Roberto Dell’Oro, a member of the Vatican’s Pontifical Academy for Life, publicly urged support for legal abortion prior to the possibility of fetal pain during a recent panel discussion sponsored this month by Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.
During an Oct.12 panel discussion, entitled “Confronting the Dobbs Decision: A Conversation About the Legality of Abortion,” Dell’Oro, a bioethicist and theologian at the university, and two other LMU panelists criticized the U.S. Supreme Court’s majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Organization, the 2022 landmark decision that overturned Roe v. Wade.
In prepared remarks, Dell’Oro attacked the Dobbs ruling for failing to uphold democracy, which “maximizes rather than restricts a space of personal freedom for all citizens, including women.”
At the same time, the bioethicist also suggested that Roe went too far when it held that fetal viability is the key moment when states can restrict abortion. Fetal viability, the period when an unborn child can survive outside his or her mother’s womb, is pegged at about 24 weeks’ gestation.
By comparison, the Charlotte Lozier Institute, a pro-life research center, reports that an unborn child can feel pain by 15 weeks, “if not earlier,” while other experts have placed that boundary after 24 weeks.
“I submit that the ability of the fetus to feel pain represents the point at which the legal right to choice ought to end,” said Dell’Oro, who billed this language as a “compromise.”
Until that moment, the freedom, autonomy and dignity of women call for a legal right to abortion, he contended.
The director of the Bioethics Institute at the Jesuit-run university, Dell’Oro was appointed to the Pontifical Academy for Life in 2015 and was promoted this month to “ordinary member.”
He organized the panel and was joined by Brietta Clark, an expert on health-care law at Loyola Law School who has written publicly in support of abortion rights, and Jennifer Gumer, a professor at the university’s Bioethics Institute.
During the discussion following the panelists’ opening remarks, sources told the Register that the organizers of the event were criticized by a member of the audience for failing to include even one voice that represented the position of Pope Francis and the Catholic Church. The Catechism of the Catholic Church authoritatively affirms “the moral evil of every procured abortion” and states, “This teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable” (2271).
The panelists did not immediately respond to that concern. But, later, Dell’Oro acknowledged that “views were left out” and suggested another forum would be forthcoming.
Andrew DiCrisi, a senior LMU philosophy student who was in the audience, told the Register he was “angered” and “confused” by Dell’Oro’s remarks.
“Professor Dell’Oro is a Catholic bioethicist and a member of the Pontifical Academy for Life,” he said. “He might have prefaced his remarks by saying, ‘I don’t like this, but the culture is in such a bad state here in California that the best we can do is choose the lesser of two evils with a compromise.’ He didn’t say that. He said, ‘This is the law I support.’ If he is going to make this claim, he needs to give his reasoning as a Catholic.”
DiCrisi also questioned the practical impact of Dello’Oro’s proposed law restricting legal abortion to the period before the unborn child experiences pain and expressed doubt that it would be ethically preferable to Roe’s standard of fetal viability.
“Mainstream scientific perspectives” maintain that fetal brain development does not allow for the experience of pain “until after 24 weeks,” DiCrisi noted, and, by then, most abortions have already taken place.
The Register reached out to Dell’Oro via email, asking him to clarify his position on legal abortion and to explain whether he was in conformity with the statutes of the Pontifical Academy for Life that require members to support the Church’s magisterium. He did not respond to the email query. But after he answered his university telephone, he said, “I don’t want to” answer questions.
“I can’t answer to every single journalist” who calls, he added, and suggested this reporter contact the university’s representative, Mason Stockstill, who did not return the Register’s call by press time.
Catholic scholars who were apprised of Dell’Oro’s remarks also raised concerns about the substance of his argument.
“The professor is right that ‘viability goes too far’; in truth, it is an utterly arbitrary criterion for identifying when unborn children become (as it were) entitled to a right to life,” Gerard Bradley, professor at the University of Notre Dame Law School, told the Register.
“But so too is feeling pain; it obviously cannot be the definitive marker of when a human person with rights comes to be, for non-human animals feel pain just as we do.
“Some human beings are impervious to pain (the anesthetized, for example) and no one suggests that they are no longer humans with a right to life,” added Bradley, who noted Justice Samuel Alito’s comments on the arbitrary nature of fetal viability in the majority opinion in Dobbs.
Bradley speculated that Dell’Oro might be carving out a “middle ground” on abortion in order to “seem reasonable” as abortion-rights activists use the Dobbs decision to demand access to the procedure until birth and some GOP lawmakers reconsider more restrictive laws.
