Over the past several weeks, it has come to my attention that significant debate has developed regarding the Terri Schiavo case. I have read various e-mail messages between Cathy Beal, Father Cekada, Father Dardis, Bishop Sanborn, and two letters appearing in the St. Gertrude the Great Church bulletin.
Let me begin by stating that I do not feel I have either the theological expertise (mine is limited to a minor in theology at Xavier University, a Jesuit college in Cincinnati) or moral authority to adequately address the theological aspects of this case. However, I do feel that my background as a neurologist with additional specialized fellowship training in both neurological critical care (the subspecialty of neurology which deals with patients in comas and other critical neurological illnesses) and stroke, at the Cleveland Clinic and University of Cincinnati respectively, put me in a position to contribute some thoughts on the medical aspects of her case. Since completing medical school, I have over 15 years of experience training, practicing, and doing research in these areas. I have also had the opportunity as the result of my training and expertise in these areas to testify as an expert witness in such matters in medical malpractice and pharmacological product liability lawsuits. I state the above not to be prideful, but to give you some tangible appreciation of the fact that, simply speaking, there are few people in the country with any better training background or practical expertise to understand in detail the scientific and medical aspects of the care of patients like Terri Schiavo, whom I deal with on literally an almost daily basis.
I have reviewed the CT scan images of Terri Schiavos brain, watched the video of her taken by her family members, and also reviewed some summary comments/ excerpts regarding testimony given in deposition transcripts in her medical malpractice case. These again are all things I do on a very frequent basis. They are, to be frank, part of how I make my living. Having clarified the context in which I share my thoughts with you, I offer the following thoughts on this matter:
1) Terri Schiavo was NOT in a persistent vegetative state. The video taken of her clearly and unequivocally demonstrates that, at least at times, she is in a minimally conscious state and capable of interacting in a rudimentary way with her family and environment, which by definition excludes her from being medically classified as comatose or in a persistent vegetative state.
2) The parts of Terri Schiavos brain which would allow her to perceive pain, here thalami, were clearly intact and visible on her CT scan images shown by her husband, Michael Schiavo, on national television (which I rarely watch, and by the way, I have never voluntarily watched Oprah)
3) The parts of Terri Schiavos brain which would allow her to perform complex cognitive function, or which would enable her to speak or understand speech, were clearly damaged.
4) The parts of Terri Schiavos brain which would allow her to swallow on her own were intact and, in fact, she did not suffer from medically significant dysphagia (swallowing difficulty). If she had, she would have been dead long ago from a condition known as aspiration pneumonia, an infection in the lungs which is the result of inhaling ones own saliva.
5) The parts of Terri Schiavos brain which would allow her to move her arms and hands to feed or hydrate herself were clearly damaged.
6) The parts of Terri Schiavos brain which would allow her to experience discomfort and/or pain due to hunger were undamaged.
7) Other tests were available to better clarify the full extent of Terri Schiavos awareness or lack thereof, such as MRI scanning of her brain ( a more detailed picture of the brain than a CT (CAT) scan, EEG (a brainwave test), and evoked potential studies, which could decipher the extent to which she could hear or see. These studies were refused by her husband, Michael Schiavo.
8) Terri Schiavo did not receive or require intravenous hydration or nutrition (so-called TPN or total parenteral nutrition.
9) Oral or stomach tube feeding via an NG (nasogastric tube) (a tube put down ones throat to the stomach) or (more commonly) via a G-tube are routinely used to feed stroke victims, both temporarily and indefinitely in patients with stroke or other brain injuries who cannot feed themselves, whether due to swallowing problems (which occur at least temporarily in most stroke victims). Such feeding and hydration are by modern medical standards considered as ordinary and unburdensome as eating and drinking on ones own. Such feedings are, in fact, less expensive than what an average American spends on food and water, and are easily administered a few times a day by a family member, requiring much less effort than cooking three meals a day. Terri Schiavos husband, parents, or siblings could easily administer such feedings. They are by no logical measure extraordinary or unduly burdensome by any reasonable standard (moral, medical, or economic).
10) Terri Schiavo could have been cared for at home with some home health care assistance at modest to at most moderate expense which would not by any common sense standard be deemed economically burdensome.
