Bio-Ethics
by
The Rev'd Dr. Stanley Harakas
|
For
the Health of Body and Soul:
An Eastern Orthodox Introduction to Bioethics
INTRODUCTION
Everyone living today is sensitive to the fact that medical
science is making enormous advances. Not only are illnesses
being treated with remarkable computerized diagnostic machines,
exotic technologies, and new drug therapies, but average people
are now faced with an amazing array of alternatives each time
a medically related problem arises.
In
ages past, medicine was always considered in the Church as an
honorable profession. Some of the most beloved figures in the
Orthodox Christian tradition combined faith in God and the exercise
of a healing ministry. The Evangelist Luke was a physician.
His Gospel and Book of the Acts of the Apostles seem to have
an unusually large number of medical terms and references to
medical situations. Saints such as Cosmas and Damian, the two
brother physicians, and St. Panteleimon are examples of widely
venerated saint-physicians of the Orthodox Church. During the
Byzantine period of the history of the Orthodox Church, there
were a number of priest-physicians as well who combined the
sacred duties of the Altar with the healing ministrations of
the physician (Constantelos, 1975). And this was not in any
way an inappropriate combination. For the life of our Savior,
Jesus Christ, was also dedicated to a healing ministry. The
four Gospels repeatedly record Christ's concern with the physical
well-being of the people. Frequently, stories are related of
persons who sought out Jesus to be healed of illnesses.
Cooperation
of Man with God
As
a consequence, the Church has always recognized two dimensions
to the healing process. On the one hand is the recognition that
our whole life is in the hands of God. We are - body and soul
- his creatures, and it is to Him that we turn in moments of
illness, both physical and emotional. He is, in the first and
most fundamental sense, "the healer of soul and body,"
as it says in the Orthodox priest's 'Prayer Book.' In the Orthodox
Church, we not only pray for the healing of sickness through
priestly "Prayers for the Sick," but the Church has
always offered the healing of God to the faithful through the
sacrament of Anointing, or Unction. Unlike other Churches, our
Orthodox understanding of this 'sacrament of prayer - oil' has
always taken the scriptural words at face value and with seriousness.
"Is
there any one among you suffering? Let him pray ... Is any among
you sick? Let him call for the presbyters of the Church, and
let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of
the Lord; and the prayer of faith will save the sick man, and
the Lord will raise him up; and if he has committed sins, he
will be forgiven" (James 4.13 - 15).
But
to emphasize the healing power of God does not mean that human
efforts at healing are down-graded. On the contrary, medical
treatment is also seen as a human cooperation with God's healing
purposes and goals. In fact, all of Orthodox teaching recognizes
a place for human effort, striving and cooperating with God's
will. Technically known as 'synergy,' this belief requires the
exercise of human talents and abilities for salvation, for spiritual
growth, for moral behavior, for achievement of human potential
as well as for the fulfillment of God's will in all things related
to our community and social life. So, in principle, the use
of healing, medicines, therapeutic diet practices, even surgical
operations have generally been understood throughout history
in the Church as appropriate, fitting and desirable ways of
cooperating with God in the healing of human illnesses.
New
Methods - New Choices - New Problems
But
something has been happening in medicine recently which has
created problems for this longstanding spirit of cooperation.
The common assumptions are no longer as firm as they once were.
In part, this is due to the fact that the advances in biological
knowledge have present and potential applications which not
only heal existing illnesses, but also manipulate and change
the natural processes of the human body and mind. The birth
control pill and mind-influencing drugs are examples. These
new techniques create some questions for the Church. It is one
thing to use medical procedures to restore the patient to normal
functioning. It is another to alter, on an ongoing basis, the
physiology and the psychology of the patient through continued
medical intervention. Yet, even here, there has been very little
objection expressed by the Church. We have seen the benefits
to individual persons and have thanked God for them, by and
large.
But
these developments have continued and now seem to have crossed
a line which no longer permits us to accept any and every thing
which comes out of the laboratory with the assumption that all
new discoveries are good. This new attitude is not limited to
questions of medical ethics. It is to be found in contemporary
attitudes regarding all scientific and technological developments.
We previously accepted these developments in the name of 'progress'
as remarkable examples of the good which man can achieve. But
since the atomic bombs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, we are discovering
more and more that our 'progress' always carries a price tag.
Every step of scientific and technical progress effects our
lives in both good and bad ways. We are learning, for instance,
to count the cost of progress in environmental terms, in health
terms, in its effect on the moral and spiritual quality of human
living.
Further,
our old belief in the goodness of the application of all our
scientific knowledge has been changed. In the past, all technological
development was 'good.' Now, more and more people have doubts.
Because we are able, technically, to do something, doesn't mean
automatically and necessarily that we should do it. In medicine,
for instance, the prospect of genetic manipulation, of genetic
experimentation, arising from the discovery of the genetic code
in DNA, has caused reputable scientists to project potential
harms to mankind and to urge that this experimentation with
the human chromosomal heritage be banned.
Whatever
the case, we are all aware of the fact that in the area of medicine,
numerous choices about medical procedures face all of us as
we live out our lives. Congenital illnesses can now be determined
to exist while the baby is still in the mother's womb. The law
permits abortions. Thus, the alternatives confront the parents
- abort or not? Here is a new kind of question which medical
technology has only recently made possible. Or, take another
example. A relative asks you to donate a kidney since kidney
transplants are now possible. Look at the host of questions!
