally new
source of energy for humanity, but as we can see in the destruction
of human life in a moment in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the disaster
at Chernobyl and the life-threatening criticality accident at Tokaimura,
it also has the potential to pass huge problems on to future generations.
To use it effectively, we need the wisdom to know our limits and
exercise the greatest care. In order to avoid tragedy, we must develop
safe alternative means of producing energy.
Respecting the mystery
76. As we enter the 21st century, we see projections for
the same sort of advances in the life sciences, a field that touches
upon the prerogatives of God the creator. There is a danger that
we will fall into the illusion that we can manipulate life as we
please, as if we were God. This increasing research in the life
sciences must take into account reason, ethics and religious values
when making judgements about its results.
We want to look at several specific fruits of this research and
technological progress, showing how they should be evaluated from
the viewpoint of basic human values.
F. Brain Death and Organ Transplants
The diagnosis of death
77. Death comes for us all without exception. We who live
are born, grow and reach old age through a process that, biologically
speaking, leads to death. This is the fate of every living thing.
Whether we be rich or poor, low or high, death comes equally to
us all.
Moreover, death accompanies each of us as the shadow side of life
itself. There is no one - even new-born, or however young or vigorous
- who can claim to have nothing to do with death. As we see in situations
like sudden disasters, traffic accidents or violent crimes, none
of us can know when, where or how we must meet death. Death sits
in wait, taking aim at the slightest crack in our life.
In the past, people understood death as the cessation of breath.
The Japanese word for death (shi) originally comes from a
phrase (shiinu) written with the characters "breath
leaves." Until the recent advances in medical science, that
was people's basic view of death. They checked to see if someone
was breathing, made a diagnosis of death and prepared the funeral.
Nowadays, however, because of the advances in medical science the
diagnosis of death is left to doctors. Family and friends, as well
as the government, respect the diagnosis of doctors and accept a
verdict of death in terms of a doctor's declaration. That verdict
has been based upon three symptoms: respiratory failure, cardiac
arrest and dilation of the pupils. These bases for diagnosing death
have been accepted without question.
Organ transplants and brain death
78. However, as medical technology has advanced, in certain
special cases a different basis for diagnosing death has appeared.
"Brain death" is being looked to as a basis for making
a diagnosis of death. The suggestion has been made that even when
the heart continues to function with the aid of medical equipment,
if the patient is in a persistent coma with brain stem paralysis
and no electrical activity in the brain, then that person should
be considered legally dead. European and American society were quicker
than Japan to accept brain death as a standard for determining death,
but interest among Japanese has increased in connection with organ
transplants.
Even if the brain is dead, other organs continue to survive. The
success rate in organ transplants is high when live organs are used.
Therefore, in 1999 a law governing organ transplants was passed
that recognizes brain death as a basis for a diagnosis of death
in the case of people who have made a written commitment to be organ
donors.
Respect for the dead
79. Even so, many people have difficulty accepting brain
death as definitive. When the heart is beating, blood is flowing
to other organs and the patients's body feels warm to the touch,
people focus on the fact that the organs are alive, even when a
diagnosis of brain death has been given. There have even been reports
of such cases of brain death in which doctors have been able to
deliver a child.47
Even when medical specialists give a diagnosis of brain death, it
is natural that the close family and friends surrounding the patient
cannot simply accept that verdict. So long as the patient's body
feels warm and so long as the heart sustains a pulse, ties of affection
remain and even when there is no response, the family and friends
attempt to communicate as if the patient were alive.
For that reason, we strongly recommend that though a medical expert's
diagnosis of brain death be accepted as final, we also affirm that
nothing may be taken away from the respect and solicitude the survivors'
ties to the deceased deserve. Further, it is absolutely necessary
that each person make an early opportunity to discuss with family
his or her willingness or unwillingness to be an organ donor.
Organ donation is an act of love
80. While we respect those who cannot simply accept a diagnosis
of brain death as final, since organ transplant technology not only
restores health to those who had lost hope and gives them new possibilities,
we recognize and value it as "good news" presented to
us by modern science.48
There are, indeed, people in Japan who say that those who take organs
from a third party in order to restore their health and lengthen
their life are merely clinging to life. This is not the position
of the Catholic Church. It is a work of love when to the fullest
extent possible we do all we can to offer encouragement and cooperation
in supporting the one life each of us has been given by God. In
fact, for more than 40 years the Catholic Church has recognized
organ donation as a work of charity when its development and progress
meet the following conditions: (1) the free-will offering by the
donor; (2) confirmation of death; (3) consideration for the bereaved;
(4) respect for the remains; (5) no buying or selling of corpses;
(6) fairness in determining who will receive organs.49
Recent media reports on organ transplants use the English word "donor"
to describe those who offer their organs. The etymology of this
word associates it with "gift-giving." It contains the
sense that one is giving another something that is precious to oneself.