11) Terri Schiavos stomach and intestines were fully functional and capable of digesting food, even normal food if it was placed in her G-tube.
12) Terri Schiavo could have received sequential neurostimulation therapy to her throat muscles, which may have further improved her swallowing function to the point that she may have been able to chew or swallow at least some types of normal food and/or liquid if placed in her mouth. This and other similar available measures were denied to her by her husband.
13) Terri Schiavos brain, while severely damaged, had not failed. When someones brain fails i.e. is irreparably and totally damaged, they are, by definition, dead. While we can keep people alive when other vital organs such as the liver, kidneys, lungs, and even heart fail (via dialysis, organ transplantation, etc.), not even 2005 era medicine can keep one alive if ones brain has failed, because all other organs shut down within 5 days when this occurs, even when every maximal effort possible is made.
14) Terri Schiavo did not require, nor to the best of my knowledge did she ever receive intravenous nutrition (TPN), as was suggested in one of Father Cekadas e-mail messages. Lifelong TPN, in contrast to tube feeds, is widely considered to be an extraordinary, burdensome, and expensive means of prolonging life, and are comparable to a respirator in that regard.
15) Terri Schiavos doctors did, in my opinion, probably commit malpractice by failing to order routine pre- procedure labs which would have disclosed severe electrolyte disturbances secondary to her bulimia.
16) Medical malpractice care awards/settlements are often grossly overinflated due to plaintiffs attorneys hiring so-called life care planners who add up every conceivable convenience and treatment imaginable as necessary for the rest of the patients life. Their overestimates are typically further compounded by overestimating the patients life expectancy. Furthermore, all the money is paid in advance at todays dollars, meaning the real money value of the award is much higher than the actual cost of such care in the vast majority of such cases. Terri Schiavos true care needs would certainly be far less than 750,000 or 1,000,000 dollars.
17) Attorneys representing patients and defendants in medical malpractice and other medicolegal matters often shop around for expert witnesses until they find experts who will give an opinion which suits their clients needs. Thus, it is no surprise that George Felos, a well-connected euthanasia advocate, was able to find three physicians to testify that Mrs. Schiavo was in a persistent vegetative state. In fairness, likewise it is no surprise that Terri Schiavos parents and siblings attorneys found expert witnesses who testified that she was not. One should certainly be suspect of the testimony of an expert witness who has spoken to the Hemlock Society and concludes that Terri Schiavo is in a persistent vegetative state.
18) Terri Schiavo died of dehydration, not starvation. Dehydration kills one much faster than starvation, barring the exception of extreme malnourishment, which was not the case here.
19) Terri Schiavo had an average life expectancy despite her brain injury, and would not have died were it not for her being deprived of nutrition and hydration. The proximate legal and medical cause of her death in my opinion was dehydration.
20) Laws regarding who has legal authority over health care decisions vary greatly by state. In Pennsylvania, for instance, children and siblings have as much right to make medical decisions as spouses, unless a pre- specified durable power of attorney designating one of them pre- exists the illness, or unless a living will was written by the patient. Other states require a durable power of attorney to be obtained no matter what. Ex- spouses, unless they are made durable power of attorney, have no legal right to make medical care decisions in any state.
21) Discontinuation of tube feeds or any form of food in general causes intense hunger pains for 2-3 days, which Terri Schiavo would have had the capacity to feel and suffer.
22) Death by dehydration occurs slowly, eventually causing hyperosmolarity often resulting in shriveling, cracking, and bleeding of the mucous membranes. This causes pain, nosebleeds, and as consciousness begins to wane, patients often begin aspirating blood from the nosebleeds, thickened, mucus or saliva, or both, causing aspiration pneumonitis. The aspiration along with accumulation of unsecreted organic acids results in progressive shortness of breath which further compounds the mucus membrane injury. Observing this struggling to breath and choking is often very disconcerting to family members as well as potentially painful and discomforting to the patient. This is why such patients are often administered morphine, which both relieves pain and suppresses this so- called air hunger. This is also I suspect why the judge in the Terri Schiavo case barred pictures or video of her being taken while she dehydrated and starved. Much as those who are pro- abortion most detest the one thing which actually shows people what happens in the case of abortion (pictures of aborted babies), euthanasia advocates do not want people to see the visible suffering which often occurs in cases like Terri Schiavos.