Is it right in the first place to transplant an organ from one
person to another? Do we have the right to give up an organ
needed by our own bodies? Is there a duty to give an organ to
a spouse or child? To a stranger? Can we rightly refuse to give
an organ for transplantation? Should we take organs from the
dead? Is it right to have organ banks? Who should get the organs
- only those who can afford to pay? None of these questions
and a host of similar questions related to every new medical
advance have self-evident answers. And none of them can be answered
on exclusively scientific and technological grounds. They involve
profound questions of right and wrong, good and evil, virtue
and sin, moral and spiritual values.
A
New Field of Study: Bioethics
As
a result, a new field of study has come into existence. Known
as 'bioethics,' it deals with the questions of right and wrong
as they effect life issues. Like everything new, it has roots
in the past. For example, Orthodox Christian ethical teaching
has always dealt with life issues. The Bible, the writings of
the Holy Fathers of the Church, Church canon law, even worship
and sacramental life have ethical implications for life issues.
Only
recently, however, have secular and religious ethicists sought
to address these issues in a coherent and organized way, with
special reference to the emerging problems of advancing medical
technological capabilities. This discipline of bioethics recognizes
that answers cannot be given without reference to principles
and values which do not come out of science. Thus, some bioethicists
seek 'common-denominator' values; others choose a certain philosophical
stance to base their thinking and teaching; others base their
thinking and guidance on religious traditions.
An
"Encyclopedia of Bioethics"
In
order to gather together what is known about this area of human
concern, it was decided in the early seventies to publish an
inter- disciplinary, intercultural and internationally-based
encyclopedia. The aim of this encyclopedia was to present a
comprehensive "state-of-the-discipline" reference
work. The Editor-in-Chief, Dr. Warren T. Reich of Georgetown
University, undertook the task with the assistance of a distinguished
Editorial Advisory Board which included among its members, Professor
Panagiotes Ch. Demetropoulos, Professor of Ethics and Christian
Sociology, Emeritus, at the School of Theology of the University
of Thessalonike, Greece. Numerous scholars of varied disciplines-medical,
legal, historical, scientific, religious, and theological, as
well as morals and ethics were invited to contribute. The articles,
arranged alphabetically, cover a range of subject matter which
makes the encyclopedia a self-contained resource for bioethics.
The scope of topics is dealt with on six levels:
concrete
and legal problems,
basic concepts and principles which underlie bioethical questions,
ethical theories,
religious traditions,
historical perspectives, and
related disciplines which bear upon bioethics.
'Eastern Orthodoxy' in the Encyclopedia of Bioethics
Two
major problems faced the author of the article on the 'Eastern
Orthodox Church' in the Encyclopedia of Bioethics. The first
was that there was no comprehensive literature from an Orthodoxperspective
on the subject. What had been written was spotty and of uneven
quality. The traditional ethics handbooks did provide some guidance,
but the very newness of some of the problems precluded any absolutely
clear tradition for many of the questions. This was related
to the second problem. Orthodox Christianity, as its name implies,
not only sees itself and understands itself to be the true Church
of Christ, but it has sought - in its own particular way and
style - to serve as the spiritual and moral guide for her people
and by extension to speak to all of mankind regarding the proper
and appropriate behavior of persons growing in the image of
God. The very existence of Orthodoxy implies that there must
be a direction and guidance on these topics for the people of
God. Consequently, that direction cannot be arbitrary and unstudied.
It must reflect the commonly accepted faith of the Church and
be rooted in the fundamental affirmations of Orthodox doctrine,
reflecting God's revelation to His Church. Only in this sense
can Orthodox Christian ethical reflection come to some conclusions
about these new issues and problems related to bioethics.
In
the pages which follow, you will read the first efforts at providing
a comprehensive Orthodox ethical teaching on bioethical questions:
the article on Eastern Orthodoxy in the Encyclopedia of Bioethics.
It is offered to the Church, on the one hand, as the distillation
of years of reflection and teaching at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox
School of Theology in Brookline, Massachusetts, on these subjects
with the conviction that the positions taken do, in fact, represent
genuinely Orthodox teaching on the issues dealt with. On the
other hand, no one theologian may speak for the whole Church.
The Church as a whole, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit,
defines its teaching, both positively and negatively. So this
encyclopedia article should be seen as a studied effort to present
to the Church, for its pastoral guidance, ethical direction
in the area of bioethics. Where it speaks in harmony with the
tradition of faith, let it be adopted, taught and followed.
In those places where it may deviate from the rule of faith,
let the consciousness of the Church correct and revise it. In
any case, may it serve to initiate informed intra-Orthodox reflection,
discussion and decision. A first step would be for all Orthodox
Church libraries to purchase the Encyclopedia of Bioethics so
as to make this treasure-house of information readily available
to both clergy and laity alike. The bibliographical references
are: Warren T. Reich, Editor in Chief, Encyclopedia of Bioethics.
New York: The Free Press, A Division of Macmillan Publishing
Co., Inc., 1978.
It
is the prayer of the author that the pages which follow will
prove to be of some value in the development of the ethical
sensitivity and reflection of the people of God in reference
to bioethical issues, as well as more growth to a conformity
of God's people to the image of God in them.
