Home/Stay Informed/All Diocesan Articles

All Diocesan Articles

Can Catholics Donate Their Organs? Here’s What the Church Says

Posted on November 06, 2024 in: News

Can Catholics Donate Their Organs? Here’s What the Church Says

A recent news report out of Kentucky revealed a slim but pointed risk regarding organ donation, one that underscores a key Church teaching about how the process of gifting one’s organs must play out. 

Congressional testimony in September revealed a 2021 incident in which a man named TJ Hoover was declared brain dead and a medical team was assembled to harvest his organs. In the operating room, however, Hoover was found to still be alive. Multiple medical officials quit over what they described as a traumatic experience.

“Several of us that were employees needed to go to therapy,” one worker told National Public Radio. Government authorities are investigating the incident. 

What does the Catholic Church say about organ donation? 

The Catholic Church states that organ donation is an acceptable and even morally laudable practice. The Catechism of the Catholic Church says that organ transplants “are in conformity with the moral law,” though only “if the physical and psychological dangers and risks to the donor are proportionate to the good that is sought for the recipient” (No. 2296).

Organ donation after death, meanwhile, “is a noble and meritorious act and is to be encouraged as an expression of generous solidarity.” However, the circumstances around organ donation must be in line with Catholic moral teaching. 

Joe Zalot, the director of education at the National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), told CNA in an interview that St. John Paul IIPope Benedict XVI, and Pope Francis have all spoken favorably about organ donation. 

Francis has described it as an “expression of universal fraternity that binds all men and women,” while John Paul II described organ donation as “a genuine act of love.”

Zalot pointed out that there are really two types of organ donations.

“One is with a paired organ, like a kidney,” he said. “We have two kidneys. If my brother has kidney failure, and he needs a transplant, and I’m a match, so long as I consent, I can give him my kidney.” 

The more prominent issue, he said, is the donation of vital organs, which by definition an individual cannot live without. 

“The Church is okay with vital organ donation,” Zalot said. “But you have to have moral certainty that the person [giving the organs] is actually deceased.”

“The Church doesn’t say how exactly you do that. It’s a medical question,” Zalot said. “But you have to have moral certainty that the person has died in order to extract his or her vital organs.”

Debate over ‘brain death’

A prominent debate among both physicians and moral theologians is the classification of “brain death,” a medical designation that indicates complete loss of brain function, including the involuntary mechanisms by which the brain sustains life.

Brain death is a “very, very hot issue” among Catholic ethicists, Zalot said. New brain death guidelines issued last year by a major neurological society were criticized by more than 150 Catholic ethicists and theologians over concerns that patients might incorrectly be pronounced “brain dead” and subsequently have their organs removed while still alive.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and the NCBC, meanwhile, last year criticized a proposed rewriting of the definition of “brain death” by the Uniform Law Commission, arguing that the revision would “replace the standard of whole brain death with one of partial brain death,” thus broadening the criteria for organ harvesting. 

The suggestion that “partial brain death is sufficient for vital organ retrieval” could dissuade individuals from becoming donors themselves, the groups argued. 

The catechism further stipulates that it is “not morally admissible directly to bring about the disabling mutilation or death of a human being” for purposes of organ harvesting, “even in order to delay the death of other persons” (No. 2296).

The Catholic Church has taught for many centuries that the body will ultimately be resurrected in glorified form, mandating the respectful treatment of human remains after the soul has departed.

“When death occurs, you have the separation of soul and body,” Zalot said. “The body dies and the soul lives on. But we have a duty to treat the body with respect.”

Considerations in light of the resurrection of the body 

One aspect of organ donation rich for theological consideration is how donating one’s organs upon death might be considered in light of the Catholic belief of the resurrection of the body.

Father Terrence Ehrman, CSC, a professor of systematic theology at the University of Notre Dame, told CNA the question ”points to the great mystery of the Resurrection.”

Asked how donating one’s organs might be considered in light of the ancient Catholic teaching of bodily resurrection, Ehrman noted that there’s “not much in Scripture and tradition about what actually a resurrected body is.”

“There’s very little we have about what this resurrected existence is like,” he admitted. But the Church teaches that “there is this connection with our bodies. They’re who we are, they’re not just a part of us.”

He noted that one’s body changes radically over one’s lifetime, though one is plainly still inhabiting the same body.

“What makes me the same person today that I was yesterday or 50 years ago?” he said. “I’m the same person. I’m the same identifiable organism. I have the same body in one sense. But it’s different in many ways.” 

“The matter [making up a body] can be very different,” he said. But “the Church is clear that we’re going to be raised in the same body.”

Catholic theologians and philosophers have long debated questions of bodily integrity and continuity, such as if someone is buried at sea and is consumed by a fish, Ehrman noted.

But the “new reality” implied by bodily resurrection suggests that one’s unique, personal body will ultimately be made whole in some way, he said.

“I think the same thing applies to questions about organ donation,” he said. “Maybe we don’t need to think of it in the way that we get the same exact matter back. We rather get the same body back, one that’s identifiable as us.”