23) Cases like Terri Schiavos are, thankfully, rare. This is why when they occur and ultimately result in legal battles, we hear about them on the media. Collectively, even if one were to assume each and every one of them were to result in a lifetime of tube feedings, would be far less of an economic burden on society than a new football stadium.
Cases like Terri Schiavos understandably evoke a wide range of emotional responses and theological arguments. Unfortunately, the Catholic Church, theologians, and bioethicists in general lag far behind in their scientific understanding of the rapid and increasingly complex advances in medical care, which often occur literally even prior to our ever having the opportunity to contemplate their moral and theological implications. It is in the spirit of attempting to help simplify and clarify some of the medical aspects of the Schiavo case that I share the above thoughts with those who are inclined to read them. Finally, I would advise each and every person to prepare a living will as you would a normal will so that your families might be spared the pain and anguish of having to decide what care measures you would want should a grave or terminal illness occur. Had Terri Schiavo done so, her family and many others would have been spared from the bitter, divisive, and expensive series of legal battles which followed, which were the real extraordinary burden to society in her case.
James M. Gebel Jr., M.D., M.S., F.A.H.A.
For those interested in this case I share the debate that led Dr. Gebel to refute Fr. Cekada who holds that Terri Schiavo should have had her feeding tube removed and that Michael Schiavo had every right to do so.
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Dear Father Cekada,
I am writing to beg you to clarify your comments concerning the death of Terri Schiavo.
You quoted the 16th-century Dominican theologian Vittoria as follows:
"If a sick man can take food or nourishment with a certain hope of life, he is required to take food as he would be required to give it to one who is sick. However, if the depression of spirits is so severe and there is present grave consternation in the appetitive power so that only with the greatest effort and as though through torture can the sick man take food, this is to be reckoned as an impossibility and therefore, he is excused, at least from mortal sin.
How do we know what state her spirits were in?
Has it been proved that there was grave consternation in Terris appetitive power?
Was Terris feeding achieved only with the greatest effort and through torture?
If the answer to all this is I dont know, or no, then every Catholic should fight such a murder.
No doctor ever made such claims about Terri Schiavo. As a matter of fact, those on the side of Michael Schiavo bragged about how healthy Terri was, saying this showed that she had been given great care.
But even if all of the above were true, the theologian you quoted said that even then, one who denies such essentials is excused, at least from mortal sin.
Vittoria is saying then, that some sin could be involved.
And that is if all of the above were true. If it is not, then Vittoria clearly states: "If a sick man can take food or nourishment with a certain hope of life, he is required to take food as he would be required to give it to one who is sick.
Terris survival for 15 years is solid proof of her certain hope of life.
Terri was not in a coma, she was not terminally ill. She was not hooked up to any life support machines. The only support Terri needed to stay alive was the same support necessary to all mankind, nutrition and hydration. The issue here is why food and water was denied this disabled woman.
Michael Schiavo and the courts have always stated that the sole reason for denying her food and water was so that she would die. This was a healthy human being who was starved to death because she was mentally disabled.
The Church has always had the highest respect for life. The examples you have given prove that. Your interpretation of them is troubling indeed.
You claim that the adulterous husband, who denied his Catholic wife not only food and water, but access to the Sacraments had the sole right before God to withhold her food and water. Terris mother was told she would be arrested if she so much as placed an ice chip on her dying daughters lips.
As to the expense of Terris food and hydration, such treatment can and is often administered at home. Even if that were not the case the story of Dives and Lazarus verses the Good Samaritan is very clear.
The elderly, the ill, and the disabled of America have every reason to fear. Though the plaque on the statue in New York Harbor says, Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, these are empty words when the strong dispose of the weak and the culture of death has become the law of the land.
We offer our prayers for Terris immortal soul, while remembering the words of St. Matthew, Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul."
I look forward to hearing from you Father.
May God bless you,
Cathy Beil
P.S. I am still hoping to read those documents you told me about in February.
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Father Cekada's Reply:
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Dear Cathy,
Thanks for your e-mail.
1. The Vittoria quote was intended to (a) show the origin of the teaching
on extraordinary means and (b) provide some examples of what were considered
extraordinary means.
