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U.S. bishops: Catholic health care providers shouldn’t perform ‘gender transition’ procedures

(Image credit: ADragan/Shutterstock)

CNA Newsroom, Mar 20, 2023 / 16:00 pm (CNA).

The U.S. Catholic bishops released a statement Monday offering moral guidance for Catholic health care institutions, reiterating that “gender transition” interventions are not to be performed because they do not respect the fact that God has created each person as a unity of body and soul.

“The body is not an object, a mere tool at the disposal of the soul, one that each person may dispose of according to his or her own will, but it is a constitutive part of the human subject, a gift to be received, respected, and cared for as something intrinsic to the person,” the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Doctrine wrote.

“As the range of what we can do expands, we must ask what we should or should not do. An indispensable criterion in making such determinations is the fundamental order of the created world. Our use of technology must respect that order.”

To that end, the bishops wrote, “Catholic health care services must not perform interventions, whether surgical or chemical, that aim to transform the sexual characteristics of a human body into those of the opposite sex or take part in the development of such procedures.”

“They must employ all appropriate resources to mitigate the suffering of those who struggle with gender incongruence, but the means used must respect the fundamental order of the human body. Only by using morally appropriate means do health care providers show full respect for the dignity of each human person.”

The March 20 statement, titled “Doctrinal Note on the Moral Limits to Technological Manipulation of the Human Body,” is intended, the bishops say, to provide moral criteria for Catholic health care institutions for discerning which medical interventions promote the authentic good of the human person and which are injurious. The bishops said they developed the statement in consultation with medical ethicists, physicians, psychologists, and moral theologians.

The bishops note that modern technology offers chemical, surgical, and genetic interventions for the functioning of the human body as well as for modifying its appearance. There are two scenarios, they said, whereby “technological interventions” can be morally justified: when they are aimed at repairing a defect in the body or sacrificing a part of the body for the sake of the whole, such as with amputation. These kinds of interventions “respect the fundamental order and finality inherent in the human person.”

However, gender transition surgeries “regards this order as unsatisfactory in some way and proposes a more desirable order, a redesigned order,” and thus are not morally permissible.

“These technological interventions are not morally justified either as attempts to repair a defect in the body or as attempts to sacrifice a part of the body for the sake of the whole,” the bishops asserted.

The bishops said one of the reasons for this moral calculus is that the “transitioning” person’s organs, which undergo mutilation and reconstruction during the gender transition process, are not disordered but are healthy. Moreover, “when a part of the body is legitimately sacrificed for the sake of the whole body, whether by the entire removal or substantial reconfiguration of a bodily organ, the removal or reconfiguring of the bodily organ is reluctantly tolerated as the only way to address a serious threat to the body. Here, by contrast, the removal or reconfiguring is itself the desired result.”

Discussing the proliferation of “gender transition” medical interventions, the bishops noted that Catholic health care institutions are not to take part in these interventions because they do not respect the “fundamental order of the human body” as being “sexually differentiated.”

“Such interventions, thus, do not respect the fundamental order of the human person as an intrinsic unity of body and soul, with a body that is sexually differentiated,” the bishops continued.

“The soul does not come into existence on its own and somehow happen to be in this body, as if it could just as well be in a different body. A soul can never be in another body, much less be in the wrong body,” the bishops wrote.

“Because of this order and finality, neither patients nor physicians nor researchers nor any other persons have unlimited rights over the body; they must respect the order and finality inscribed in the embodied person.”

The bishops quoted Pope Francis, who wrote in his encyclical ​​Laudato Si’: “The acceptance of our bodies as God’s gift is vital for welcoming and accepting the entire world as a gift from the Father and our common home, whereas thinking that we enjoy absolute power over our own bodies turns, often subtly, into thinking that we enjoy absolute power over creation.”

Relying on medical interventions that do not respect the body-soul unity is a “mistake,” they wrote.

“An approach that does not respect the fundamental order will never truly solve the problem in view; in the end, it will only create further problems. The Hippocratic tradition in medicine calls upon all health care providers first and foremost to ‘do no harm.’ Any technological intervention that does not accord with the fundamental order of the human person as a unity of body and soul, including the sexual difference inscribed in the body, ultimately does not help but, rather, harms the human person.”


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4 Comments

  1. They should not, but then again, they should not prescribe The Pill or perform sterilizations either, but they do, and “no one cares.”

  2. Wow. Love the interest in clarifying such details about the moral wrong of “transition”; however, the late timing is such that those whose lives have already been ruined by this lie are beginning to “de-transition”. Could this statement have been about 5-7 years previous, given from the pulpit, and thus offered the import it rightly deserves? It seems that the bishops are late to the party, so to speak.

  3. As Ralph notes “We are in trouble”. Catholic Health Care has become in many instances purely profit making, typically founding sisters selling out to secular management but retaining the Catholic image. Atheistic secularism perhaps the bedrock that underlies most of what’s occurring in Catholic academia, medical care, dioceses.
    Perhaps Jonah McKeown’s essay title stating Health Care Providers Shouldn’t Perform Gender Transition Procedures reflects the reality, doctrinal weakness within the Catholic sphere of influence. Although, the document itself, Doctrinal Note on the Moral Limits to Tech Manipulation of the Human Body is strong. Example, “18. Catholic health care services must not perform interventions, whether surgical or chemical, that aim to transform the sexual characteristics of a human body into those of the opposite sex”. ‘Must not’ is a clear prohibition. The moral theology, ethics are excellent. Our question is what positive effect will it have?
    As it pertains to academic institutions within dioceses, bishops are required to oversee and make effort to implement the Moral Limits. Therein is a major quandary the Church in America faces with bishops permitted, even encouraged by Pope Francis, implemented by dictum of CDF prefect Card Ladaria to be ‘diverse’ in their judgments on moral questions. Diversity of judgment on vital moral questions that fragments unity. My conviction is that the USCCB finds a way [considering there isn’t unanimity] to direct the matter to Pope Francis. Our Church hierarchy cannot effectively implement moral doctrine as long as the secular ideology of diversity in all matters including doctrine remains. If not there’s no effective difference between Catholic and Anglican.

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