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Two voices rise on July 9 to explain what the law will concretely change: refusal of the conscience clause for pharmacists, alert on the elderly pushed into default choices.
We had reported on the impasse: the text legalizing aid in dying was adopted by the National Assembly in third reading on June 30, 2026, then rejected without debate by the Senate on July 7. The parliamentary shuttle continues, and the implementing decrees are already being prepared behind the scenes. On July 9, two converging alerts remind us that the debate is not over: Gènéthique denounces the refusal of the conscience clause for pharmacists, and a tribune by geriatricians published in La Croix warns of the risk of a "default" choice among vulnerable elderly people.
Gènéthique speaks of an "absolute inconsistency": the bill recognizes the conscience clause for the doctor who prescribes the lethal substance, but refuses it to the pharmacist who delivers it. The administered chain of death would thus be made morally practicable for one, mandatory for the other. In parallel, in La Croix, geriatricians emphasize that "the poor care of our elderly could push them to choose aid in dying." The Salon Beige takes up the formula of a jurist according to whom this law creates "a real license to kill."
The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches in n° 2277 that "direct euthanasia [...] is morally unacceptable." Saint John Paul II, in Evangelium Vitae n° 65, qualifies it as "a grave violation of the law of God, inasmuch as it is the deliberate murder of a human person." The same document, in n° 73, affirms the moral duty of conscientious objection to any law that authorizes the homicide of the innocent. To refuse the pharmacist what the law grants to the doctor is to deny the former what the magisterium recognizes to all: the primacy of a right conscience.
For Catholics working in pharmacies or in medico-social institutions, legal coercion becomes real. The Little Sisters of the Poor have already announced that they will close rather than collaborate. The issue goes beyond professionals alone: it is a societal choice between accompanying old age and liquidating it by default due to a lack of geriatric resources. The question raised by the geriatricians is decisive: when old age is no longer cared for, euthanasia ceases to be a free choice to become a socially suggested outcome.
The shift is classic. The text is presented as an ultimate freedom offered to the dying person, while denying their executors the first moral freedom, that of not killing. The phrase "license to kill" is not a polemic: it describes a new legal reality where the lethal act becomes a service owed. The blind spot of the public debate remains the fate of the directors of denominational institutions and caregivers trained to save.
Pray for caregivers placed before conscientious objection, support Catholic institutions that resist, contact your senator before the final vote. Faith does not withdraw from the world: it unfolds in silent resistances.
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Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
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