Offering one's organs for transplant to someone in need is indeed
a precious gift of a part of the life we have received from God.
The Catholic Church has consistently affirmed this as a work of
charity.
Life is in God's hands
81. While we freely recommend organ donation as a work of
charity, when we look honestly at Japanese society today, we must
also admit to some hesitation. It comes from society's tendency
to think about life and death lightly, not looking squarely at the
meaning of death for human life. A view of life that gives highest
priority to extending life in this world might easily go along with
the logic of our consumer society and turn organ donation into a
commercial transaction. Our life and death have a mysterious value
that is not confined to the value given it by this world. The sign
of that is the new life given through the cross and resurrection
of Christ.
We wish to remind all those involved in organ transplants of a view
of humanity that says life on the merely biological level does not
have ultimate value for the human being, but is directed toward
eternal life. Life is given by God and is directed toward communion
with the eternal God. Death is nothing more than a passage from
life in this world to eternal life. Life and death are both in the
hands of God, led by God. Therefore, even if an organ transplant
has given me a longer life, I should not view it as something I
have purchased for myself at high cost. Rather, I should gratefully
accept a transplant as the generosity of the donor and a gift from
God and hear in them God's call to live more dedicated to eternal
life.
G. Embryo Research, Gene Therapy and Cloning
82. When we think about the human embryo, that is, the
early condition of pregnancy beginning with the fertilized egg,
we must confirm the next point as a fundamental premise. The question
arises of when one thinks human life begins. We want to take the
considered position that rather than attempting to define when life
begins, we declare our position that life must be protected from
its very beginning.50
Holding to this understanding, we must think about recent progress
in human embryonic research and the technology of cloning that comes
from it.
Human cloning
83. A "clone" is a cell or creature that shares
the same heredity as another. The world received a big shock in
1997 when Dolly, a sheep cloned by transplanting a cell nucleus
into an egg, was born and gave rise to the question of human cloning.
The early heated ethical arguments eventually calmed as the majority
of researchers complained that delicate matters of judgment that
should be considered on a case-by-case basis were being dealt with
in the realm of general public opinion. Two points are at the center
of the dispute. The first concerns two kinds of cloning: "reproductive
cloning" for the sake of reproduction and "non-reproductive
cloning" for purposes other than reproduction. The second point
of controversy concerns how to ethically and legally deal with the
cloned embryo. The Church teaches the following:
1. It opposes reproductive cloning because human beings exist as
ends and may not be treated as means. Human beings have rights that
are not programmable through heredity and each human being has the
right to be recognized as a hereditarily unique individual.
2. The use of non-reproductive cloning (for example, for the sake
of making structures or organs) requires delicate judgements of
each technology. Standards for handling human embryos are the basic
problem. When the intention is to produce the birth of an individual
by other than normal means we cannot avoid the problem of when the
life of the new individual begins. Since the embryo is already a
human being, it may not be used for research.
Gene therapy
84. Pope John Paul II has said that the results of research
in genetic manipulation must be used for the benefit of humanity,
for curing disease and improving the food supply. At the same time
he condemns any use of live human embryos for experimentation, saying
that rational values and respect for humanity are damaged thereby.51
In response to the 1997 UNESCO Universal Declaration on the Human
Genome and Human Rights, the French Catholic bishops issued a pastoral
letter, "Development in Genetics and Human Dignity." They
said that though gene therapy is used to save patients, we do not
know the full results of it. It is desirable that this research
continue with full respect given to the subjects of these experiments
without going too far into reproductive cloning, the introduction
of germ cells or embryonic cells into adult cells. They further
said that out of consideration for future generations we should
refrain from all research involving such genetic manipulation.52
Gene therapy is being used at present in the treatment of diseases
in which specific genes do not function properly and in cases of
acquired diseases for which there is no other therapy. In the former
cases, positive results have been reported. However, in the latter
cases such as cancer and AIDS, research has only just begun. Therefore,
no cures have been established yet and there have even been cases
where research on human gene therapy has been stopped.53
While we have great hopes for this technology in the future, we
must carefully monitor its development.
H. The Environment
The Earth
85. God created the world and declared it good, giving it
order and harmony with the hope that nature and humankind would
coexist in abundance. However, modernization and industrialization
in the 19th and 20th centuries have led to the subjugation of nature
by humanity, disappointing that hope. In their untiring pursuit
of convenience and comfort, the peoples of the developed nations,
driven by self-centered egoism and commercialism, have in a short
time destroyed the earth's environment.
