Archbishop Carrasco said, “The reaction to the news of becoming a mother should return to being what it has always been, a reaction of joy” that leads us to say “congratulations.” He added that the response to a mother should not be “'I'm so sorry,' like we say to people who get sick.”
He recalled that it was Blessed John Paul II who was inspired 25 years ago to create the Pontifical Academy, which is dedicated to the defense of human life.
“He was the first to realize that the Church needed an
academy devoted to the issues of life such as biomedicine or
biotechnology,” the archbishop added.
Archbishop Carrasco said the dicastery’s focus this year has been on three areas: post-abortion trauma, umbilical cord banks and treatments for infertility.
Archbishop Carrasco said the dicastery’s focus this year has been on three areas: post-abortion trauma, umbilical cord banks and treatments for infertility.
Regarding
post-abortion trauma, he said it is necessary that the condition be
“defined as well as whether or not there is a cure.”
He also discussed the new ethical problems surrounding umbilical cord banks “of an economic nature,” because “there is a new market in which there is supply and demand.” This factor is where ethical problems come into play, the archbishop said.
Likewise, he explained that the in vitro fertilization treatments imply “very serious moral problems because a child is created in the laboratory and can easily become an object of manipulation.” The process is further complicated by the selection and destruction of multiple embryos, he added.
Archbishop Carrasco also noted that the defense of human life should also include helping the elderly.
He also discussed the new ethical problems surrounding umbilical cord banks “of an economic nature,” because “there is a new market in which there is supply and demand.” This factor is where ethical problems come into play, the archbishop said.
Likewise, he explained that the in vitro fertilization treatments imply “very serious moral problems because a child is created in the laboratory and can easily become an object of manipulation.” The process is further complicated by the selection and destruction of multiple embryos, he added.
Archbishop Carrasco also noted that the defense of human life should also include helping the elderly.
We must recall “they are not people who have become useless to society and have nothing left to say,” the archbishop added.