EASTERN
ORTHODOX ETHICS
Eastern
Orthodox Christian ethics bases its ethical judgments on Holy
Scripture and Holy Tradition. Holy Tradition consists of the
"mind of the Church" and is discerned in the decisions
of ecumenical and local councils, the writings of the Fathers
of the Church, canon law, and the penitentials (guides for the
administration of the sacrament of Penance).
Issues
not directly treated in the ancient sources are dealt with by
modem Orthodox ethicists by seeking to express ethical judgments
that are in harmony with the "mind of the Church."
Thus, their writings have a certain provisional character and
are always subject to episcopal, synodical, or general ecclesial
critique. There are occasionally differences of substance in
the writings of modem Orthodox Christian ethicists. By and large,
however, responsible Orthodox ethicists maintain a common ethical
stance. Modem issues in bioethics often require of ethicists
that they find parallels in the tradition and, with the help
of reason, deduce new ethical applications from established
doctrinal, historical, and pastoral positions.
Basic
doctrine and ethical affirmations
The
Eastern Christian doctrinal position tends to be cautious in
defining positively the central affirmations of its faith. It
prefers the via negativa, or "apophatic" method (i.e.,
saying what is not the case). In ethics, a practice may be proscribed
as not in harmony with the ethos of the faith, but often no
positive solution is offered other than the need for patience
and acceptance of the situation.
Nevertheless,
Eastern Orthodox Christianity does avail itself of positive
or "kataphatic" doctrinal and ethical statements.
These are taken seriously when they are normative in character,
but not in a rigid, legalistic, or absolute fashion. All positive
statements regarding divine revelation - the Tradition - are
seen as limited and subject to mystery as a necessary dimension
of all human understandings of the divine. In canon law and
in ethics this has led to the practice of "economia,"
which authorizes exceptions to the rule without considering
the exception a precedent or abrogating the rule. In most cases
the justification for the application of "economia"
is the avoidance of greater harm in the case of the strict application
of the rule (Kotsonis). Several key doctrinal teachings have
immediate ethical application with specific reference to bioethical
issues.
Theological
anthropology.
The
humanum of our existence is both a given and a potential. Some
of the patristic authorities distinguish between the creation
of human beings in the "image" of God, and in his
"likeness." "Image" is the donatum of intellect,
emotion, ethical judgment, and self-determination. In fallen
humanity these remain part of human nature, albeit darkened,
wounded, and weakened. The "likeness" is the human
potential to become like God, to achieve an ever expanding,
never completed perfection. This fulfillment of our humanity
is traditionally referred to as theosis or "divinization."
Human beings are in fact "less than fully human."
To achieve theosis means to realize our full human potential.
Ethically, this teaching leads to the acceptance, on the one
hand, of the existence of a "human nature," but, on
the other, it clearly does not restrict our "humanum"
to conformity to that nature. The "image" provides
a firm foundation for ethical reasoning. The "likeness"
prohibits the absolutizing of any rule, law, or formulation
(Maloney).
Divine
energies and human self-determination.
Though
God's essence is totally incomprehensible to the human mind,
God's energies are present in every human experience. To speak
of divine energies is to speak of God's actions in relation
to the created world. The relationship of God's energies to
human freedom and self-determination has obvious ethical implications.
Orthodox Christianity teaches that, though God is Lord of history,
he does not coerce or force obedience and conformity to his
will. Coerced conformity is dehumanization, whereas fulfilled
humanity - which is the divinization of human life - must be
free, since God is free. This raises the question of Divine
Providence and Human Responsibility. Orthodox Christianity holds
these two in paradoxical tension: man is responsible and must
act, but God accomplishes his will, either with or in spite
of man's actions. Ideally, human actions are harmoniously integrated
with divine purposes in a perfect synergy of divine and human
wills. This belief is but an extension and application of the
Orthodox doctrine of the divine and human natures in the one
person of Jesus Christ. Ethically, this means that we are not
permitted simply to wait upon God. Rather, we are committed
to the exercise of self-determination and responsibility in
conformity with both human reality and divine purpose (Florovsky,
pp. 113-120).
Body-spirit.
God
is seen as the creator of both the material and the spiritual
dimensions of reality. Eastern Orthodox Christianity sees these
aspects of existence as closely bound together. The icon is
an example of this belief. At first sight, the icon appears
to be a stylized artistic representation of a holy figure. Yet
the iconographer's purpose is to capture in form, line, color,
and symbol both the spiritual and the physical reality of the
figure. The sacramental use of material means (such as water,
oil, bread, wine, etc.) for spiritual purposes also illustrates
Eastern Orthodoxy's comprehension of the intimate relationship
of matter and spirit, For bioethics, this key concept is important
because it leads to a serious affirmation of the psychosomatic
unity of human life. "Body" and "soul" are
the constituents of human existence; the Orthodox emphasis on
the Resurrection confirms its view that human life and human
fulfillment are inextricably bound to both the physical and
the spiritual dimensions of human existence. In more contemporary
terms, body and personhood are essential for the fulfillment
of human potential (Antoniades, 1:204-208).
Law,
motive, intent.
Based
on the above, ethical reasoning in Orthodoxy is a balanced combination
of law, motive, and intent. Moral law is based in large part
on the donatum of human nature. For Eastern Orthodoxy, natural
law refers primarily to the elementary relationships that are
necessary for the constitution and maintenance of human society.