2. It was the quote from Pius XII that provides the general principle that
must be applied and that defines the term "extraordinary means" those
which involve "grave burdens for oneself or another."
This, not the Vittoria quote, was the starting point for my discussion.
3. Providing nutrition and hydration artificially on a permanent basis does
indeed constitute a grave burden:
"Routine medical practice today utilizes intravenous feeding in in a
countless variety of cases. Certainly the physician regards this procedure
as an ordinary means of safeguarding life. It is obviously capable of being
carried out , under normal hospital conditions, without any notable
inconvenience. For these reasons, I would regard recourse to intravenous
feeding, in the case of typical hospitalized patients, as an ordinary and
morally compulsory procedure.
"The above statement applies, as stated, to routine hospital cases and where
the procedure is envisioned as a temporary means of carrying a person
through a critical period. Surely any effort to sustain life permanently in
this fashion would constitute a grave hardship."Charles McFadden OSA,
Medical Ethics, 4th ed., (Philadelphia: 1956), imprimatur by Cardinal
O'Hara.
Accordingly, when it is envisioned that such means will need to be employed
permanently, they become "extraordinary" and there is no moral requirement
to continue their use.
4. Below is a letter to The Remnant that expands upon some of my original
remarks.
5. I lost the note regarding the documentation you mention. Did it concern
SSPX's use of the John XXIII Mass, or was it something else?
In Christ,
Father Cekada
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Note: Father Cekadas letter to the Editor of the Remnant Newspaper is at the end of this post.
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I replied to Father Cekadas email:
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Dear Fr. Cekada,
Thank you for your prompt reply to my questions. From that reply, it appears that we agree that Vittorias teaching did not apply to Terri Schiavo and that you used it only to: (a) show the origin of the teaching on extraordinary means, and (b) provide some examples, none of which applied to Terri Schiavo.
You wrote, It was the quote from Pius XII that provides the general principle that must be applied and that defines the term "extraordinary means" those which involve "grave burdens for oneself or another." This, not the Vittoria quote, was the starting point for my discussion.
I have read the document from which that quote came. Again Father, I would ask you to clarify the relationship between that document and Terri Schiavo. The quote was taken from Pius XIIs Address to an International Congress of Anesthesiologists.
http://www.lifeissues.net/writers/doc/doc_31resuscitation.html The issue here was not concerning food and hydration. The questions the pope was addressing were three and all of them were restricted to resuscitation, not food and drink.
Since you refer to that example however, I would ask you to again read other sections of the same document. Although the pope says that resuscitation is not necessary in all cases he stresses the fact that,
There is not involved here a case of direct disposal of the life of the patient, nor of euthanasia in any way: this would never be licit. Even when it causes the arrest of circulation, the interruption of attempts at resuscitation is never more than an indirect cause of the cessation of life, and one must apply in this case the principle of double effect and of "voluntarium in cause."
Of course, everyone knows that in Terri Schiavos case the withdrawal of food and water was the direct cause of her death. Hers was not a matter of resuscitation.
In the same paragraph as the quote that you used to justify Terri Schiavos murder, the pope said this, We shall willingly answer these three questions. But before examining them we would like to set forth the principles that will allow formulation of the answer.
Natural reason and Christian morals say that man (and whoever is entrusted with the task of taking care of his fellowman) has the right and the duty in case of serious illness to take the necessary treatment for the preservation of life and health. This duty that one has toward himself, toward God, toward the human community, and in most cases toward certain determined persons, derives from well ordered charity, from submission to the Creator, from social justice and even from strict justice, as well as from devotion toward one's family.
The quote you used follows those words. Now we already know from Vittorias statement that food and water was not extraordinary in the Schiavo case and Pius XII was not speaking of food and water, but about resuscitating a patient with artificial means. Terri Schiavo did not need resuscitation. She was not on a respirator, which was the machine these anesthesiologists were concerned about, when they asked clarification from Pius XII.
In the Remnant article you wrote, Moral theologians categorize as extraordinary those treatments that are physically painful, invasive, repulsive, emotionally disturbing, dangerous, rarely successful, expensive, etc.
None of the above applies to Terri Schiavo except perhaps expense, but then her husband had received a large amount of money for her care.
