Church Positions Regarding the Sanctity of Human Life

The Church's teaching about human life is based on Holy Tradition, including the Scriptures as a primary resource and the ongoing teaching and interpretation of the Orthodox Faith. Life is a gift of God in the formation of the created world. All life is precious, but God uniquely creates human life in the "image and likeness of God." Human life as such is deserving of deep respect and individual human beings are to be treated in accordance to their inherent human dignity.

The Sanctity of Human Life

A major and overarching concern of the Church arises with its commitment to
the God-given sanctity of human life. Some of the develop­ments of the
biological manipulation of human life, though promising amazing therapeutic
achieve­ments, may also be understood and undermining respect for the integrity
of human existence. Others may be seen as providing a new means of healing human
illness. Discering the difference is the challenge the Church faces in
developing its teaching on these newly appearing issues.

Human Life

The Church’s teaching about human life is based on Holy Tradition, including
the Scriptures as a primary resource and the ongoing teaching and interpretation
of the Orthodox Faith. Life is a gift of God in the formation of the created
world. All life is precious, but God uniquely creates human life in the “image
and likeness of God.” Human life as such is deserving of deep respect and
individual human beings are to be treated in accordance to their inherent human
dignity.

Thus, racism, unjust prejudicial treatment of men and women, genocide, forms
of sexual exploita­tion, domestic violence, child abuse, rape, theft or
destruction of legitimately owned property, deceptions and deceit, environmental
plunder and other such manipulative behaviors violate the human dignity of
others. Human life as a gift of God should be respected. Some specific issues
are the following.

Donation of Organs

Although nothing in the Orthodox tradition requires the faithful to donate
their organs to others, never the less, this practice may be considered an act
of love, and as such is encour­aged. The decision to donate a duplicate organ,
such as a kidney, while the donor is living, requires much consideration and
should be made in con­sultation with medical professionals and one’s spiritual
father. The donation of an organ from a deceased person is also an act of love
that helps to make possible for the recipient a longer, fuller life. Such
donations are acceptable if the deceased donor had willed such action, or if
surviving relatives permit it providing that it was in harmony with the desires
of the deceased. Such actions can be approved as an expression of love and if
they express the self-determination of the donor. In all cases, respect for the
body of the donor should be maintained.

Organ transplants should never be commercial­ized nor coerced nor take placed
without proper consent, nor place in jeopardy the identity of the donor or
recipient, such as the use of animal organs. Nor should the death of the donor
be hastened in order to harvest organs for trans­plantation to another person.

Cremation

Because the Orthodox Faith affirms the funda­mental goodness of creation, it
understands the body to be an integral part of the human person and the temple
of the Holy Spirit, and expects the resurrection of the dead. The Church
consid­ers cremation to be the deliberate desecration and destruction of what
God has made and ordained for us. The Church instead insists that the body be
buried so that the natural physical process of decomposition may take place. The
Church does not grant funerals, either in the sanctuary, or at the funeral home,
or at any other place, to persons who have chosen to be cre­mated. Additionally,
memorial services with kolyva (boiled wheat) are not allowed in such instances,
inasmuch as the similarity between the “kernel of wheat” and the “body” has been
intentionally destroyed.

Medical Developments and the Church

With high frequency, new developments in the area of the life sciences appear
in our technolog­ically advanced culture. The Church welcomes efforts and
techniques that contribute to healing of human diseases. Yet, many of these
advances raise moral questions. Some of the Church’s responses to these
developments are based on older issues for which the Church has clear and
unambiguous guidelines. Other responses are not so evident.

Thus, many of these developments form chal­lenges to Orthodox Christian
spiritual concerns and moral values. In numerous cases, the Church is still in
the process of clarifying its response. The following serve to indicate the
general positions and direction of thought in the Orthodox Church.

Sexuality

The Orthodox Church recognizes marriage as the only moral and spiritually
appropriate context for sexual relations. Thus, all other forms of sexual
activity such as fornication, adultery, homo­sexuality, lesbianism, pornography,
all forms of prostitution, and similar forms of behavior are sins that are
inappropriate for the Orthodox Christian. Marriage is only conducted and
recognized in the Orthodox Church as taking place between a man and a woman.
Same-sex marriages are a contradiction in terms. The Orthodox Church does not
allow for same-sex marriages.

Abortion

The Church from the very beginning of existence has sought to protect “the
life in the womb” and has considered abortion as a form of murder in its
theology and canons. Orthodox Christians are admonished not to encourage women
to have abortions, nor to assist in the committing of abortion. Those who
perform abortions and those who have sought it are doing an immoral deed, and
are called to repentance.

Suicide

Suicide, the taking of one’s own life, is self-­murder and as such, a sin.
More importantly, it may be evidence of a lack of faith in our loving,
forgiving, sustaining God. If a person has com­mitted suicide as a result of a
belief that: such an action is rationally or ethically defensible, the Orthodox
Church denies that person a Church funeral, because such beliefs and actions
sepa­rate a person from the community of faith. The Church shows compassion,
however, on those who have taken their own life as a result of mental illness or
severe emotional stress, when a condition of impaired rationality can be
verified by a physician.

Autopsy

When a person dies for reasons that are uncer­tain, a qualified medical
examiner may, with the permission of the next of kin, perform an autopsy to
determine the cause of death. In some states, this is required by law. In all
cases, however, the Orthodox Church expects that the body of the deceased be
treated with respect and dignity.

http://www.goarch.org/en/ourfaith/articles/article8083.asp

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