But Catholic bioethicists who take this path “are fooling themselves,” Bradley concluded. “Their sheer arbitrariness puts them high on the list of those who are simply unreasonable on this most important human-rights issue of our era.”
Dell’Oro’s public support for legal abortion will likely increase scrutiny of the Pontifical Academy for Life, which has issued documents and made appointments that repeatedly stirred controversy and raised questions about its commitment to the study of life issues from a Catholic perspective.
The LMU bioethicist is the co-author of a favorable review of Theological Ethics of Life: Scripture, Tradition, Practical Challenges, a 2022 book issued by the Pontifical Academy for Life and published by the Holy See that has been widely understood to support a change in Church teaching on contraception. A link to the review is prominently featured on the Pontifical Academy for Life’s webpage about the book.
A synthesis of the proceedings of a 2021 “interdisciplinary study seminar promoted by the Pontifical Academy for Life,” the volume was criticized by an international group of Catholic experts who posted an open letter in September challenging its scholarship and arguments.
This week, the academy generated fresh headlines when it announced the appointment of Mariana Mazzucato, an Italian-American economist and professor at University College London, who tweeted her support for legal abortion after the Dobbs decision was issued this summer.
The Vatican organization has sought to defend its decision to make Mazzucato a member, issuing a lengthy press release that explained the importance of “dialogue” in the academy’s work and outlined the formal process that led to her appointment.
The statement noted that documents issued by the academy are vetted by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and that appointees are nominated by Pope Francis himself and reviewed by the “Apostolic Nuncio and the Episcopal Conference of the countries where the Academics live and work.”
That was the case with the economist’s nomination, the statement emphasized, “and there were no problems” flagged.
The Pontifical Academy for Life was founded in 1994 by Pope St. John Paul II to study “the principal problems of biomedicine and of law, relative to the promotion and defense of life,” with a specific focus on the “direct relation that they have with Christian morality and the directives of the Church’s Magisterium.”
The academy, under its first president, the towering pro-life pediatrician and geneticist Venerable Jérôme Lejeune, secured bylaws that directed its members to sign a declaration that affirmed their commitment to “bear witness that … every human being is a person” and that, “from the moment the embryo is formed until death, it is the same human being which grows to maturity and dies.”
After the 2016 appointment of Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, its president and chancellor, and the approval of new statutes, however, members were no longer required to sign the pro-life declaration.
But while the updated statutes also do not require that members be Catholic, the appointees should “promote and defend the principles regarding the value of life and dignity of the human person, interpreted in a way that conforms to the Magisterium of the Church.”
Likewise, the statues make clear that membership can be revoked, “in the case of a public and deliberate action or statement manifestly contrary to said principles, or seriously offensive to the dignity and credibility of the Catholic Church and the Academy itself.”
Catholic scholars will be reviewing those statutes as the academy’s members and publications continue to stir questions about the leadership’s commitment to its founding mission and the value of its proceedings for Church leaders seeking guidance on life issues.
“The problem with appointing people who do not share a Catholic worldview and value system is the academy’s positions fail to represent a Catholic mind,” said U.S. moral theologian Christian Brugger.
And when “the body no longer can be trusted to speak in concert with the Gospel, it loses its evangelical purpose.”
The above comes from an Oct. 21 story by Joan Frawley Desmond in the National Catholic Register.
Dell’Oro is a false, heretical Catholic theologian and bioethicist. The Catholic Church ought to excommunicate Dell’Oro and kick him out of the Vatican, and off the LMU faculty– pronto.
Why is this comment down voted?
I am thinking along similar lines… anti Church? Anti Life? Anti Christ?
There is someone who thumbs downs every post regardless of content. You could prove it simply. Post “Sun will rise tomorrow” and you’ll see a thumbs down almost immediately. A good Catholic therapist might help, but I don’t know if he or she is open to that.
The sun’ll come out tomorrow. Bet your bottom dollar that tomorrow there’ll be sun.
(For those of you who still live in California.)
Welp, looking at your ratio I was to speculate that the down voters weren’t big in to “Annie”. But, looking at mine now… not Hamlet or Shakespeare fans? /sarc
Or they did not agree with you.
Don’t take it too hard.
Scripture gets a thumbs down here.
Not everyone is Catholic or pro=life or even Christian.
It’s a com-box, not a community.
I always ignore “down-votes.” They are probably a sign of ignorance, cowardice, and immaturity– and anti-Catholic “Internet Trollers.” I never cast votes– I prefer to make my own comments. And what kind of good and decent human being– supports a Catholic or Christian moral theologian, preaching Child Murder, Abortion– along with flimsy excuses and justifications?