You then quote from a 1956 article concerning temporary intravenous feeding and permanent, "The above statement applies, as stated, to routine hospital cases and where the procedure is envisioned as a temporary means of carrying a person through a critical period. Surely any effort to sustain life permanently in this fashion would constitute a grave hardship."Charles McFadden OSA, Medical Ethics, 4th ed., (Philadelphia: 1956), imprimatur by Cardinal O'Hara.
Surely you would agree Father that medicine has advanced tremendously since 1956. Technology has come far in the past 50 years. What constituted a grave burden in 1956 is not necessarily a burden today.
Many extraordinary procedures from 1956 are ordinary today. In 1945 a Gallop Poll showed that most people had never heard of television, it was extraordinary. Today it is an ordinary, albeit evil influence in many homes. In past decades, women often died in childbirth. At risk mothers today might be put in a hospital till the birth, which is very expensive. Premature babies cost millions as modern technology devises ways to keep these little ones alive in prenatal units around the world. According to your teaching these innocents should be taken off the machines for the expense is a drain on society.
What about the pregnant woman, who learns that her unborn child is going to be severely disabled imposing a heavy burden on their families or on society. According to your teaching, that mother would have the right to, if not abort the child, to starve it after its birth. Based on hardship and expense and that child should not live.
Your entire thesis seems to be based on cost. And so I ask Father, what is the price of life these days? What is the dollar amount that we finally tell our suffering loved ones is too much?
I thought Traditional Catholics, more than most, were aware of the great benefits derived from sacrifice. We know that grave burdens, embraced as Christ embraced His for us, lead us to an eternal reward.
You also did not address the issue of why Terris mother was threatened with arrest if she so much as put an ice chip to her dying daughters lips. Surely that was not considered extraordinary?
You wrote that, Accordingly, when it is envisioned that such means will need to be employed permanently, they become "extraordinary" and there is no moral requirement to continue their use.
The only thing that was proved to be permanent was that Terri would be disabled. There were nurses and doctors who came forward and testified that she could swallow. She did not drool; she was able to swallow her own saliva. But her adulterous, husband, only 3 months after receiving over a million dollars for her care, ordered all rehabilitation stopped. When he found out that a nurse was feeding her Jello, he had her fired. Judge Greer said in 2003, I do not want anyone feeding that girl!
Since when is rehabilitation considered extraordinary? The sole purpose of rehabilitation is so that the person can do on their own what they cannot at that time.
You wrote in the Remnant article, Nowadays the latter burden extraordinary expense is mostly hidden, because "someone else pays for it" i.e., you and I and everyone else foot the bills through health insurance premiums, doctor malpractice premiums and high taxes. This is now a grave burden on society. If someone wants to make every effort to sustain life for as long as possible in a body that is obviously shutting down for good, he is free to pay for extraordinary means himself but it is wrong for him to impose this burden on everyone else.
But it was Michael Schiavo who imposed such a burden on society, not his suffering wife, Terri. He got the money and then wanted rid of the reason for his windfall.
None of our care would be so expensive if it werent for people like Michael Schiavo, who sought to benefit from his wifes misfortune and then be rid of her once that benefit was his.
You wrote, Had Terri Schiavo not received a $750,000 ³malpractice² settlement i.e., some trial lawyers shook down an insurance company, which in turn calculated that it would be cheaper to pay them and the Schiavos off, rather than gamble with the Oprah-watching idiots in the average jury pool you can bet that her husband and parents would not have sold off their own houses to sustain her for all this time.
With all due respect Father, we do not know this. And to claim such as a reason or excuse to decide such an issue is relying on ones own thoughts and emotions rather than facts. The outcome of such a bet will have no bearing on our duty to the weak of the world.
You wrote, Instead, you and I not merely the Schiavos or the Schindlers got stuck with the "grave burden" of paying for it. If something is immoral in the whole affair, it is surely this.
Is that Catholic teaching or emotion? My family and I are unduly burdened by the unfair tax laws and the inflated insurance and medical rates we are bound to pay. And yet that immorality pales in comparison to the execution by starvation of Terri Schiavo.
As far as Michael Schiavos sole right before God to decide her fate, you wrote, In the Schiavo case, however, the civil courts examined the matter and repeatedly reaffirmed Mr. Schiavo's rights.