The earth was born 4.6 million years ago. At the beginning of the
15th century, the human population of the planet was approximately
one billion. By the beginning of the 20th century it was some 1.6
billion. As we enter the 21st century, the world population is some
6.1 billion and is expected to exceed 10 billion by mid-century.
Predicting the future is difficult, but in the 21st century three
things seem certain: population growth, increased energy consumption
and deepening environmental problems.
If we keep on like this...
86. As early as 1962 the American biologist Rachel Carson
in her book Silent Spring pointed out the problem of environmental
pollution.
"It was a spring without voices. On the mornings that had once
throbbed with the dawn chorus of robins, catbirds, doves, jays,
wrens, and scores of other bird voices there was now no sound; only
silence lay over the fields and woods and marsh. ... The apple trees
were coming into bloom but no bees droned among the blossoms, so
there was no pollination and there would be no fruit."54
This prophecy of a "silent spring" was made more than
40 years ago.
In 1972, the Club of Rome published its report, The Limits of Growth,
warning of overpopulation, economic expansion, resource depletion,
food shortages, and environmental pollution. The report warned that
under present conditions the exhaustion of resources and environmental
pollution caused by population growth would impose limits on human
development.
Today these prophecies leave a heavy weight on our hearts. Once
lost, it is impossible to return nature's pristine state. Between
1975 and 2000, some 40,000 different kinds of creatures were driven
to extinction each year. Restoring an extinct species is, to all
intents and purposes, impossible.
In the latter half of the 20th century, mechanization and the growth
of the automotive society in developed countries led to mass production,
large-scale consumption, large-scale disposal, and large-scale discharge
of industrial wastes as individual engaged in extravagantly conspicuous
consumption. This has resulted in the over-production of carbon
dioxide (CO2) which is raising the earth's temperature. In addition,
chemical pollutants such as dioxin and environmental endocrine disruptors
are threatening not only humanity, but all life on earth.
The facts of environmental destruction
87. Especially serious among the world's environmental problems
are global warming, acid rain, ozone depletion and environmental
destruction in developing countries.
The consumption of fossil fuels such as petroleum and coal produces
"greenhouse gases" such as CO2 that raise the temperature
of the planet. It is projected that during the 21st century the
average temperature will rise 2o C. It is assumed that this will
result in a rise of about 50cm in the sea level. This rise in sea
levels will change rainfall amounts and weather patterns and have
a big influence on plant and animal life. Abnormal weather conditions
will produce famine and environmental refugees.
Sulfuric oxides (SOx) and nitrous oxides (NOx) discharged by factories,
cars etc. undergo chemical changes in the atmosphere to produce
sulfuric acid and nitric acid that then falls to the earth as acid
rain. The death of fish in Northern European lakes and rivers was
observed in the 1950's and today more than half of Germany's forests
have been harmed by acid rain. Crops have been damaged in China,
and acid rain has been observed as well in America, Canada and Japan.
Pollutants have been observed to ride air currents for as much as
2,000km, so it is feared that the effects of acid rain can be worldwide.
Ozone in the lower level of the stratosphere is destroyed by chlorofluorocarbons
and other such gases. This allows an increase in the amount of harmful
ultraviolet radiation that reaches the planet's surface. The fear
is that this will cause health problems like cancer, interfere with
photosynthesis in plants and hinder the growth of plankton.
Industrial pollution is a serious problem in developing countries.
While that is their responsibility, it is also the responsibility
of the developed countries that build factories in those places.
The problem of pollution arose in Japan in the 1960's. Situations
of air pollution in Yokkaichi and Kawasaki, and water pollution
in Minamata due to industrial drainage provoked various countermeasures
that have improved the situation. However, problems of air pollution,
industrial drainage and heavy metal pollution are appearing in the
developing countries.
This is not a case of people in the developed nations criticizing
development in other places. It is important, though, that we share
our experience by transferring technology, personnel and funds to
assist developing nations.
Moreover, the overlogging of tropical hardwoods, the depletion of
seafood resources due to marine pollution, the disposal of harmful
wastes in the sea and desertification all present serious challenges
to the existence of every creature on earth. In particular, it is
said that more than half of earth's species live in the tropical
forests, but that by 2020 between 50,000 and 1,500,000 of them are
expected to be extinct.
What God expects
88. Both nature and humanity have been exquisitely created
by God's hands. Humans, animals and plants cooperate with each other
and are linked to each other through a great interwoven ecosystem.