For the Fathers of the Church, the Decalogue is an excellent
expression of the natural law common to all men (Harakas, 1964).
In a similar yet more flexible pattern, there are modes of behavior
that are either prescribed or proscribed for the lives of Christians
growing in the image and likeness of God toward theosis or full
humanity. These positive and negative injunctions are found
in the Holy Scriptures, in the writings of the Fathers and in
the canons of the Church. For the Orthodox these statements
are normative in the sense that they embody the mind of the
Church and reflect standards of behavior that are appropriate
and fitting for the members of the Church and, potentially,
for all human beings growing in the image and likeness of God
-for the full realization of personhood.
This
first level of ethical direction is saved from legalism and
rigid prescriptivism by the fundamental emphasis on love as
a motive of action. Grounded thoroughly on a Trinitarian theology
that understands the Holy Trinity first as a community of persons
united in love, the Church teaches that being God-like means
being loving. In general, the commandments - of the moral law
are embodiments of loving concern for the welfare of others.
Consequently, in most situations the loving action is in conformity
with the guidelines provided by the commandments (Harakas, 1970).
The
possibility remains open, however, for the exception, i.e.,
for the exercise of "economia" when conformity to
the prescribed action is perceived as detracting from the basic
intent of all reasoning - the advancement of each person in
community toward the fulfillment of the image and likeness of
God. Thus, both order and compassion are harmonized in an approach
to Christian ethics that seeks to avoid the extremesof legalism
and relativism.
Bioethics.
It
is convenient to treat the Eastern Orthodox approach to bioethics
under two major rubrics: the protection of life and the transmission
of life. Implicit in the treatment of each of the bioethical
issues are the affirmations implied in the doctrines of the
image and likeness, theosis, human self-determination and responsibility,
the intimate bond of body and personhood, and the interpenetrating
relationship of commandment, love, and the realization of true
human potential.
The
protection of life.
Orthodox
Christian ethical thought universally holds that life is a gift
of God and as such is the necessary prerequisite of all other
physical, spiritual, and moral values. As a gift of God it is
a moral good held by the individual and by societies in trust,
and over which they do not have absolute control. Both the individual
and societies, however, are charged with the moral responsibility
of protecting, transmitting, and enhancing life. The concerns
of bioethics relate primarily to the first two of these concerns.
Generally speaking, human responsibility for the preservation
of life means that we are not given the right to terminate human
life. Even the exceptions to this rule are understood as arising
when conflicting claims to life become mutually exclusive, and
a choice must be made. The preservation and protection of life
are thus seen as crucial in ethical decision making. Since life
is the prerequisite of all other this-worldly goods such as
education, intelligence, social worth, and service to humanity,
it has an intrinsic value that may not be violated under normal
circumstances.
Health
care.
It
follows quite logically that thecare of one's own health and
societal concern for public health are moral imperatives (Androutsos,
pp. 191-195, 250). Throughout its history, Eastern Orthodox
Christianity has concerned itself sacramentally with the physical
health of the faithful. The Sacrament of Holy Unction has not
been conducted as a service of the "last rites." Rather,
it is a healing service conducted both publicly and privately
for the faithful. One of the constituents of the condition of
original sin in which man actually finds himself is sickness.
Total harmony of the creation with God would in fact eliminate
sickness and ill health. The spiritual and physical dimensions
of health are closely bound together in Orthodox thought. Thus,
it was natural for the priest and the physician often to be
one and the same person (Constantelos, 1967).
The
issue of the allocation of scarce medical resources demands
a general principle of distribution. Neither the ability to
pay nor an aristocratic criterion of greater human value or
worth is acceptable. Eastern Christianity has always distinguished
between the essential value of human life and social worth.
In spite of the enormous difficulties involved, the ethical
imperative from the Orthodox perspective calls for the widest
possible distribution of health care and life-protecting facilities
and resources, rather than a concentration of such resources
for the select few. The famous health care center established
by Saint Basil in the fourth century in Cappadocia of Asia Minor
was designed to reach as many people as possible. It and similar
institutions embodied the Eastern Christian view on health distribution
(Constantelos, 1968, chap.11).
Rights
of patients.
The
understanding that each person is created in the image and likeness
of God with the personal destiny of achieving theosis implies
that each patient has an essential and inviolate dignity as
a person. The fact that individuals can achieve personhood only
in community (Unus Christianus, nullus Christianus), requires
the concern of the healthy for the ill. Those who deliver health
care, therefore, do not morally discharge their responsibility
by the mere mechanical application of healing methods and practices.
Underlying every medical procedure ought to be a basic respect
for the patient as God's image and likeness. The patient is
never a thing. Consequently, medical practitioners are obligated,
within reason and in the light of the patient's well-being,
to maintain confidentiality and to obtain informed consent for
procedures that entail excessive risk. Exceptions and restrictions
on this obligation should be made in the light of the patient's
welfare and whenever possible in consultation with those having
immediate responsibility for the patient, e.g., his or her family.
Human
experimentation.
For
the same reasons articulated in the previous section, the Eastern
Orthodox Christians take a very hesitant stance vis-à-vis
human experimentation. Medical trial and error conducted for
the well-being of the patient himself is often required and
necessary. However, the submission of a patient to experimental
procedures without significant regard for his or her direct
personal benefit is wrong. There is no moral obligation of any
person to be used by another for the benefit of a third party.