Yes Father and these same civil courts have given mothers the right to kill babies in their womb. I dont think they have shown competence in natural or moral law and I would hope that our priests would look fully at the issue before giving credence to the immoral civil courts.
You condemn those who oppose her execution and wanted her adulterous husband removed as guardian as being emotional. You write as an alternative to this adulterous husband, Assign headship of the wife to the relative deemed most worthy by the majority of members of an Internet chat room? Isnt that emotional rhetoric Father?
You say, Even a wicked husband retains certain rights before God. I agree Father, but let us not forget while guarding that wicked husbands rights -- his wife who has been violated by his refusal to grant her care and by his infidelity, also retains certain rights before God.
You wrote, The tendency of so many traditionalists to resolve moral or theological questions be it the Schiavo case, the Indult, excommunications, schism, heresy, the Fatima consecration, the sede vacante dispute, etc. by following emotional reactions, rather than by seeking out an objective principle that the Church has laid down, makes them ripe for deception by the ignorant and manipulation by the cynical.
I couldnt agree more. And it was on this discussion we had in February that you were going to send me information that proved me incorrect in using the example of Pope Liberius excommunication of St. Athanasius and the condemnation of several councils of Pope Honorius I as a heretic. You said that I couldnt use those examples to compare the situation of the church today. I was trying to resolve an issue by seeking out an objective principle the Church already laid down.
You also promised to send me information that would refute my belief that the ordinary magisterium is only infallible when they teach in union with the each other. My information came from the 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia which states that the body of bishops is infallible and each bishop is not so, save in proportion as he teaches in communion and concert with the entire Episcopal body.
Again Father, I thank you for your reply and look forward to hearing from you.
God bless you,
Cathy Beil
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Fr. Cekadas (unemotional?) Reply
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Dear Cathy,
Bishop Sanborn is doing something on the Honorius/Liberius question. I'll forward it to you when it's completed.
As regards your comments on the Schiavo case:
1. In the quote, Pius XII enunciated the general moral principles to be applied, not merely particular ones applicable only to the narrow question of resuscitation.
Otherwise, you would have to maintain that his statements like "Normally one is held to use only ordinary means" or "life, health, all temporal activities are in fact subordinated to spiritual ends" apply only to the specific case of resuscitation, and that in other cases therefore: a) One is not held to use even ordinary means to preserve life and b) Life is not subordinated to spiritual ends.
Good luck.
2. The expense of Terri Schiavo's maintenance was "socialized" through wealth redistribution $750,000 via the litigation/insurance company shakedown, and other hidden costs we can only guess at via tax and other insurance subsidies.
(This should be obvious to anyone with the last name Brueggemann.)
Michael Schiavo and the Schindlers were very generous in spending everyone else's money.
Such expense is a grave burden on society, and as such falls within the definition of "extraordinary means." There is accordingly no moral obligation to continue it.
3. A wicked husband still maintains his headship over the wife before God and his "domestic and paternal authority."
He has the right to say yes or no to ice chips and Jello, unless and until an ecclesiastical or civil court, for a grave and just reason, legitimately impedes him from exercising his right.
Compromise on that principle, and the family is toast.
4. Finally, the larger problem I see is that lay traditionalists like you are trying to turn something into a mortal sin that isn't.
You have no business doing so. You don't have the training in moral theology that priests have, and you certainly don't have the confessional experience we do in applying moral principles.
But this doesn't stop you from boldly expressing your "opinion" on the moral issues in the Schiavo case, because in the practical order you simply cannot accept the fact that a priest probably knows a lot more that you do about certain subjects chief among them, moral theology.
I am supposed to make the distinctions for you between right and wrong, because I have the training, the sacramental graces and the experience to do so.
But because do not have the humility to recognize this in practice, you will go on endlessly arguing for your "opinion," rendering exchanges like this a waste of the priest's time, and in the process, I fear, turning traditional Catholics into members of the Church of Lay Opinion.
Be assured of my prayers.