It is a mysterious link. The present generation must not be allowed
to use up the world's resources and by its egoism and stupidity
destroy living beings created by God. Human beings must take a new
look at our relation to the environment and make a new start.
Each of us must correct our pride and comprehend the God-given balance
of nature. We must recognize what it is that sustains us and know
our limits. We need nature in order to live, to eat and to love.
In 1990, Pope John Paul II, saying that God expects humanity to
care for the earth, affirmed "that there is an order in the
universe which must be respected, and that the human person, endowed
with the capability of choosing freely, has a grave responsibility
to preserve this order for the well-being of future generations.
I wish to repeat that the ecological crisis is a moral issue."55
Act locally
89. Nowadays the life style of people in developed countries
is being called into question. In light of that, industries in our
country should reconsider their mass production, large-scale consumption
and rampant waste, and emphasize energy saving, resource saving,
recycling and low waste production in the development of new products.
We want them to grapple with the development of technologies to
deal with all aspects of industry from manufacturing processes through
disposal.
We, too, should stop such wasteful practices as excessive air conditioning
and excessive packaging. When we buy a product, we should ask ourselves
if it is really necessary, if it is made from recycled materials
and how much electrical power it consumes. Each one of us should
do what we can to reduce the burden on the environment. The activities
of NGOs (non-government organizations) that work for the environment
are increasingly important.
God cares even for the flowers of the field, dressing each with
beauty and loving it. To sense each creature singing the hymn of
its existence is to live joyfully in God's love and hope. When we
become aware of the abundant richness of other creatures' existence,
our eyes are opened to an intuitive sense of God's own existence.
The human task is not to destroy the environment, but to cooperate
with God in creating it. It is important that we continue to hope
as we correct problems and engage in a calm dialogue in search of
solutions.
Some Final Reflections
A starting point
90. This marks the first time we bishops of Japan have prepared
a message not only for Catholics, but for all of Japanese society.
Those who read it may find points that dissatisfy them and about
which they have complaints. "I wanted this matter handled too."
"The bishops' understanding of the facts is shallow."
"They don't understand our viewpoint and situation." "The
bishops should have made the position and doctrine of the Catholic
Church more clear." In fact, we often heard such comments as
we worked on this message.
We knew from the start that there were other and perhaps more crucial
topics to deal with. However, we decided that even with its imperfections
we should send a message to the world as it enters a new century,
a new millennium. We are convinced that our vocation as bishops
requires us to issue a call for people to understand a human posture
toward life based on the light of God.
In 1971, Pope Paul VI made the following declaration regarding social
problems. "In the face of such widely varying situations, it
is not our ambition or mission to utter a unified message or offer
a solution with universal validity. Christian communities must objectively
analyze the situation proper to their own country to shed on it
the light of the Gospel and draw principles of reflection, norms
of judgement and directives for action from the social teaching
of the Church. ... With the help of the Holy Spirit, in communion
with the bishops, and in dialogue with other Christians and men
of good will, Christian communities must discern what are the changes
to be promoted."56
We have the same hope today that Pope Paul had then. We hope that
those of you who read this message will not take it to be the final
word of the Church on these matters. Rather, we hope you discuss
it and use it as a starting point in building a society that values
life.
Christ's view
91. As we prepared this message, we shared a common understanding
of the people who live in modern Japanese society and the problems
they encounter in life. Those problems are rooted in each individual's
way of life, values and view of humanity. Materialism, the pursuit
of pleasure, the worldliness that thinks only the concerns of this
world matter, and the individualistic pursuit only of one's own
comfort make for unhappiness and bring society to a dead end. From
this point of view we wanted first of all to show the way of life
which Christ taught and we hoped to inspire others with the life
of Christ. That is why we opened this message with "The Message
of Scripture."
The source and support of this message is indeed Jesus Christ. In
short, our faith is grounded in the life of Christ who loved God,
loved people, was crucified, died, was buried and rose from the
dead to save our lives from edge of danger and lead us to everlasting
life. Christ looks after and suffers with those who are abused and
suffer in our society. Following his example, we too look with deep
affection upon those who suffer and hope that by our efforts our
society will improve.
This message might not have spread sufficient light on solutions
to the complex problems people face. We hope, however, that you
will understand our desire to present Christ as truly "the
way, the truth and the life" (John 14:6). We are convinced
that even in the midst of suffering Christ who lived the loving
will of God will lead humanity in the way of joy.
