A one-day conference organized on Ethics, Aging, and the Coming Healthcare Challenge
took place yesterday at Rome’s Pontifical Lateran University. Organized by the Acton
Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, with the co-sponsorship of the Pontifical
Council for the Family, the conference looked at ethical, medical, and economic issues
arising in light of the new challenges presented by aging demographics and ever-extending
life-spans.
A featured speaker at the conference, Professor Daniel Sulmasy
of the University of Chicago is a Franciscan Friar and a member of the President’s
Council for the Study of Bioethical Questions in the United States.
He told
us that the medical community would benefit from the experience and guidance of the
Church’s centuries of experience in thinking about matters of life and death. “The
Church invented bioethics before there was the word,” Sulmasy said. “We invented the
term, ‘extraordinary means’, four or five hundred years ago – it’s been a part of
our tradition for centuries.”
Sulmasy went on to say the Church’s way of thinking
about these matters is eminently reasonable. “Hewing always to the middle,” said Sulmasy,
“[we] say that life is always valuable. We can never intentionally destroy it – but
recognizing its value is also to recognize its finitude.” He went on to say that this
allows us to say, with St. Paul, “’I have fought the fight, I have run the race, I
have kept the faith,’ and when the time comes, to cease and desist these extraordinary
means of care.”
Listen to Chris Altieri’s interview with Dr. Daniel Sulmasy,
OFM: