Catholic Insight

Inspired by Truth, Enlightening Minds for the Church in Canada and Throughout the World

Catholic Insight

Inspired by Truth, Enlightening Minds for the Church in Canada and Throughout the World

Is the Covid Sars-2 Vaccine Morally Licit? Formal and Material Co-Operation

A question for all of us, those who may see the vaccine as the prophylactic panacea to bring us back to peace and normality, all the way across that spectrum and widening divide separating many of us, to those adamant that they will never take the hastily approved conspiratorial concoction, come hell or high water. I may give my opinion on that in the midst of these thoughts,
We all must decide in that still small voice our tradition calls our conscience, that act of judgement on our own moral actions, on which I offered some principles from Saint Thomas. Our conscience must be as informed as we might make it, so that we can judge as much in accordance with objective truth.
One of the primary objections to the vaccine is its link to abortion, derived as some of them are from the cell line of an aborted baby decades ago, which raises the question of co-operation in the grave evil of the snuffing out of life – oft by heinous means – before birth.
We must distinguish here between formal and material co-operation, with the key distinction between the two being that in formal co-operation, one’s will is somehow involved in the act, either by commission or omission, while in material co-operation, one’s will may not be involved.
Here in Canada, part of our tax dollars goes towards abortion and a host of other evils, which is, in some remote sense, material co-operation. But it is not formal, for I do not will it. After all, Christ urged Peter to pay the tax for both of them – even miraculously finding a coin in the mouth of a fish  (Mt 17:27) – and we would be hard pressed to argue that the Romans did not get up to a whole lot of evil, Christ’s prophetic reference to Pontius Pilate mixing the blood of the Galileans with their sacrifice, a case in point (Lk 13:1). And perhaps part of that payment went towards the wood and nails and the wages of the soldiers in the Son of God’s own crucifixion.
We are not responsible for everything Trudeau does with our taxes – Trudeau is.
However, if they were to put a box on my tax form prescribing a specific contribution to abortion – or in Trudeau’s own demand that businesses sign support for ‘reproductive rights’ to receive job grants – well, then we’d have to draw the line.
Might a plumber in good conscience fix a water pipe in an abortuary? Or the bathroom?  What of a contractor fixing the walkway, or the sidewalk outside?
And even more, are well doing what we should to stop the holocaust of abortion? Or other evils, now euthanasia, and child mutilation in the name of ‘gender dysphoria’? When does material co-operation – even in not doing what we’re meant to do – become formal, involving our will, and so making us imputable for the act?
This is not easy to discern, and there are no pat a priori answer, besides the obvious cases of direct and formal co-operation in the act itself (which, for abortion, carries the sentence of excommunication, latae sententiae).

To the point at hand, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith offered counsel in the 2008 Instruction, Dignitatis Personae, on the use of vaccines tainted with abortion:

Of course, within this general picture there exist differing degrees of responsibility. Grave reasons may be morally proportionate to justify the use of such “biological material”. Thus, for example, danger to the health of children could permit parents to use a vaccine which was developed using cell lines of illicit origin, while keeping in mind that everyone has the duty to make known their disagreement and to ask that their healthcare system make other types of vaccines available. Moreover, in organizations where cell lines of illicit origin are being utilized, the responsibility of those who make the decision to use them is not the same as that of those who have no voice in such a decision. (35.4)
For a scientific application of these principles, a recent reflection in First Things offer a helpful pro-life perspective, whether or note we agree in the details.
On December 19th, the CDF issued an update statement, specifically on the Covid vaccine, one that has stirred some controversy. Really, it says nothing new, reiterating the distinction between material and formal, remote and proximate cooperation. But it does seem to offer greater allowance, in the principle of double effect, for taking the vaccine.
There is even a faint hint of coercion implied in the penultimate paragraph of the brief instruction:
5. At the same time, practical reason makes evident that vaccination is not, as a rule, a moral obligation and that, therefore, it must be voluntary. In any case, from the ethical point of view, the morality of vaccination depends not only on the duty to protect one’s own health, but also on the duty to pursue the common good. In the absence of other means to stop or even prevent the epidemic, the common good may recommend vaccination, especially to protect the weakest and most exposed. Those who, however, for reasons of conscience, refuse vaccines produced with cell lines from aborted fetuses, must do their utmost to avoid, by other prophylactic means and appropriate behavior, becoming vehicles for the transmission of the infectious agent. In particular, they must avoid any risk to the health of those who cannot be vaccinated for medical or other reasons, and who are the most vulnerable.
I often wish the modern Magisterium were a bit more clear and precise. As I’ve mentioned any number of times before, it is impossible in this life to ‘avoid any risk’. Attaining of such an asymptote is impossible – how does one reduce risk to absolute zero? And, I wonder what ‘prophylactic means’ and ‘appropriate behavior’ might be?
Certainly, we should protect the vulnerable, which is common sense. We should also keep in mind that these instructions from the Vatican are meant to instruct our conscience, but they are not definitive, nor infallible, and are certainly not our conscience itself.  For now, we should interpret this as best we might, in light of our own conscience, the proximate norm of morality, the aboriginal Vicar of Christ, in Newman’s phrase, and that upon I and we all, will be judged.
A postscript:
I said I would offer my opinion, and each of must decide in his own conscience how to proceed. For now, I will pass on the vaccine, as I don’t think I need it, not being in the vulnerable category, as far as I can tell, and the principle of double-effect would not apply.
But, more to the point, I don’t fully trust its makers and designers, its supporters and financial backers, nor even those who would administer the needle. ‘Tis a sad thing that our medical establishment, once so trusted, has, with its courting the culture of death, become so suspect. How does one put one’s faith in a physician, who would treat your cancer one minute, then sign a referral for your euthanasia the next? Or an ob-gyn who heals and cares for your unborn child because it’s ‘wanted’, and destroys another, because it’s not? And there is evidence the WHO has been surreptitiously sterilizing women in poorer countries via vaccines. As one saying has it, trust takes years to build, seconds to ruin, and forever to repair.
Paranoid? Perhaps. We should at least know and have faith in what’s going into our bodies. But then if someone had described to you on Christmas Eve last year the world we’re living in now, you may well have so described him. We’re living in strange and interesting times.
But more on all that in a subsequent reflection, as we take this to prayer and pondering. Stay informed, strong, faithful, peaceful and free.
For now, may the joys of this Christmas Eve on this O Holy Night, and God’s good grace and cheer be with you all. +

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