FranceMembers only 1 h ago0Add to bookmarks

The parliamentary shuttle resumes this Tuesday, July 7. The Little Sisters of the Poor and denominational clinics see the collective conscience clause threatened.
We described in issue 2 the vote on June 30 by which the National Assembly adopted in third reading the bill on end-of-life assistance. This Tuesday, July 7, 2026, the Senate will speak: its social affairs committee adopted as early as July 1 a motion to reject the bill preliminarily. The parliamentary shuttle will nevertheless continue its way. The senatorial vote weighs the weight of a doctrinal opposition against a presidential majority determined to succeed before the end of the session.
According to Aleteia (July 6, 2026), the commission rejected the text on the grounds that the definition of end-of-life assistance offends the very vocation of care. The Little Sisters of the Poor had expressed in June their concern about the possible closure of their French houses in the absence of a collective conscience clause. The Conference of Bishops of France, in its solemn communiqué of June 29, on the eve of the Assembly's vote, had recalled that the vocation of the caregiver is to accompany, not to give death.
The Church's teaching is constant. The Catechism, in paragraphs 2276 to 2279, condemns euthanasia as morally unacceptable. John Paul II, in Evangelium Vitae (n° 65, 1995), qualifies it as a serious violation of the Law of God and an unacceptable refusal of the human person. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, in the Letter Samaritanus bonus (July 14, 2020), recalled that no formal complicity can be admitted and that conscientious objection imposes itself on any health professional. The collective conscience clause derives from these principles applied to moral persons: without it, Catholic hospitals become legally complicit in an act that is doctrinally unacceptable.
Three stakes are linked. First, the institutional survival of congregations and denominational clinics, forced to close or to yield. Then the formation of the consciences of Catholic caregivers, called to a probable individual objection if the collective clause fails. Finally, the public word of the episcopate: after marriage in 2013, end-of-life assistance becomes the second major test of Catholic mobilization in contemporary France.
The blind spot of the debate remains the effective development of palliative care, promised by the Claeys-Leonetti law (2016) but for which several departments are still lacking. Adopting end-of-life assistance before having generalized access to palliative care amounts to offering a lethal response to a territorial inequality. This ethical flaw will not be enough to stop the law, but it reveals its utilitarian logic.
Let us pray for the senators, for the Little Sisters of the Poor, for the Catholic caregivers. Let us write to our elected officials. Let us materially support the congregations that refuse to participate, even indirectly, in the given death. The fight for the conscience clause remains open in the implementing decrees, before the Constitutional Council and the Council of State.
Create a free account to access all our content and the weekly review.
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
Assisted dying: referendum blocked, Assembly in voting week