Our responsibility
92. We sincerely hope that all who read this message, whether
Catholic believers or not, will find light in it and by that light
make responsible choices for the way they live. It is an undeniable
fact of life that each of us must assume responsibility for his
or her own life.
This message is different from other documents we have issued that
stressed the teachings of the Church. We intentionally avoided categorical
statements like, "The Church teaches that..." This is
the reason we chose to speak in the form of a "message"
to society. We hope that you will listen to our appeal, heed your
conscience and take responsibility for how you live your life.
We ask our fellow Catholics to deepen their understanding of the
ethics and teachings of the Church in the light of this message
and to take responsibility for making decisions regarding their
own lives. Furthermore, we ask all pastors to understand the spirit
of this message and support and encourage believers in putting Church
doctrine into practice.
With love rather than judgment
93. One more thing we shared in preparing this message was
the desire to show God's loving mercy. We recognize that in the
past Church teaching was understood inflexibly and those who were
unable to follow it and their families were judged and discriminated
against. While appealing to high ideals, this time we tried to bring
God's kindness into our message, taking on the heart of Christ who
said, "I have come to call not the righteous but sinners"
(Matthew 9:13) and, "It is not the will of your Father in heaven
that one of these little ones should be lost" (Matthew 8:14)
We do not intend to condone sin, rather we want to be a good friend
to those who in the here and now complexities of life have lost
the light and are discouraged. We sincerely want to help them find
renewal in God's blessings and start anew.
Love and forgiveness are light and power. True humanity shines forth
when, embraced by love, it experiences comforting forgiveness in
the midst of the darkness of sin. Love and forgiveness are indispensable
for a sinner to find salvation.
We will be happy if this message helps build a society in which
those who are discouraged by their weakness and those who live in
lonely darkness find warm understanding, comfort and encouragement.
A new century
94. Finally, as we enter a new century, we declare that the
Catholic Church gives a clear "No!" to all evil that undermines
or neglects human life and we express our commitment to actively
join the struggle to overcome each person's difficult circumstances,
solve our problems and build a society of truth, justice and love.
May God's light and blessings be poured out upon us all.
Catholic Bishops' Conference of Japan
January 1, 2001
Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God
1. In the original text the phrase is eyzer kinegdo, in which
eyzer means someone who gives support and aid. It is someone with
resources, ability, talent and experience who puts them at the service
of others. This includes parents, teachers, doctors, those who care
for the elderly, etc. As technology and specialization increase,
this kind of mutual assistance is more necessary than ever before.
However, we are not fulfilled merely through help with work. We
have a deep hunger for encounter. It is here that the word kinegdo
("suitable") becomes important. A suitable helper is one
who "stands together with another, face-to-face." A suitable
helper is one who transcends differences of ability, social position
or gender to meet and help another. When we find someone who can
heal our heart's wounds and give us peace we know the joy of having
found a "suitable helper."
2. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Vital Statistics Division,
Population Trends, 1998.
3. Ibid.
4. A survey among parents of children up to age 15 showed that 48.7%
of Japanese feel that having children makes no difference in a decision
about divorce. (Prime Minister's Office, Management and Coordination
Agency, Youth Affairs Administration, International Survey on the
Child and Family, 1995.)
5. Mother Teresa, Words to Love by... (Notre Dame: Ave Maria
Press, 1983), p. 60.
6. In the media such terms as Japayuki-san and "prostitution
tour" were widely used to describe this phenomenon.
7. "God did not create man as a solitary. ... [Man and woman's]
companionship produces the primary form of interpersonal communion.
For by his innermost nature man is a social being, and unless he
relates himself to others he can neither live nor develop his potential."
Vatican II, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World
(Gaudium et spes), 12.
8. Ibid., 49.
9. Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction on Respect
for Human Life in Its Origin and on The Dignity of Procreation:
Replies to Certain Questions of The Day (Donum vitae) (February
22, 1987), 2,1; Encyclical of Pope Paul VI on The Regulation of
Birth (Humanae Vitae) (July 25, 1968), 8; Encyclical of Pope
John Paul II on The Gospel of Life (Evangelium vitae) (March
25, 1995).
10. Evangelium vitae, 13.
11. Humanae vitae, 18, Evangelium vitae, 97.
12. Pontifical Council for the Family, Charter of the Rights of
the Family (Charta iurium familiae) (October 22, 1983); Donum
vitae, Introduction, 3.
13. Gaudium et spes, 49.
14. For example, the Billings Method and other systems that rely
upon basal temperature and other readings.
