FranceMembers only Jun 29, 20266Add to bookmarks

Solemn vote set for June 30. The Haute Autorité de santé already lists lethal substances. The Little Sisters of the Poor threaten to close their homes. Isabelle de Franclieu analyzes this pivotal week—and what the Church must say and do.
Week after week, we had been following the inexorable progress of the bill on assisted dying. The solemn vote is now set for June 30, 2026. The removal of the institutional conscience clause, decided in the new reading, has lifted the last legal barrier protecting Catholic healthcare establishments. The law as it stands will compel every institution, including palliative care homes founded on a Christian vision of human dignity, to open its doors to the act of causing death.
On June 28, some 4,000 to 5,000 people marched in Paris at the call of pro-life collectives, sending an unambiguous message to MPs: "Do not tip the balance." On the same day, a "June 28 appeal" urged undecided parliamentarians: "If you have doubts, vote no."
Meanwhile, the administrative machinery is already in motion. The Haute Autorité de santé has begun work on defining the substances likely to be used in the lethal protocol, even before the solemn vote has taken place. This bureaucratic anticipation speaks volumes about the executive's confidence in the outcome of the ballot.
The Petites Sœurs des Pauvres have warned that they may be forced to close homes if the law compels them to practice assisted dying. Bishop Matthieu Rougé of Nanterre expresses the same concerns in Le Figaro: thousands of beds serving the most vulnerable could disappear from the French healthcare landscape.
On the pastoral level, the Church's position is unequivocal: "Any MP who votes against life commits a grave sin and cannot receive holy communion." This direct and canonically grounded formulation recalls the provisions of can. 915 of the Code of Canon Law.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church is explicit: "Whatever its motives and means, direct euthanasia consists in putting an end to the lives of handicapped, sick, or dying persons. It is morally unacceptable" (CCC § 2277). John Paul II, in Evangelium Vitae (n. 65), made it a truth of the ordinary and universal magisterium: "Euthanasia is a grave violation of the law of God, inasmuch as it is the deliberate and morally unacceptable killing of a human person."
The removal of the institutional conscience clause is not a technical detail. It forces moral entities created to serve life to become instruments of death, directly undermining the natural right of intermediate bodies to act according to their own purpose—a foundational principle of the Church's social doctrine (Rerum Novarum; Centesimus Annus, n. 48).
Catholic establishments represent a significant part of France's healthcare provision. Their potential closure would not only be a loss for the Christian community: it is the poorest, those abandoned by secular institutions, who would suffer first. The threat from the Petites Sœurs des Pauvres is not blackmail: it is the observation of a radical incompatibility, already expressed by palliative care physicians during parliamentary hearings.
The dominant argument is that of "individual freedom" and "death with dignity." It obscures two documented realities: the social pressure on the elderly, the sick, or the precarious; and the gradual expansion of application criteria observed in Belgium and the Netherlands over the past twenty years. The law claims to be limited to specific cases; foreign experience contradicts this promise. The absence of serious debate on palliative care, whose network remains dramatically insufficient, is revealing: legislation on death is being enacted before investment in end-of-life support.
The greatness of a civilization is measured by how it treats its weakest members. Tomorrow, the solemn vote will reveal what kind of civilization France chooses to be. For Catholics: pray, support threatened establishments, challenge elected representatives. And if the law passes, remain alongside the most vulnerable, as the Petites Sœurs have always done, whatever the cost.
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En Bretagne, on disait toujours : « La mort, c’est comme la marée, ça ne se commande pas. » On a vraiment besoin de ça, maintenant ?
Et si le vrai respect de la vie, c’était justement de choisir comment elle s’achève ?
Ma belle-sœur en soins palliatifs dit la même chose : ce qui la tient, c’est de savoir qu’on compte encore sur elle. Une loi comme ça, c’est leur voler leur dernière raison de se battre.
C’est ça qui me révolte : on nous dit que c’est un progrès, mais en vrai on enlève aux gens le droit de tenir jusqu’au bout sans se sentir coupables.
C'est vrai quoi, on parle d'accompagner les gens jusqu'au bout, pas de leur tendre un flacon. Où sont les moyens pour les soins palliatifs ?
C’est bien beau de parler d’aide à mourir, mais est-ce qu’on a vraiment tout fait pour que les gens vivent dignement jusqu’au bout ? Les soins palliatifs, c’est encore un parcours du combattant dans trop d’endroits.
Bénédicte77 a raison : avant de parler d'euthanasie, on devrait se demander pourquoi les soins palliatifs restent si compliqués à obtenir en France.
C’est vrai qu’on parle de garde-fous, mais est-ce que ça suffira quand les maisons de retraite catholiques devront accepter l’euthanasie ?
Des garde-fous ? À la maison Saint-Joseph, on nous a déjà dit que si la loi passe, on fermera plutôt que de laisser faire ça sous notre toit.
Aide à mourir : le référendum bloqué, l'Assemblée dans la semaine du vote