**Assisted Dying: Bishop Aillet Denies Communion to Catholic Deputies Who Vote for the Bill**

Ongoing story : Assisted dying: referendum blocked, Assembly in voting week· Part 37/37

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**Assisted Dying: Bishop Aillet Denies Communion to Catholic Deputies Who Vote for the Bill**
Illustration : Marie Yukimura Saitō

Four days before the decisive vote of the National Assembly, the bishop of Bayonne publicly applies canon 915. An isolated gesture, but canonically founded.

Context

We had followed the long French trajectory of the law on dying with dignity. The Senate rejected it for the third time on July 7, the National Assembly should impose the final word on July 15. On July 11, four days before the decisive vote, Mgr Marc Aillet, bishop of Bayonne, Lescar and Oloron, publicly addressed Catholic parliamentarians. LifeSiteNews and Le Salon Beige republished the declaration on July 13: voting for this law makes receiving communion impossible.

The Facts

Mgr Aillet calls Catholic deputies to a examination of conscience. He specifies that those who, aware of the inconsistency between their favorable vote and their faith, choose to support the text, will no longer be able to receive communion. Father Michel Viot announces in parallel that he will personally refuse communion to parliamentarians who have publicly approved the law, and will refuse to preside over their religious funerals. No episcopal conference has collectively endorsed this position. It remains that of a bishop, not of the CEF as a whole.

Doctrinal Analysis

The canonical foundation is canon 915 of the 1983 Code: persons who persist with obstinacy in a grave manifest sin are not to be admitted to holy communion. The instruction Redemptionis Sacramentum (Congregation for Divine Worship, 2004) recalls that the safeguarding of the Eucharist obliges ministers not to administer the sacrament to those who publicly refuse to adhere to it. Evangelium Vitae § 73 (John Paul II, 1995) qualifies as gravely unjust any law that authorizes the direct homicide of the innocent, and expressly refuses Catholics formal cooperation in such a vote. The Catechism of the Catholic Church § 2277 classifies euthanasia among morally unacceptable acts. Eucharistic coherence is therefore not a pastoral option: it falls under sacramental discipline.

Stakes for the Church and the Faithful

Mgr Aillet applies in France the line that Cardinal Burke had set in 2004 for John Kerry, and that the American bishops' conference has taken up again in 2021 in its document on eucharistic coherence. Two stakes. Making visible the inconsistency of a pro-euthanasia Catholic vote. Reminding that the sacramental ministry engages the responsibility of the pastor upstream of individual conscience alone. For the faithful, the clarification is clear: supporting legal homicide is not a neutral political choice.

Critical Reading and Blind Spots

The initiative remains isolated. The silence of the major metropolitan sees, in particular of the presidency of the CEF, leaves the gesture to be carried by a single diocese. The application of canon 915 requires pastoral discernment, not an automatism. Finally, there is the question of remote material cooperation: what to think of elected officials who vote constrained by party discipline?

To Ponder and Act

Canon 915 is not a weapon, it is a reminder that the eucharistic table is not dissociated from the truth of the body given. Pray for Catholic deputies at the time of the vote, and for their pastors.

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Isabelle de FranclieuJuriste, chroniqueuse bioéthique & société
Juriste de formation, elle suit les questions de bioéthique, de famille et de liberté de conscience, dans la perspective du droit naturel.
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Assisted dying: referendum blocked, Assembly in voting week

  1. 1Assisted dying: referendum blocked, Assembly in voting week23/06/2026
  2. 2J-7 before the vote: SFAP says no to assisted dying23/06/2026
  3. 3Assisted dying crosses the Rubicon: the Assembly votes, Bayrou hesitates, caregivers resist23/06/2026
  4. 4Assisted dying: rejection motion fails, vote nears, streets resist23/06/2026
  5. 5Assisted dying on the verge of a vote: a legislative chimera facing conscience24/06/2026
  6. 6Assisted dying: the motion rejected, the final vote approaches - the streets say no24/06/2026
  7. 7Netherlands: First Euthanasia of a Child Under 12 - Europe Crosses a Threshold24/06/2026
  8. 8Assisted dying on the brink of final vote: Archbishop Aveline speaks out, France at a crossroads24/06/2026
  9. 9Assisted dying, D-5: the text hasn't changed by a comma25/06/2026
  10. 10**"Anesthesia": When Documentary Cinema Resists the Law on Medically Assisted Dying**25/06/2026
  11. 11Netherlands: First Child Euthanized Since Law Expansion - Five Days Before French Vote25/06/2026
  12. 12Euthanasia: 4 Days Before the Vote, the Streets Say No on June 2826/06/2026
  13. 13Assisted dying: D-4, the streets say no, Parliament moves forward26/06/2026
  14. 14Two days before the demonstration, the end-of-life assistance law is forced through26/06/2026
  15. 15Assisted dying: MPs return to assisted suicide - the solemn vote on June 30 approaches27/06/2026
  16. 16Assisted dying: the conscience clause for institutions removed28/06/2026
  17. 17Assisted dying: 48 hours before the vote, the radical incompatibility with palliative care28/06/2026
  18. 18Assisted dying: tomorrow, France crosses the Rubicon29/06/2026
  19. 19Vote on June 30: France on the brink of the irreversible29/06/2026
  20. 20France votes on assisted dying: the Church faces the irreversible30/06/2026
  21. 21France votes on assisted dying: Archbishop Ulrich calls for renunciation, the Church prepares its resistance30/06/2026
  22. 22Assisted dying passed: the Church enters into resistance01/07/2026
  23. 23Assisted dying: law passed, Senate resists, loved ones testify01/07/2026
  24. 24The Senate Resists: The Rejection Motion Opens a New Front Against Assisted Dying02/07/2026
  25. 25Assisted Dying: The Senate Raises a Last-Minute Barrier03/07/2026
  26. 26Assisted dying: the Senate at an impasse, the conscience clause in limbo03/07/2026
  27. 27Assisted dying: Senate rejects motion, shuttling resumes04/07/2026
  28. 28Assisted dying: the Senate between shuttle and conscience clause06/07/2026
  29. 29Assisted dying: the Senate at a crossroads, the conscience clause on its deathbed06/07/2026
  30. 30Pope XIV and French euthanasia: papal visit suspended pending Senate vote?07/07/2026
  31. 31Assisted dying: Senators question the Prime Minister, "refuse to be the guarantor of an extreme text"07/07/2026
  32. 32Assisted dying: the Senate rejects for the third time, the parliamentary loophole is closed08/07/2026
  33. 33Assisted dying: Larcher promises to refer the matter to the Constitutional Council09/07/2026
  34. 34Assisted dying: conscience clause refused to pharmacists, seniors in the crosshairs09/07/2026
  35. 35Jersey: royal assent opens the way for assisted dying on a Crown dependency10/07/2026
  36. 36Assisted dying: when the Élysée sets the pace, parliamentary democracy retreats11/07/2026
  37. 37**Assisted Dying: Bishop Aillet Denies Communion to Catholic Deputies Who Vote for the Bill**13/07/2026
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