15. Humanae vitae, 16.
16. Humanae vitae, 18; Evangelium vitae, 91.
17. On the other hand, over the past few years cases of child abuse
reported to the authorities have multiplied. Staff at nursery schools
are being asked to look out for signs of abuse. We see this violence
as a cry for help from mothers overwhelmed by the stress of raising
a child without support from their husbands and with no one to turn
to for advice.
18. According to a survey published by the Management and Coordination
Agency of the Prime Minister's office in 1998, in a five-year period
the number of people with this attitude had risen 14 points to 42.6%.
Along with this, there was an increase in the number of small families.
The acceleration of this tendency is causing difficulties in relations
between parents and children. In order to maintain the present population,
the reproductive rate (the average number of children born per woman)
must be 2.08. However, in fact the 1998 rate was only 1.38.
19. Among reasons given for remaining single are frequently such
comments as "I haven't met anyone who suits me," "I
don't feel the need," "I don't want to give up my freedom
and comfort" and "I want to enjoy my hobbies and amusements."
(Population Problems Research Institute, 1997) In the same report,
reasons wives give for wanting to keep the number of their children
low frequently include "Raising a child generally costs a lot
of money," "I don't like giving birth at a late age"
and "I can't handle the burdens of a child's psychological
and physical care."
20. The Yomiuri Shimbun (Dec. 12, 1996) reported a survey taken
among students at nine middle schools in Tokyo's Nerima Ward. In
response to the question, "Are you of any use to your school
or friends?" 51.5% said no. The question, "Do you expect
to be of any use to society when you grow up?" elicited negative
responses from 47%. To the question, "Do you like yourself?"
those who replied "No" or "I don't think so"
totaled 47.9%.
21. A 1996 survey of youth by the prime minister's office showed
that when young people think about life, 80% of them are influenced
by television, friends and magazines. No more than 10% are influenced
by their families.
22. cf. Pontifical Council for the Laity, The Dignity of Older
People and Their Mission in the Church and the World (October
1, 1998), Chapter 1: "Meaning and Value of Old Age."
23. Hermann Heuvers, Jinsei no aki ni (In the Autumn of Life),
(Tokyo: Shunjusha, 1973), p. 308.
24. For example, Asahi Shimbun, May 7, 1998.
25. "In four hospitals surveyed, most of the 100 pregnant women
who received a diagnosis of chromosomal aberration chose abortions."
(Asahi Shimbun, April 2, 1998)
26. So far, discrimination and prejudice have arisen from ignorance
and indifference. But through sympathetic encounters with the disabled
people are coming to see that those with handicaps can make a contribution
to society. In this, attitudes about "economic efficiency"
and "emphasis on productivity" remain. The severely handicapped
who cannot work have been considered "social baggage."
However, by getting to know disabled persons as friends who have
the same desires and rights, a sense of "living with"
the disabled has taken root among people. Increasingly, the viewpoint
that "disability is uniqueness" is spreading among the
disabled and those who have a deep understanding of them. (cf. Prime
Minister's 1995 white paper on the disabled)
27. Among parents of children with disabilities we often hear, "I
can't die before my child." When a daughter is born to someone
with a disability the new parent is sometimes told, "It's a
good thing it's a girl; she can take care of you." The general
attitude that it is common sense to expect families to care for
the disabled continues to puts a heavy burden on parents and families.
28. Document of the Holy See for the International Year of Disabled
Persons, L'Osservatore Romano, March 23, 1981.
29. The concept "barrier free" includes four aspects:
(1) dismantling physical barriers on streets and in buildings, etc.
that hinder access by the disabled; (2) overcoming barriers in licencing
and school entrance; (3) breaking information barriers that keep
the visually and aurally handicapped from access to culture and
information; (4) removing attitudinal barriers in each of us toward
the disabled.
In relation to these four aspects, when disabled persons say, "I
am discriminated against" or "I'm not properly dealt with,"
it is in response to barriers in our hearts. If we can break down
those attitudinal barriers, the various barriers in society will
crumble naturally and ours will become a world where the disabled
can live with dignity.
30. "The number of suicides in Japan last year came to a record-high
33,048, up 0.6% from the previous record high marked in 1998, the
National Police Agency (NPA) said in a report released Thursday.
"One in five suicides last year was due to debts or job losses,
up 11.6% from 1998, the NPA said.
"The report said 75% of those who killed themselves were aged
40 or older.
"Of those who took their own lives in 1999, 23,512 were men
and 9,536 were women, according to the report.
"The number of male suicides, accounting for 71.1% of the total,
was up 2.2% from the previous year, while female suicides were down
3.2%.
Health problems caused 16,330 people to kill themselves, which accounted
for 49.4% of the total, the report said. The figure was down 2.6%
from 1998.