Democracy and freedoms for citizens, is a responsibility, requiring lots of maturity, hard work, virtue, and making necessary sacrifices.”Freedom is not free.” All have equal rights to Life– including helpless, unborn infants. And that also includes a poor, helpless, sick, invalid family nember that you may care for– no euthanasia. All have dignity and equal rights to Life. It does not matter, the stage of fetal development, or the stage of a fatal illness– and ability to feel pain. None of that matters. Patients in a coma, or who have suffered very serious accidents and are in shock and trauma, as well as some with very serious illnesses, and some dementia patients– may not respond in a normal manner to pain. Some may not seem to be aware of pain. The ability of a victim to feel pain has nothing to do with making an evil decision for– and wrongly justifying– selfish, cold-blooded murder. All human life must be respected and protected from conception until natural death. Only God can make a life. And only God can take a life. Respect Life!
I can see where Dell’Oro is coming from. How does one integrate democracy, the “will of the people,” with a sanctity of life ethic, amidst a political culture tending strongly in the direction of the culture of death? He is trying to appeal to some imagined common ground that people of good will might agree on. But good will is in short supply precisely because the culture of death prevails so strongly. Can you imagine our blessed governor standing with Dell’Oro? And the compromise suggested by Dell’Oro is itself a direct attack on the sanctity of life.
This organization is now far from the vision with which is was founded by Pope Saint John Paul II. Please continue to pray for the Vatican and the Pope.
As noted, founded in 1994, the Academy is, or was?, dedicated to “study, information and formation on the principal problems of biomedicine and of law, relative to the promotion and defense of life, above all in the direct relation that they have with Christian morality and the directives of the Church’s Magisterium.” The Academy members are named by the pope. That a Catholic theologian like Dr. Dell’Oro would be promoted to be an “ordinary” member of the Pontifical Academy for Life this month, while defending abortion, is inexplicable and inexcusable. Ora et labora.
Yes, Deacon Anderson– the Academy members are named by the Pope. What does Canon Law say– if we have a Pope who has strayed from Catholic Teaching? Can the College of Cardinals correct him– and make corrections for serious errors such as this? Can the College of Cardinals remove their Papal choice– and choose another to replace him? Any balances to Petrine power– in case of terrible abuses, immorality, or heresy? Or are only religious, moral and political influences and advice possible, for a wayward successor of St. Peter? I think it is probably pretty hopeless…
In response to “Loyola’s Roberto Dell’Oro urges abortion until fetal pain” let me make it perfectly clear, as a Roman Catholic Pro-Life Nurse, that Abortion is a Non Negotiable! Abortion is the murder of the most innocent of innocent, the precious baby made in the Imago Dei in the womb of his/her mother! Abortion is Anti Life! The Pontifical Academy for Life is just what its name says! ALL MEMBERS OF THE PONTIFICAL ACADEMY FOR LIFE MUST BE PRO LIFE AND PRO DIGNITY OF THE HUMAN PERSON MADE IN THE IMAGO DEI! No person should be appointed to the Pontifical Academy for Life who does not believe and profess this! Human Life is a very precious gift from God and is non-negotiable. God gives us the gift of Life and calls us Home, when He, God, the Author of Life is ready to call us Home. No one else has that Authority! Roberto Dell’Oro is wrong and not in compliance with the Magisterium of the Catholic Church and the teachings of the Catholic Church and should not be a member of the Pontifical Academy for Life. This applies to all members of The Pontifical Academy for Life! Thank you, asking Our Blessed Mother to intercede and watch over The Pontifical Academy for Life! God bless you.
Joana Livoti, RN,BS,MS
When our youngest daughter was visiting Catholic universities, choosing which to attend, a parent asked the Dean of one of these, “Are you Jesuit here?” The Dean wryly smiled and explained, “No, we’re Catholic.” Not much has changed in the intervening years.
Common Sense: Remember the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
So, be honest: Where were you 7 months before you were born? If the Golden Rule applies to you, you could have been aborted. Be sure to tell your mother and your children abortion is OK when an innocent baby is thought to be inconvenient.
That is not OK. It is not OK to abort an infant or kill anybody, if you would prefer to not have been born or if you want to end your life.
This evil situation with the Vatican is particularly horrific for California, as Catholics and other Christians are campaigning to persuade voters to vote “NO” on Prop. 1, in the upcoming election. Poor, helpless unborn children need the Vatican’s support. Many will be on Death Row if Prop. 1 gets passed. This is seriously horrible and tragic.