At first glance, the bizarre world of cryonics might appear to raise
troubling theological questions.
If, for example, a body could somehow
be revived five hundred years hence, where would the soul have been
during the interim?
Fortunately, theology is an applied science so
meaningful pronouncements are only required when a substantive moral
dilemma or religious quandary exists.
The scientific consensus is that
any body frozen using current technology has no chance of being revived
in the future.
Too much damage will have been done.
To be blunt, those bodies in the shiny facilities are dead and the
souls have moved on to new pastures.
If cryonics makes staggering and
unanticipated advances then we will have to revisit this issue, but
isn’t it much more likely that, well ahead of such a moment (which may
never arrive), we will have located cures for the diseases that force
many people into cryogenic decisions in the first place?
The present situation does call for some theological intervention,
however.
If cryonic procedures were to begin when a person was in the
process of dying rather than after death then medical ethics must come
to the fore.
It seems reasonable to assume that a negative adjudication
could be extrapolated from Church teaching on preserving life and
respecting its potential and dignity in all circumstances.
A broader cultural question must also be addressed.
I don’t believe
that everyone who considers cryonic solutions is seeking immortality.
They just want to prolong life or live without terrible pain or
suffering.
Blameless, certainly, was the disease-ravaged and desperate
fourteen-year-old girl with such modest aspirations.
Those who do want
to live forever on the third rock from the sun are in a different,
deluded category, however, and their refusal to accept the inevitable
robs them of the chance to explore the possibility of another kind of
eternity.