Yours in Christ,
Father Cekada
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I asked Fr. Brendan M. Dardis from St. Pius X Church in Cincinnati to read Fr. Cekadas opinion on Terri Schiavo. Fr. Dardis actually went to Florida, led Rosary processions, and spoke with Terris parents and her brother. He based his opinions on Catholic Teachings and the facts of Terris case. Note his title and read what he wrote an article entitled: EXTRAORDINARY MEANNESS:
"You have asked for my reaction to Fr. Cekada's opinion contained in a recent bulletin concerning Terri Schiavo's death. I have read his words which he set forth "for the record." My first impression is that he suffers from cognitive dissonance.
First, the quotation from Vittoria is not applicable to the Schiavo case. She was not tortured by being fed; her torture began when she was prevented from being fed. The greatest effort was not being expended on her; she had won a million dollar lawsuit precisely for her care. Even the oral introduction of food and water was denied Terri Schiavo, a means of preserving life which can never, under any circumstances, be denied to an animal, much less a human person. Terri Schiavo was denied the most ordinary of means. Her death was not hastened by the removal of a feeding tube, it was caused by starvation. To deny that her death was anything less than passive euthanasia is absurd on its face, and her case sets a frightening precedent.
Second, to claim that Michael Schiavo had the sole right before God to determine his wife's fate would be laughable if it were not so tragic. He woke up in the arms of another woman the morning his wife's feeding tube was removed. He denied all therapies for his wife. He prevented all the standard diagnostic tests that could well have determined his wife's true state. His wife suffered serious ulcers on her buttocks and thighs because he prevented the nurses from turning her. Her teeth were rotten because no one was allowed to brush them and no dentist ever attended her. The husband stands to inherit the estate of his wife. At which point do unfaithfulness, abuse, neglect and greed create a conflict of interest so serious that one's marital rights are abdicated? Apparently, never.
Third, the means were not extraordinary. To whom, it should be asked, were Terri Schiavo's care and feeding overly burdensome. Her family offered to take care of her. To them she was not too burdensome. When her case became widely known, her husband was offered relief from a number of sources. He refused all such offers. Perhaps life was too burdensome for Terri herself. That sort of argument, however, can bear no moral weight because she was not in any apparent pain or discomfort and could not express her own desires. Or perhaps her life was too burdensome to society. Such an argument seems quite silly when one considers the rarity of her case.
Moreover, if we claim that the cost of food and a hospital bed are overly burdensome to our society, we are liars. Consider the cost of all the poor individuals in states the same or similar to Terri Schiavo's and compare that to the money spent on frivolous entertainments and sports in this society. Our duty is what has become a burden. The burden does not appear to have been too great on Terri Schiavo's husband either. He won a large malpractice lawsuit to pay for her care and was living in a fulltime adulterous affair. One can almost hear him groan under the great load he suffered.
Finally, we can consider what ought to have been done in Terri Schiavo's case. All the doctors and nurses who filed affidavits should have been listened to. The video clip you showed me was very strong evidence that Terri Schiavo was not in vegetative state, persistent or otherwise, but a thorough diagnosis was never arrived at. One does not lose one's humanity when one loses a human power, be it physical or cognitive. The noble course for Mr. Schiavo, if he could not bring himself to care for his wife, would have been to give Terri to her family. The armed police state stood between a sick woman and her mother, preventing the mother from bringing a glass of water to the suffering daughter. Anyone who countenances such a scene lacks moral clarity at best or is equivalent to the Nazi SS at worst.
I have copied a few remarks for you to read. The "Starving for a Fair Diagnosis" by Fr. Johansen is especially good on Tern's medical and legal history. The Statement from the NCCB on nutrition and hydration is also very good. It expands on Pope Pius XII's short statement, and it takes many modern medical advances into account. It is a wonder that the nation's bishops could have published something so good, considering how corrupt and modernist they are. The statement by Renato Cardinal Martino, head of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, includes the opinion that "whoever stands idly by without trying to prevent the death of Terri Schindler Schiavo becomes an accomplice to murder." That very sentiment was what motivated my going to Florida (if we ever have a spare minute, I will tell you some good and some sorry stories from my trip). The Christian Medical & Dental Associations press release states: "Removing Tern's tube was done simply to remove a burdensome patient." Even the Protestants can get it right sometimes. Finally, the article by Wesley J. Smith shows how modern ethicists argue that one can be human but a non-person at same time and the connections between euthanasia and abortionchilling stuff.