"It also said 6,758 people, or 20.4%, committed suicide due
to poor quality of life and restructuring caused by Japan's long
recession.
"By age, 11,123 were 60 or older, followed by 8,288 in their
50s and 5,363 in their 40s, the NPA said.
"Suicides among those aged 19 or under came to 674, down 6.4%
from a year earlier." (Kyodo, August 17, 2000)
31. According to the dictionaries, suicide is "To end one's
own life." (Nihongo Dai Jiten, Kodansha), "To end
one's life by oneself" (Shinmeikai Kokugo Jiten, Sanseido).
An example of the sort of technical definition given in specialist
writings is this by Kato Masaaki (Jisatsu (Suicide), Misuzu
Shobo, 1954): "When a person with a certain degree of maturity
acts in accord with his/her own will with the intention of ending
one's own life, that is suicide." Takahashi Yoshitomo (Jisatsu
no kiken (The Danger of Suicide), Kongo Shuppan, 1992) says
the difficulty in defining suicide comes from deciding whether two
conditions are involved: "Is it clear that the act is self-willed?"
and "Can the person predict the results of his or her suicidal
action?" Clinical specialists are, in fact, more concerned
with suicide prevention than with the niceties of philosophic definitions,
and having some general concept of suicide is useful in such research.
32. cf. John Paul II, Evangelium vitae, 66.
33. In the 1991 "Tokai University Euthanasia Case," an
attending physician killed a terminally ill cancer patient by injecting
potassium chloride at the request of the patient's family who could
no longer bear to watch the suffering. In the Kyoto "Keihoku
Hospital Case" in 1999, the physician in charge, a friend of
the patient who could no longer bear to watch the patient's suffering,
gave muscle relaxants that caused the patient's death.
34. The elements of hospice care are (1) the alleviation of pain,
(2) the rejection of excessive medical intervention, (3) human caring
and (4) spiritual and religious support.
35. cf. John Paul II, Evangelium vitae, 64-65.
36. cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Declaration
on Euthanasia (Iura et bona) (May 5, 1980)
37. cf. John Paul II, Evangelium vitae, 65.
38. In a February 27, 1999 address to the Pontifical Academy of
Sciences Pope John Paul II made the following points:
-modern society hides the reality of death, and in this there is
the danger of abandoning the elderly;
- suicide and euthanasia are mistakenly accepted as freedom of choice;
- the present system of medical facilities does not provide truly
human care;
- efficiency, results and practicality are seen from the point of
view of control;
- it is essential to combat movements for legalization of euthanasia
and assisted suicide;
- the Church does not put absolute value on life in this world (Evangelium
vitae, 47), but suicide and euthanasia cannot be seen as giving
proper respect for human dignity (idem, 64-66);
- for the same reason, the Church opposes aggressive treatment;
- the Church recommends that truly human care be given in terms
of pain relief and institutional and home care;
- based upon Christian love and human solidarity, the Church hopes
for a movement in opposition to legalized euthanasia and assisted
suicide, and for reform in social and Church systems of care for
the dying;
- in short, the Church opposes the following: (a) inhuman medical
treatment, (b) indifference toward the elderly and suffering, (c)
euthanasia. It supports the following: (a) humanized care, (b) alleviation
of pain, (c) social solidarity and the reform of the health care
system.
39. John Paul II, Evangelium vitae, 65.
40. The Catholic Bishops' Conference of Spain on September 25, 1990
issued the results of discussions regarding Christian attitudes
toward illness and death. They suggested that Christians write a
"living will" similar to the example that follows. We
provide it as a reference.
"To my family, doctor and lawyer,
"In the event that I am no longer able to declare my preferences
regarding my medical treatment, please accept this statement as
a declaration of my intentions. I am fully conscious of and responsible
for what I am asking and I want this statement to be accepted as
my will.
"Life in this world is a gift and blessing from God; however,
I do not think it has absolute value. Death cannot be avoided, and
I know that it will be the end of my existence in this world. But,
seen with the eyes of faith, death opens the way to eternal life
with God.
"Therefore, I (N.) request the following:
"1. if my condition is terminal and there is no possibility
of recovery, do not use excessive or aggressive treatments to prolong
my life;
"2. do not commit active euthanasia;
"3. do not use medical methods merely to postpone my death;
"4. use appropriate pain killers to ease my pain.
"Please help me to accept death as a Christian and as a human
being. I want to approach this final event of my life in peace,
with the support of those I love and the comfort of faith.
"I sign this will after full consideration. I ask that those
responsible for my care respect my intentions. I understand that
I am placing a difficult and serious responsibility upon others.