Zalot, meanwhile, said the Church’s proscriptions on organ donation are informed by its comprehensive teachings on the dignity of the human person and respect for the human body.

The faithful are still enjoined to respect the body even after organ donations have been performed, Zalot said.

Organ donation is “a great gift,” he said. “But after a person is a vital organ donor — once the heart or other organs are removed — the same rule applies, treating the body with respect.”

By Daniel Payne

This article was originally published by on November 5, 2024 by Catholic News Agency.


Most Viewed Articles of the Last 30 Days

Archbishop Coyne Reflects on the Baptism of the Lord: "Don't Ever Apologize for Being Catholic"
This past Sunday, Archbishop Christopher Coyne, Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Norwich, delivered an inspiring homily at the Baptism of the Lord Mass. In his message, he urged the faithful to embrace their identity as Catholics with confidence and joy, reminding them, "Don't ever apologize for being Catholic." Archbishop Coyne drew meaningful connections between the baptism of Jesus and our own call to live as beloved children of God. He reflected on the feast's profound significance, encouraging the community to proclaim the Good News boldly...

Read More

Big Laughs for a Big Cause: 2nd Annual Comedy Night to Benefit Amazing Grace Food Pantry
Four Acclaimed National Comedians to Perform at 2nd Annual “Comedy, Charity, Community” Night at Wesleyan University, Friday, January 24th, to benefit Amazing Grace Food Pantry St. Vincent de Paul Middletown (SVDM) in partnership with Wesleyan University’s Robert F. Schumann Institute of the Bailey College of the Environment is proud to present a night of “Comedy, Charity, Community” on Friday, January 24, 2025, from 6 to 9 p.m. at. Wesleyan University’s Fayerweather Building, Beckham Hall, 55 Wyllys Ave, Middletown. Tickets ($69) a...

Read More

80 Years After Auschwitz’s Liberation: ‘I Ask You Only to Remember’
Jan. 27 marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau. Each year, the camp survivors are fewer in number, and as their testimony and witness remain, the importance of Auschwitz endures. In 2024, more than 1.8 million visitors passed through its gates. What is it that brings people here? An obscene charnel of mass murder with all its evil, its inhumanity, its brutality: On the surface, it is a site devoid of hope. But among the ruins and the selection lines, beneath the Arbeit Macht Frei sign, in the preserved block houses, and amid the devastating ex...

Read More

A Dedicated Servant of Faith Takes on a New Role

Posted on January 14, 2025 in: News

291

A Dedicated Servant of Faith Takes on a New Role
The Office of Faith Events is thrilled to welcome Alvania Tejada as its new administrative assistant. Alvania is a familiar face in the Diocese of Norwich, bringing years of devotion, experience and heartfelt service. Originally from the Dominican Republic and a proud mother of two adult children, Alvania has long been a part of our diocesan community, holding numerous ministry roles that have impacted countless lives. Her journey brought her to the U.S. in 1998 and then to Connecticut in 2002, where her story of Faith and service truly began to flourish. For nearly...

Read More

The Transformative Power of Catholic Education
I recently attended a reunion of my high school class. Most of the men I hadn’t seen in over a half-century. We reminisced about our high school experience, the great times, the great and not-so-great teachers, and the good and bad of attending an all-boys high school. But what we all remembered most was the wonderful academic environment created by the Vincentians who administered the school. We attended St. John's Preparatory School, which at the time was located on Lewis Avenue in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, New York. “The Prep” w...

Read More

Be Not Afraid, Because God is Always Near, Pope Says
Pope Francis reflected on Mary's trust in God's plan and presence, prayed for Los Angeles wildfire victims and prayed for peace in Gaza during his general audience at the Vatican.   VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- God tells Christians not to be afraid because he is always close, accompanying the faithful throughout their lives and through all their challenges, Pope Francis said. "God says 'Do not be afraid' to Abraham, Isaac" and many others in the Bible, but "he says it to us, too. 'Be not afraid,' keep going," because God &q...

Read More

Annual Catholic Appeal

ACA DONATE

English

Español

 

Latest Articles
Witnessing Hope — My First March For Life
A Month of Compassion: Film Events to Support St. Vincent de Paul Place
Celebrating 150 Years: St. Joseph School Honors Faith, Family, and Tradition
Religious Icons: Hope & Faith Video Series
St. John Bosco, the Patron Saint of Young People - January 31st
Morality of AI Depends on Human Choices, Vatican Says in New Document
Candles, Prayers, and Healing: The Blessing of Throats Explained
Anchored in Faith - Remembering “The Four Chaplains”
Recently Added Galleries
Click to view album: 40 Days for Life 2024
Click to view album: Blessing of the Fleet 2024
Click to view album: Mass of Ordination for Fr. Eric Carl Hosmer, Fr. Julian Felipe Cuervo-Lozada and Fr. Alexander James Pandolfe
Click to view album: Norwich Diocesan Council of Catholic Women (NDCCW) 46th Annual Layette
Signup for Weekly Newsletter

     

    Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich
    201 Broadway
    Norwich, CT 06360-4328
    Phone: 860-887-9294