Human self-determination requires that the patient decide. Such
a decision must be based on adequate information regarding the
procedures, ends to be achieved, and risks involved. The patient
does not have the right to inflict harm upon himself unnecessarily.
The researcher should use human experimentation procedures only
after all other means of testing have been exhausted and there
is every reasonable expectation of the avoidance of harm to
the subject. In every case, experimenter and subject are morally
obligated to exercise great caution. The hope of benefiting
mankind in general does not outweigh the moral obligation of
the protection of the individual life.
Abortion.
Eastern
Christianity has a long history of opposition to abortion. Its
ethical teachings as embodied in canon law and in the penitential
books, as well as in more formal ethical instruction, condemn
abortion as a form of murder. Because our humanity is a psychosomatic
unity and because Orthodox Christians see all of life as a continuous
and never ending development of the image and likeness toward
theosis and full humanity, the achievement of particular stages
of development of the conceptus is not ethically relevant to
the question of abortion.
In
his second canon, St. Basil specifically rules out the artificial
distinction between the "formed" and "unformed"
conceptus (The Rudder, pp. 789-790). Thus, any abortion is seen
as an evil. Since the physical and the personal aspects of human
existence are understood as essential constitutive elements
of our humanity, the conceptus - unfulfilled and incomplete
as it may be - may not be destroyed under normal circumstances.
Eastern Orthodox ethicists reject as unworthy those counterarguments
which appeal to economic and social reasons and so hold fife
to be less valuable than money, pride, or convenience. Armed
with modem genetic information, they also reject the argument
that an abortion may be justified because a woman is entitled
to control her own body. That basic affirmation of self-determination
is not rejected; what is rejected is the claim that the conceptus
is a part of the mother's tissue. It is not her body; it is
the body and life of another human being entrusted to her for
care and nurture.
Only
in the case in which the life of the mother is endangered by
the conceptus is it morally appropriate to consider the possibility
of abortion. Yet, even here, the main operative value is the
preservation of life. Numerous prudential considerations will
be taken into account, though it is likely that the preservation
of the mother's life will most often be chosen. In any case,
it falls into the class of "involuntary sin" in which
the evil of the event is recognized, while the personal guilt
is mitigated (Papacostas, pp. 9-13, 83-105).
Organ
transplants.
In
the case of organ transplants, the crucial ethical considerations
are two: the potential harm inflicted upon the donor and the
need of the recipient. Historically, the Orthodox Church has
not objected to similar, though not identical, procedures, such
as blood transfusions and skin grafts. In both cases, no radical
threat to the life of the donor is perceived, and the lifesaving
consequences for the recipient are substantial. Similar considerations
affect the Orthodox Christian judgment of organ transplants.
In no case should a person ignore or make light of the ethical
implications of organ donation. Donating an organ whose loss
will impair or threaten the life of the potential donor is never
required and is never a moral obligation of any person. If the
condition of health and the physical well-being of the donor
permits, some transplants are not objectionable. Renal transplants
are a case in point. A healthy person may consent to donate
a kidney knowing that his or her health is not thereby impaired.
The
recipient of an organ transplant ought to be in otherwise good
health, and there should be a substantial expectation of restoration
to normal living in order to warrant the risk to the donor.
Heart
transplants present a special case. Objectively they are different
from other sorts of organ transplants because they presupposed
the death of the donor. Though some Orthodox hierarchs have
objected to heart transplants because the "heart"
is often designated in the devotional literature of the Church
as the seat of the soul, most have not responded negatively
to heart transplants in principle. However, caution has been
expressed regarding the temptation to hasten the death of the
donor for the sake of the recipient. Also, so long as this procedure
does not yet have a high success rate, it is morally questionable
to continue its practice until the phenomenon of tissue rejection
is better understood.
Drug
addiction.
The
use of stimulants, depressants, and hallucinogens for any purpose
other than the restoration of health or the alleviation of abnormal
pain, when properly and legitimately prescribed by a physician,
is condemned; but Orthodox ethics, because of its teaching on
"involuntary sin," is able to recognize the evil of
the condition of drug addiction and yet also recognize that
the essence of the evil is that personal self-determination
has been lost, and with it a large measure of personal responsibility.
Orthodox texts often refer to sinful conditions as "sickness"
and "illness." In the case of drug addiction the cure
is the restoration of self-determination In the Orthodox view,
the judgment that drug addiction and alcoholism are evil and
sinful, on the one hand, and the judgment that they are illnesses,
on the other hand, are not mutually exclusive. This is not to
say, of course, that every sickness is the result of individual
voluntary sins, a position specifically denied by the Orthodox
doctrine of original sin.
Mental
health: values, therapies, institutions.
At
the heart of the Eastern Orthodox Christian approach to mental
health is the understanding of human wholesomeness in the doctrine
of theosis. True and full human well-being is the consequence
of our proper relationship with God (Demetropoulos, pp. 155-157).
Mental health is one dimension of this total relationship. Since
no individual human being perfectly achieves this relationship,
it may be noted that, just as we are all in some measure "less
than fully human," in the same manner we are all in some
measure lacking in full mental health. The Orthodox concept
of repentance or metanoia implies a change of mind, a transfiguration
and transformation of the human mind. What is significant is
that the teaching of the spiritual Fathers of the Eastern Church
emphasizes the need for constant repentance on the part of every
human being in the direction of his human goal and destiny.
