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By Rusty
Benson | AFA Journal Associate Editor
When does life begin? That thorny question has been at the center
of our national debate about abortion for over 30 years. Even for
skeptics, advances in medical imaging have pushed the answer earlier
and earlier.
On the other end of the life-death continuum, the ability of modern
medicine to sustain life has brought its own set of difficult ethical
and moral questions: When does life end? Or perhaps more practically,
how should life end?
For a country in which life expectancy is approaching 80 years,
and for whom 20% of the population will be between the ages of 66
and 84 by 2030, these questions are more than theoretical. Now and
in the near future, millions of American families will deal with
issues of long-term care of aging or chronically ill loved ones.
Many will face troubling end-of-life decisions, such as when to
administer or withhold measures that could sustain life.
In the midst of such confusing and emotional issues, powerful social
and cultural factors threaten to convince families that "quality
of life" supercedes "sanctity of life." These factors,
according to Dr. Kenneth Simcic, include:
A culture in which God is respected less and less as the only
giver and taker of life;
A lack of accepted moral absolutes;
The popularity of radical personal autonomy ("my body, my
right");
Families with fewer children to care for aging parents;
Pressure to reduce the cost of health care.
And perhaps most significantly, families will
be making life and death decisions against a cultural background
of over three decades of killing the most defenseless members of
our human community. Is there any doubt that the deaths of 50 million
babies since the 1972 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized
abortion on demand, have softened many in our society to the notion
that underlies the euthanasia movement: some lives are not worth
living.
For these reasons and others, euthanasia
also known by such euphemisms as "mercy killing," "death
with dignity" and "the right to die" is an
issue that is certain to come center stage in the near future or
so it would logically seem.
According to Burke J. Balch, director of the
Robert Powell Center for Medical Ethics in Washington, D.C., and
affiliated with the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), proponents
of euthanasia are achieving their goal without public debate, court
decisions or legislation. Balch says that the practice of euthanasia
is already quietly but quickly spreading to hospitals across the
nation, not in the form of active killing, but through "futile
care" policies.
Recognized and argued in prestigious publications
such as The Journal of the American Medical Association and
The New England Journal of Medicine, the theory of futile
care empowers doctors and hospitals to refuse service to patients
they deem unworthy of treatment. Practically, that means patients
can be killed by withholding nourishment or treatment, even over
the objections of the family.
"Unfortunately, many doctors and hospital
ethics committees are now arguing they should have a veto over a
patients request to be allowed to live if the doctor, in disagreement
with the patient or the patients family, thinks the patients
quality of life is so poor her or his life is not worth
living," Balch wrote in a paper for the NRLC. "They consider
medically inappropriate not just treatment that will
not save a patients life, but also treatment that would save
life if the lifes quality is deemed poor."
Its a "bombshell story" that
has largely been ignored by the popular media, according to Wesley
Smith, a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute and author of
Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America.
Smith writes in an article at National Review Online (www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-smith010603.asp):
"The first time most patients and their families become aware
that doctors are being given the right to say no to
wanted medical treatment (other than comfort care) is during a medical
crisis when they are at their most defenseless and vulnerable."
In the crucible
Surrounded by powerful social forces
and a modern bioethic that does not believe that all human life
is of intrinsic and equal value, how are Christian families to prepare
for making decisions that uphold the "sanctity of life"
and reject the "quality of life" ethic?
In a recent speech, NRLC Senior Congressional
Liaison Lori Kehoe said that although treatment decisions may be
complex in their circumstances, the ethics are not difficult for
ethical people. "Its not hard to wrap your mind around
when you get down to the basics," she said.
The difficult part even for mature Christians,
however, is practicing those basic principles. To demonstrate the
proper application of the "sanctity of life" ethic, Kehoe
said, "It is just as wrong for you to fail to preserve your
own life as it is for you to shoot yourself in the head. The ethics
are simple. If something will work to preserve your own life and
you would quickly do it for someone who is young and otherwise healthy,
you must do it for your grandmother or yourself."
Biblical principles
Below is a selection of biblical principles
summarized from the teachings of orthodox Christian authors, theologians
and ethicists. For a more complete treatment of these and related
issues, see the suggested resources above.
1. All human beings are created in the
image of God (Gen. 1:26) and therefore have unique dignity and
value. This principle is the foundation of the belief that
life is sacred from the moment of conception until natural birth.
This view is rejected by many because the
values of our society have shifted from a Judeo-Christian foundation
to a humanistic and utilitarian one, according to the late Christian
thinker Francis Schaeffer. In his 1972 book, Whatever Happened
to the Human Race? Schaeffer said that having rejected the Creator
God, humanists have convinced our society that all reality, including
humans, is simply "one big machine."
This worldview, in which all things have come
into being by chance, drastically reduces the value of human beings,
Schaeffer argued, and naturally leads to the practices of abortion
and euthanasia.
2. God is sovereign over life and death
and we cannot always know His purposes. (Job 1:21; Job 14:5;
Acts 17:28; Ps. 139:16)
"Not even the gods of medicine can keep
us alive when we are supposed to be dead," says Kehoe. "We
cannot live past our time." She says this is not only a great
comfort when making difficult treatment decisions, but a warning
against presuming on God through advanced directives or living
wills that could give permission to end a life prematurely.
In applying the principle of Gods sovereignty
over all things, Balch observes that by cutting short the dying
process, Christians may miss profound opportunities for service,
witness and personal growth. "Death is one thing that shows
that we are not self-sufficient," he said.
3. The Bible condemns murder. Kirby
Anderson of Probe Ministries writes in an article at www.leadership.com
that this includes hastening death in a patient by any means and
certainly includes suicide.
"It is not ethical to die simply because
you want to," Kehoe said. Christians must remember that according
to 1 Cor. 6:19-20, our bodies are not our own, but belong to Christ,
she explained.
On the other hand, Anderson writes that death,
being part of the fallen nature of man, is inevitable. Therefore,
Christians must reject the notion that everything must be done
to save life at all costs. For example, when the time comes that
death is imminent, treatments that will only preserve life momentarily
need not be administered.
Quality vs. sanctity of life
The practice of euthanasia is under
way in many American hospitals, according to Balch, Smith and others.
And the stage has been set for the downward slide toward "euthanasia
by action," in which lethal injections are administered by
a third party.
"The progression was inevitable,"
Anderson writes. "Once society begins to devalue the life of
the unborn child, it is but a small step to begin to do the same
with a child who has been born. Abortion slides naturally into infanticide
and eventually euthanasia."
If Christians would resist further erosion of
the value of life, we must start by clarifying in our own lives
and be willing to publicly declare the difference in
quality of life and sanctity of life.
RESOURCES
TO HELP FORM A CHRISTIAN VIEW OF EUTHANASIA
Whatever Happened To The Human Race? By Francis Schaeffer
and C. Everett Koop. Crossway Books. Available in paperback and
audio cassette from local and online booksellers. Online adaptation
available at www.antithesis.
com/features/dignity.html
www.nrlc.org/euthanasia/index.html
Web site of National Right To Life Committee
Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America
by Wesley J. Smith. Encounter Books.
www.wesleyjsmith.com
Web site of Wesley J. Smith. For an excellect selection
of on-line euthanasia resources, click on "Links."
www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/euthan.html
and www.leaderu.com/orgs/tul/ott-euthanasia.html
Two excellent overviews of the euthanasia issue from a
Christian perspective
www.lifenews.com
An independent news agency specifically devoted to reporting
news that affects the pro-life community.
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