“Motu Proprio” establishing the
Pontifical Academy for Life
VITAE MYSTERIUM
(The Mystery Of Life)
11 February 1994
THE MYSTERY OF LIFE, and of human life in
particular, is attracting the increased attention of experts who are drawn by
the extraordinary opportunities for investigation that scientific and
technological advances offer their research today. While this new situation
opens up fascinating horizons for intervention at the sources of life itself,
it also gives rise to a variety of new moral questions that man cannot ignore
without the risk of taking steps that could prove irreversible. With this
awareness, the Church, which by Christ's mandate must enlighten the consciences
of men regarding the moral requirements inherent in their very nature, "having
taken account of the data of research and technology. . . intends to put
forward by virtue of its evangelical mission and apostolic duty, the moral
teaching corresponding to the dignity of the person and to his or her integral
vocation."[1] This is a particularly urgent task in our day, if one
considers that "the Church today lives a fundamental aspect of her mission
in lovingly and generously accepting every human being, especially those who
are weak and sick. This is made all the more necessary as a 'culture of death'
threatens to take control."[2] The Church has been active for many
centuries in the health-care sector and has frequently anticipated state
interventions. Through the assistance and pastoral services she provides, she
continues today to proclaim the "Gospel of life" in changing
historical and cultural circumstances, relying on teachings that are faithful
to the Gospel truth and attentive to the "signs of the times." In the
health-care sector, she is particularly aware of the need to broaden all
possible knowledge at the service of human life, so that where technology is
unable to provide exhaustive answers, "the law of love" may come to
light. This law inspires all her missionary activity and urges her to express
in a living and practical way the message of Christ, who came that we might
have life and have it more abundantly (cf. Jn
10:10).When on February 11, 1985 I established the Pontifical Commission that
now is the Pontifical Council for Pastoral Assistance to Health Care Workers, I
pointed out one of its objectives: "to spread, explain and defend the
Church's teachings on the subject of health care, and to encourage their
penetration into health-care practices."[3] This goal was confirmed by
this dicastery in the apostolic constitution Pastor
Bonus.[4] All health-care workers are required to be properly trained in morals
and the problems of bioethics,[5] to show clearly that science and technology,
at the service of the human person and his fundamental rights, contribute to
the overall good of man and to fulfilling the divine plan of salvation.[6]In
order to achieve these goals, I have gathered together the suggestions made by
those chiefly responsible for pastoral assistance to health-care workers,
realizing that in serving life the Church and science cannot fail to cross
paths.[7] With this motu proprio
I am establishing the Pontifical Academy for Life, which is autonomous in
accordance with its statutes. However it is connected to and works in close
relationship with the Pontifical Council for Pastoral Assistance to Health Care
Workers. It will have the specific task to study and to provide information and
training about the principal problems of law and biomedicine pertaining to the
promotion and protection of life, especially in the direct relationship they
have with Christian morality and the directives of the Church's magisterium. The Pontifical Academy for Life, located in
the Vatican, will be chaired by a president whom I shall appoint, assisted by a
council and an ecclesiastical adviser. It will be the task of the Pontifical
Academy's president to convoke the assembly, to encourage its activities, to
approve its annual programs, and to supervise its administration in accordance
with its own statutes, to be approved by the Apostolic See. The members of the
Academy, appointed by me, will represent the various branches of the biomedical
sciences and those that are most closely related to problems concerning the
promotion and protection of life. It is also planned to associate members by
correspondence. As I invoke the divine assistance on the activities of the new
Academy, which I shall not fail to follow with keen interest, I am pleased to
impart a special apostolic blessing to all its members and associates and to
all those who will strive to make this initiative as successful as possible.
ENDNOTES
1
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, instruction <Donum
Vitae>, n. 1.
2 Apostolic
exhortation <Christifideles Laici,>
n. 38.
3 Motu proprio <Dolentium Hominum>, n. 6.
4 Art. 153.
par. 3-4.
5 Cf.
Special Assembly for Europe of the Synod of Bishops, 1991, <Final
Declaration,> n. 10.
6 Cf. pastoral
constitution <Gaudium et Spes>
n. 35.
7 Second
Vatican Ecumenical Council, <Message to Men of Thought and Science>,
December 8, 1965.