Some
recent studies have related traditional spiritual methodologies
to standard psychotherapeutic theories, methods, and approaches
(Faros). There are differences, of course, but there is also
a remarkable number of parallels to be found between the ancient
spiritual disciplines and modern schools of psychology.
Orthodox
ethics sees the mentally ill as fellow human beings who need
compassionate assistance. Therapies that degrade their essential
humanity and attitudes that dehumanize the mentally ill in the
eyes of society and deny assistance, relationship, and therapeutic
support are in themselves immoral and dehumanizing.
Aging.
In
the ethical consciousness of the Church, respect and deference
for the elderly, and especially for elderly parents, is an important
moral responsibility. There is a strong feeling that children
ought personally to care for their aged parents. It is only
when circumstances are such that it is truly impossible for
children to care for their aged parents that they may be placed
in appropriate institutions for care. Such institutions have
long been a part of the Eastern Orthodox Church's social mission
(Constantelos, 1968, chap.13).
Death,
dying, and euthanasia.
The
traditional definition of physical death is "the separation
of soul and body." Such a definition is not subject to
objective observation. Thus it is not within the province of
theology to determine the medical indications of death and the
onset of the dying process. However, in reference to the terminally
ill person, certain distinctions can be made. Physical life
is generally understood to imply the ability of the person to
sustain his or her vital activities. Physical death begins when
interrelated systems of the body begin to break down. Death
occurs when the systemic breakdown becomes irreversible. It
may well be that physical life and death are events in a continuum
in which it is impossible to discern when the dying process
actually begins. Nevertheless, the bias of the Church and the
traditional bias of the medical practitioner (cf. Oath of Hippocrates)
is to do everything possible to maintain life and hinder the
onset of dying and death. The medical use of drugs, surgical
operations, and even artificial organs (mechanical kidneys,
lungs, hearts, etc.) are considered legitimately used when there
is a reasonable expectation that they will aid the return in
due time to normal or close to normal functioning of the whole
organic system.
The
special case arises in that it is now medically possible to
keep the body "alive" with a complex array of artificial
organs, medications, transfusions, and the like. Under these
conditions it may not be feasible to expect, with any degree
of probability, the restoration of the organic functioning of
the body. When, especially, there is no evidence of brain activity
in conjunction with the systemic breakdown, we can safely say
that the patient is no longer alive in any religiously significant
way, and that, in fact, only certain organs are functioning.
In such a case there is no moral responsibility to continue
the use of artificial, means. It is of interest that the Prayer
book of the Eastern Orthodox Church includes a whole service
devoted to those in the process of dying. In the case of the
individual whose death is prolonged and attended by much "struggling
to die," the key sentence in the prayer calls upon God
to separate the soul from the body, thus giving rest to the
dying person. It asks God "to release your servant (name)
from this unbearable suffering and this continuing bitter illness
and grant rest to him" (Mikron Euchologion, p. 192).
However,
it must be emphasized that this is a prayer directed to God,
who, for the Orthodox, has ultimate dominion over life and death.
Consequently, the preceding discussion in no way supports the
practice of euthanasia. Euthanasia is held by some to be morally
justified and/or morally required to terminate the life of an
incurably sick person. To permit a dying person to die, when
there is no real expectation that life can sustain itself, and
even to pray to the Authorof Life to take the life of one "struggling
to die" is one thing; euthanasia is another, i.e., the
active intervention to terminate the life of another. Orthodox
Christian ethics rejects the alternative of the willful termination
of dying patients, regarding it as a special case of murder
if done without the knowledge and consent of the patient, and
suicide if it is permitted by the patient (Antoniades, II, pp.
125-127). One of the most serious criticisms of euthanasia is
the grave difficulty in drawing the line between "bearable
suffering" and "unbearable suffering," especially
from an Eastern Orthodox perspective, which has taken seriously
the spiritual growth that may take place through suffering (Rom.
8:17-39).
Ethical
decision making is never precise and absolute. The principles
that govern it are in a measure fluid and subject to interpretation.
But to elevate euthanasia to a right or an obligation would
bring it into direct conflict with the fundamental ethical affirmation
that as human beings we are custodians of life, which comes
from a source other than ourselves. Furthermore, the immense
possibilities, not only for error but also for decision making
based on self-serving ends, which may disregard the fundamental
principle of the sanctity of human life, argue against euthanasia.
Generally
speaking, the Orthodox Church teaches that it is the duty of
both physician and family to make the patient as comfortable
e as possible, to provide the opportunity for the exercise of
patience, courage, repentance, and prayer. The Church has always
rejected inflicted, and unnecessary voluntary suffering and
pain as immoral; but at the same time, the Church also has perceived
in suffering a positive value that often goes unrecognized in
the "logic of the world."
The
only "eu-thanasia" (Greek for "a good death")
recognized in Orthodox ethics is that death in which the human
person accepts the end of his or her life in the spirit of moral
and spiritual purity, in hope and trust in God, and as a member
of his kingdom. True humanity may be achieved even on a deathbed.
The
transmission of life.
