Vatican
City, 20 September 2013 (VIS) – Today the Pope met with members of
the International Federation of Catholic Medical Associations and
Catholic gynaecologists, and spoke of the current paradoxical
situation of the medical profession. “On the one hand we see
progress in the field of medicine, thanks to the work of scientists
who passionately and unreservedly dedicate themselves to the search
for new cures. On the other hand, however, we also encounter the risk
that doctors lose sight of their identity in the service of life”.
He referred to the Encyclical Caritas in Veritate to explain that
this paradoxical situation is seen also in the fact that, “while
new rights are attributed to or indeed almost presumed by the
individual, life is not always protected as the primary value and the
primordial right of every human being. The ultimate aim of medicine
remains the defence and promotion of life”. Faced with this
contradictory situation, the Pope renewed the Church's appeal to the
conscience of all healthcare professionals and volunteers, especially
gynaecologists. “Yours is a singular vocation and mission, which
necessitates study, conscience and humanity”, he said.
Again,
Francis spoke of the “throwaway culture” that leads to the
elimination of human beings, especially those who are physically and
socially weakest. “Our response to this mentality is a 'yes' to
life, decisive and without hesitation. 'The first right of the human
person is his life. He has other goods and some are precious, but
this one is fundamental – the condition for all the others'”.
Reiterating
that in recent times, human life in its entirety has become a
priority for the Magisterium of the Church, the Pope emphasised that
“goods have a price and can be sold, but people have dignity, they
are worth more than goods and have no price”.
Francis
asked those present to “bear witness to and disseminate this
'culture of life' … remind all, through actions and words, that in
all its phases and at any age, life is always sacred and always of
quality. And not as a matter of faith, but of reason and science!
There is no human life more sacred than another, just as there exists
no human life qualitatively more meaningful than another”.
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