Rodriguez’s comments are some of the most direct from Church leaders in the heavily Catholic region and may reflect a growing concern in the hierarchy about the ramifications of the public health debate over how to deal with the potential epidemic.
Although all forms of abortion are illegal in Honduras, Rodriguez said he was saddened to read a medical professional’s writing apparently in support of “therapeutic abortion,” which is one that is carried out if the life of the mother is in danger or if there is risk of fetal abnormality.
“We should never talk about ‘therapeutic’ abortion,” the cardinal said in his homily at a Feb. 3 Mass in the pilgrimage city of Suyap, according to Honduran media reports.
“Therapeutic abortion doesn’t exist,” he said. “Therapeutic means curing, and abortion cures nothing. It takes innocent lives.”
The Zika virus, which health officials say can also be transmitted by sex in some cases, is blamed for an apparent spike in the number of babies diagnosed with microcephaly. Infants with microcephaly have small heads and abnormal brain growth and suffer from a range of other health problems.
While it’s not clear how widespread the virus is and how likely it is that a fetus will develop abnormalities if exposed to the virus, the World Health Organization declared an international public health emergency Feb. 1.
But since December, government officials in various Latin American countries have been warning women to delay pregnancy until the virus is brought under control. In El Salvador, one health official said women should avoid getting pregnant this year and next year.
The advice to delay pregnancy raises questions for Catholics about using artificial birth control, which is against Church teaching except in certain circumstances. Because discerning those circumstances is like threading “a fine theological needle,” as one theologian told CNN, the bishops in many countries have so far largely avoided making blanket statements on the issue.
The question of aborting fetuses with abnormalities, however, takes the issue to another level.
Abortion rights supporters have been using the crisis as an argument for liberalizing the region’s generally strict abortion laws, and that is putting pressure on Church leaders to remind the flock that direct abortion is never acceptable.
“This is just a way to push laws for the legalization of abortion,” said Danelia Cardona, head of the pro-life office of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Colombia.
Cardona said some would like to make pregnancies affected by the virus eligible for termination by categorizing them as “high risk,” but added that such abortions would still not be allowed under Colombia’s current tough abortion law.