Orthodox
Christian ethical thought considers that the transmission of
human life is no less a fundamental responsibility of mankind
than its protection. The Church sees this aspect of its concern
as the divinely chosen means by which human beings contribute
cooperatively in God's creative work. The transmission of human
life is thus a holy and sacred moral responsibility. This responsibility
is a generally human one and is taken up, sanctified, and made
a part of the corporate life of the body of Christ in the Sacrament
of Holy Matrimony. Though not the only purpose of marriage,
the transmission of human life is an important duty and moral
responsibility. This is readily seen in the fact that if each
and every person now alive failed to contribute to the transmission
of human life, it would be only a matter of time until human
life would be extinguished from the face of the earth. The divine
injunction "to be fruitful and multiply" (Genesis
1:28) is a fundamental moral imperative in the teaching of the
Orthodox Christian Church. It is within this larger framework
that we approach the specific issues of human sexuality, fertility
control, population, artificial insemination, in vitro fertilization,
andgenetic screening and counseling.
Human
sexuality.
The
Church teaches that human sexuality is a divinely given dimension
of humanlife that finds its fulfillment in the marital relationship.
This is also supported by empirical observation, for at their
very biological basis, sexual differences clearly exist for
reproductive purposes. Because of the fact that human reproduction
requires a long period of time for the newly born child to achieve
a level of development permitting physical self-care, and increasingly
long periods for social, educational, emotional, and economic
maturity, the human race long ago recognized the need for some
kind of permanent relationship of the sexes for the purpose
of serving the reproductive purpose. That permanent relationship
is marriage.
However,
the purpose of marriage is not limited or restricted to this
aspect alone. The purposes of marriage and their ranking in
importance are a point of difference among Orthodox authorities
(both patristic and contemporary), but scriptural and patristic
evidence argue for at least four purposes for marriage, without
ranking them in order of primacy:
General
agreement exists among Orthodox writers on the following two
points:
since
at least one of the purposes of marriage is the birth of children,
a couple acts immorally when it consistently uses contraceptive
methods to avoid the birth of any children, if there are not
extenuating circumstances;
contraception
is also immoral when used to encourage the practice of fornication
and adultery.
Less
agreement exists among Eastern Orthodox authors on the issue
of contraception within marriage for the spacing of children
or for the limitation of the number of children. Some authors
take a negative view and count any use of contraceptive methods
within or outside of marriage as immoral (Papacostas, pp. 13-18;
Gabriel Dionysiatou).
These
authors tend to emphasize as the primary and almost exclusive
purpose of marriage the birth of children and their upbringing.
They tend to consider any other exercise of the sexual function
as the submission of this holy act to unworthy purposes, i.e.,
pleasure-seeking, passion, and bodily gratification, which are
held to be inappropriate for the Christian growing in spiritual
perfection. These teachers hold that the only alternative is
sexual abstinence in marriage, which, though difficult, is both
desirable and possible through the aid of the grace of God.
It must be noted also that, for these writers, abortion and
contraception are closely tied together, and often little or
no distinction is made between the two. Further, it is hard
to discern in their writings any difference in judgment between
those who use contraceptive methods so as to have no children
and those who use them to space and limit the number of children.
Other
Orthodox writers have challenged this view by seriously questioning
the Orthodoxy of the exclusive and all-controlling role of the
procreative purpose of marriage (Zaphiris; Constantelos, 1975).
Some note the inconsistency of the advocacy of sexual continence
in marriage with the scriptural teaching that one of the purposes
of marriage is to permit the ethical fulfillment of sexual drives,
so as to avoid fornication and adultery (1 Cor. 7:1-7).
Most
authors, however, emphasize the sacramental nature of marriage
and its place within the framework of Christian anthropology,
seeing the sexual relationship of husband and wife as one aspect
of the mutual growth of the couple in love and unity. This approach
readily adapts itself to an ethical position that would not
only permit but also enjoin sexual relationships of husband
and wife for their own sake as expressions of mutual love. Such
a view clearly would support the use of contraceptive practices
for the purpose of spacing and limiting children so as to permit
greater freedom of the couple in the expression of their mutual
love.
Population.
There
would appear to be a direct contradiction between the ethical
imperative to "be fruitful and multiply" and the need
to respond ethically to the "population explosion."
Those
few Orthodox writers who have addressed themselves to this question
ask if the issue is not so much a question of population as
it is one of the fair and just distribution of the world's resources.
(Papacostas; Gabriel Dionysiatou; Evdokimov, pp. 163-174). However,
in the light of strong evidence that food and mineral resources
are limited, population control is, without question, of ethical
significance. This is not necessarily in conflict with the Orthodox
teaching on marriage. Of interest in this instance is a fourth-century
quotation from St. John Chrysostom, made in reference to the
purpose of marriage, which the saint considered to be primarily
the satisfaction of the sexual drive:
It
was for two reasons that marriage was introduced so that we
may live in chastity [sophrosyne] and so that we might become
parents. Of these the most important reason is chastity . .
. especially today when the whole inhabited world [he oikoumene]
is full of our race [John Chrysostom].
If
overpopulation in the saint's eyes was a fact of the fourth
century providing an argument to support his views on marriage,
it implies that today the fact of overpopulation continues to
have ethical significance. If it is true that humanity has in
fact been obedient to the divine command and has been "fruitful"
and has "multiplied" and has "filled the earth"
(Gen. 1:28), then it would appear that this has ethical significance.