For that reason, so that responsibility may be shared and no one
need feel total responsibility I have written and signed this will."
41. In Japan from the 8th century to the beginning of the 12th century
even when sentence of death was given, it was usually commuted to
banishment or imprisonment. After the rise of military power, public
executions came to be considered natural.
42. A 1999 survey by the prime minister's office showed that 79.3%
approved of the death penalty, an increase of 5.5% over the 1994
figure of 73.8%. Those favoring abolition of the death penalty were
8.8%
However, one specialist points out the possibility of a decrease
in the approval rating if a choice "introducing life imprisonment
in place of the death penalty" were added to three choices
of "abolition," "approval" and "no opinion."
(Professor Kikuta Koichi, Meiji University School of Law. Mainichi
Shimbun, November 28, 1999).
43. cf. Shikei no Genzai (Nihon Hyoron Sha, 1990, 207 pages)
for Japanese translations of relevant texts. In the concrete case
of Nigeria, there was no correlation between the death penalty and
the crime rate. In Canada, the murder rate per 10,000 in the year
preceding the abolition of the death penalty (1975) reached a peak
of 3.09. In 1983 the rate had declined to 2.74 and by 1986 had reached
the lowest rate in 15 years. cf. Iwai Makoto, Shikei no Nani
ga Mondai ka - Nihon to Sekai no Shikei no Genjo (Shinkyo Shuppansha,
1994).
44. Archbishop Charles Chaput of Denver, USA, in the June 11, 1995
edition of the Denver Catholic Register commented on the death penalty
given in the case of the Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people.
"Killing the guilty is still wrong. It does not honor the dead.
It does not ennoble the living. And while it may satisfy society's
anger for awhile, it cannot even release the murder victim's loved
ones from their sorrow, because only forgiveness can do that."
45. "If bloodless means are sufficient to defend human lives
against an aggressor and to protect public order and the safety
of persons, public authority should limit itself to such means,
because they better correspond to the concrete conditions of the
common good and are more in conformity to the dignity of the human
person" (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2267 cf. 2266).
See also John Paul II, Evangelium vitae, 27, 57; 1998 Christmas
message; speeches in Mexico (January 25, 1999) and St. Louis (January
27, 1999).
46. "I therefore renew my appeal to all leaders to reach an
international consensus on the abolition of the death penalty, since
'cases in which the execution of the offender is an absolute necessity
are very rare, if not practically non-existent.'" (December
12, 1999, Angelus)
47. In the United States there was a case of a woman six months
pregnant who 50 days after being declared brain dead gave birth
to a daughter (Yomiuri Shimbun, July 31, 1986, evening edition).
The Mainichi Shimbun, June 20, 1992 reported on a case announced
June 19, 1992 at a conference on brain death and neurological rehabilitation.
A pregnant woman was declared brain dead following a hemorrhage
gave birth to a daughter 35 days later in early November 1991. On
January 23,1992, Prime Minister Miyazawa's office issued a report
on brain death and related issues that pointed out cases in both
the United States and Japan where women who had been declared brain
dead had given birth (Asahi Shimbun, January 23, 1992).
48. cf. Pope John Paul II, Evangelium vitae, 15, 86. See
also the pope's greeting to the participants at the Pontifical Academy
of Science, Congress on Determining the Moment of Death, December
14, 1989.
49. Pope Pius XII, greeting to representatives of the Italian corneal
donors' society (May 13, 1956): "It is not contrary to reverence
toward the corpse to take a part of it." He further set such
conditions as "the confirmation of death," "consideration
for the bereaved," "reverence in the handling the corpse,"
etc.
50. cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Declaration
on Procured Abortion, (November 18, 1974). See also Pope John Paul
II, Evangelium vitae, 60, where he emphasizes that life should be
respected from its inception.
51. Address to participants in week of study on "Biological
Experimentation" of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, October
25, 1982.
52. Le Conseil permanent des eveques de France, Essor de la genetique
et dignite humaine, Bayard Editions/Centurion/Les Editions du Cerf,
Paris, 1998.
53. The University of Pennsylvania's Institute for Human Gene Therapy
in the United States on May 24, 2000 halted all gene research on
human beings because of deaths among research subjects in the previous
year. (Asahi Shimbun, May 25, 2000, evening edition).
54. Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (Penguin edition) p. 22.
55. Pope John Paul II, World Day of Peace Message, 1990, "Peace
with God the Creator, Peace with All of Creation," 15.
56. Pope Paul VI, Octogesima adveniens (May 14, 1971), 4.
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