I am sure you have found other good articles on this sad subject. There is certainly a plethora of choice. Don't forget that when we were in our mothers' wombs, we were all fed by a tube, we were unable to express our desires, we lacked the ability to speak and abstract, and we would have needed morphine every bit as much as Terri Schiavo needed her morphine drip to prevent our crying out in pain if our nutrition and hydration had been blocked."
4/14/2005
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Fr. Cekada's article in Remnant:
To the Editor,
My letter on the Terri Schiavo case that appeared in your previous issue
was widely circulated and prompted many comments from traditionalists
nearly all negative and emotional.
Most objections were rooted in misconceptions about extraordinary means,
or in a disgust with the actions of Terri Schiavo's husband.
I would appreciate the opportunity to expand upon both these points, and
then add a more general observation.
1. EXTRAORDINARY MEANS. The resolution of the moral issue in the case hinges
upon the definition of the term "extraordinary" not as the term is defined
by medical science, but rather as it is defined by moral theologians.
Pius XII's statement defines extraordinary means as those which "involve
any grave burdens for oneself or another."
The emphasis, then, is not on the specific procedure that is performed, but
rather upon the burden that results from performing it.
Moral theologians categorize as extraordinary those treatments that are physically painful, invasive, repulsive, emotionally disturbing, dangerous,
rarely successful, expensive, etc.
Nowadays the latter burden extraordinary expense is mostly hidden,
because "someone else pays for it" i.e., you and I and everyone else foot
the bills through health insurance premiums, doctor malpractice premiums and
high taxes.
This is now a grave burden on society. If someone wants to make every
effort to sustain life for as long as possible in a body that is obviously
shutting down for good, he is free to pay for extraordinary means himself
but it is wrong for him to impose this burden on everyone else.
Had Terri Schiavo not received a $750,000 ³malpractice² settlement i.e.,
some trial lawyers shook down an insurance company, which in turn calculated
that it would be cheaper to pay them and the Schiavos off, rather than
gamble with the Oprah-watching idiots in the average jury pool you can bet
that her husband and parents would not have sold off their own houses to
sustain her for all this time.
Instead, you and I not merely the Schiavos or the Schindlers got stuck
with the "grave burden" of paying for it.
If something is immoral in the whole affair, it is surely this.
2. WHO DECIDES? Mrs. Schiavo¹s husband (as horrible a person as he seems to
be) and not her parents had the right before God to determine whether
these means should have continued to be used.
A husband does not somehow automatically lose his headship of the household
or his God-given "domestic and paternal authority² if he becomes a moral
reprobate.
An ecclesiastical or civil court may for a grave reason, of course, prevent
him from exercising his authority.
In the Schiavo case, however, the civil courts examined the matter and
repeatedly reaffirmed Mr. Schiavo's rights.
The alternative to this is what? Allow in-laws automatic headship over the
wife when they believe the husband is a "moral reprobate"? Have those
paragons of family values congressmen legislate the rules? Assign
headship of the wife to the relative deemed most worthy by the majority of
members of an Internet chat room?
Even a wicked husband retains certain rights before God.
3. EMOTION OR PRINCIPLE? The negative response to both these points was
almost without exception based on emotion.
This I find very disturbing because the first reaction a Catholic lay
or clerical should have when confronted with a complex moral or
theological problem is to find the principle that applies what, in other
words, is the standard the Church (not my emotions, directed by Michael
Savage) uses to separate virtue from sin, or truth from error, on any
particular issue.
In most cases, the right principle and the correct definition of its terms
can be found in a theology book somewhere, even though it may take some time
and priest with good Latin to find it.
The tendency of so many traditionalists to resolve moral or theological
questions be it the Schiavo case, the Indult, excommunications, schism,
heresy, the Fatima consecration, the sede vacante dispute, etc. by
following emotional reactions, rather than by seeking out an objective
principle that the Church has laid down, makes them ripe for deception by
the ignorant and manipulation by the cynical.
The reactions of so many in the Schiavo case make me fear that when it
comes to deceiving the elect, the Antichrist won¹t have to work too hard.
The Rev. Anthony Cekada
St. Gertrude the Great Church
West Chester, Ohio
www.sgg.org
www.traditionalmass.org