Thus,
it seems valid to raise the question, within the context of
Orthodox ethics, of the appropriate means of population control.
Orthodox ethics disapproves of any means of population control
that would violate and coerce the individual couple's choice
regarding their obligation to procreate. It opposes the use
of those means on a large scale that it opposes in individual
cases, i.e., abortion. Those Orthodox teachers who oppose contraceptive
practices of any nature, when faced with the facts of population
pressures, are placed in the position of proposing widespread
abstinence from sexual relations by huge numbers of people.
Those who hold to the legitimacy of a reasonable use of contraceptives
within marriages that have produced some offspring are prepared
to accept the need and propriety of population control through
educational methods, encouraging smaller families through contraceptive
methods. All Orthodox ethicists, however, would hold that respect
for the freedom of each couple to decide must be considered
an important and significant factor of population control policy.
Artificial
insemination.
For
obvious reasons, artificial insemination of unmarried women,
or of married women without the consent and cooperation of the
husband, is rejected by the Orthodox, in the first instance
as a form of fornication, and in the second as duplicity and
a form of adultery (Galanopoulos, pp. 455-456). What of the
cases in which the husband gives his permission or urges the
procedure upon his wife? In this situation, when a donor's semen
is used, Orthodox ethicists readily view it as the intrusion
of a third person into the sacred marital relationship and reject
it as a form of adultery not ethically appropriate. In the instances
in which the couple is not able to bear their own children,
the other purposes of marriage remain in effect, and the marriage
of the couple continues to be both valid and fulfilling. Such
a couple may decide to adopt children.
In
the case of insemination with the husband's sperm (AIH), there
are differing opinions. Some ethicists hold that AIH is also
improper because the child is not conceived as a result of natural
sexual intercourse (Constantinides). This position, however,
does not prohibit medical treatment of the husband for the correction
of some medical defect that may be the cause of the failure
to achieve conception. This view is countered by the consideration
that the integrity of the marital relationship is not attacked
by AIH. Rather, one of its main purposes is permitted to be
fulfilled. It is questionable if the ethical argumentation connecting
AIH with the requirement for the physical act of sexual intercourse
is drawn from Eastern Orthodox sources.
Orthodox
writers have not dealt with artificial inovulation and in vitro
fertilization procedures. It would seem consistent, though,
to hold that, so long as the sperm and ovum are those of the
husband and wife, and the wife carried the child to term, such
procedures would not in themselves be objectionable. However,
egg grafts from anonymous donors and the transplantation of
a fertilized ovum to a foster mother who would then carry the
conceptus to term would attack the integrity of the marriage
and the mother-child relationship.
Another
topic that has received little treatment from Orthodox writers
is sterilization: vasectomy in the case of the male and tubal
ligation in the case of the female. It would appear that the
irreversible character of these procedures would cause most
Orthodox to see them as a violation of one of the purposes of
marriage, though it is conceivable that some cases involving
serious threat to the life of the wife might justify the procedures.
Obviously, the use of the operation to permit promiscuous sexual
living would be rejected out of hand by Orthodox ethicists (Zozos).
Genetic
counseling and genetic screening.
At
first glance it may appear that the Eastern Orthodox Church
has little or nothing to say on genetic counseling and screening.
Yet genetic counseling, which seeks to provide information to
prospective parents before a child is conceived, simply makes
more precise that which the Church has sought to do through
its canon law, which prohibits marriages between closely related
persons (The Rudder, pp. 977-999).This ancient compendium of
prohibitions to inbreeding clearly has its historical antecedents
in the observation that genetic defect-, tend to multiply when
inbreeding takes place. Consequently, it would appear that genetic
counseling most appropriately should take place before marriage.
It seems equally clear that for the Orthodox the option of abortion
is not ethically appropriate when amniocentesis indicates some
genetic deformation.
Genetic
screening of whole groups or populations to determine carriers
of genetic disease would also be encouraged by Orthodox ethics,
so as to provide as much information as possible to persons
before marriage. Ethical prudence would cause two persons who
are carriers of the same genetic disease not to marry, thus
avoiding the high probability that deformed children would be
born to them.
In
this way, what is more or less crudely effected through the
Church's rules regarding prohibited marriages because of consanguinity
would be accomplished more accurately through scientific genetic
screening. In the same spirit it would be possible to support
legislation prohibiting marriage between two carriers of the
same genetic disease, especially in the case of a disease that
is widespread and a threat to the total human genetic pool.
CONCLUSION
The
common denominator of all the issues discussed is the high regard
and concern of the Church for human life as a gift of God. Orthodoxy
tends to take a conservative approach to these issues, seeing
in them a dimension of the holy and relating them to transcendent
values and concerns. An intense respect for human life is needed
to hold the reins upon those who would attack it. The human
person, from the very moment of conception, is dependent upon
others for life and sustenance. It is in the community of the
living, especially as it relates to the source of life, God
in Trinity, that life is conceived, nurtured, developed, and
fulfilled. The trust we have in others for the continued well-being
of our own lives forms a basis for generalization. Eastern Orthodox
ethics, consequently, functions with a pro-life bias that honors
and respects the life of each person as a divine gift, which
requires development and enhancement.
v
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© 2003 Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
www.goarch.org