Revelation 21:4New American Standard Bible (NASB)
4 and He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there will no longer be any death; there will no longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain; the first things have passed away.”
Death is a part of life. There is no escaping this and it will come to all of us. How death is viewed in this country leaves much to be desired. At least for me it does. Every life is precious or is it? I find it deeply disturbing how casually life is thrown away. When we as a society so easily look the other direction and murder the most vulnerable, the unborn, the elderly, the disabled, we have lost some of our compassion for others and for life itself. PatriotUSA
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Commentary: There’s dignity in defying death
By Christine M. Flowers
The seamless vision of life, as the late
Cardinal Joseph Bernardin once noted, is the only way to ensure
individual dignity. We are only as strong as the weakest links in our
human chain, so the way we treat the young, the sick and the elderly is
the truest bell weather of our evolution as a compassionate society.
Lately, though, that compassion has been lacking,
and I suspect it’s due in no small part to our cavalier attitude toward
unborn life. If you are capable of dehumanizing something at its most
elemental level and packaging it as a wholly dependent appendage of a
woman, it’s a short step from there to seeing older and ailing Americans
as dependent appendages of society. Of course, we don’t put it in
exactly those terms. No, we’re a lot smarter than that, which is how the
terms “pro-choice” and “death with dignity” entered the popular
lexicon. In “Through the Looking Glass,” Humpty Dumpty gives a fairly
good summary of the nihilistic game plan so many of the pro-choice and
pro-euthanasia people subscribe to: “When I use a word, it means just
what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.”
So when the rights brigade start on about the “right
to choose” and the “right to die” and the “right to be left alone,”
they are asserting dominion over the language that they use to make
their narrow and specific points. But those who oppose abortion are not
generally allowed to call ourselves “pro-life” in the media, as I myself
found out when I once put that term in a column and it miraculously
morphed into “anti-abortion.” Humpty was apparently a social
progressive.
To those of you who kept reading after you heard the
word “abortion,” my thanks. And to reward you for your perseverance, I
will now get to the point.
Recently, a young woman named Brittany Maynard took
her own life. I would have said “killed herself” but that doesn’t fully
express the motivation behind her act. Maynard was suffering from a
terminal form of cancer, and decided that she didn’t want to put herself
or her family through the final months of debilitating pain. I
understand that, of course, and I have some empathy for her predicament
given the fact that my father died a long and lingering death from lung
cancer. It was a time of pain and horror.
What I don’t understand is the way that Maynard
announced to the world, almost as if she were challenging us to evolve
to some higher level of consciousness, that she would take ownership of
her own presence on this earth and its significance. Maynard did not
kill herself. She “took” back what she thought she owned, her life. This
presupposes that her highest obligation was to herself, and that she
was her own “keeper,” so to speak. That is a dangerous point of view,
because it flows directly from the idea that we are all separate,
unconnected islands in this vast ocean of humanity and are ultimately
alone.
This is the same mentality that motivated Ezekiel
Emmanuel to write his notorious essay in the Atlantic, expressing a hope
that he would die by the age of 70 so as not to “burden” society. At
least Emmanuel was considering the impact his life would have on others,
albeit in a very negative way. He didn’t want to upset anyone, so he
made a vow to bow out, stage left, when he became “troublesome” to his
family and friends. I suspect that if he’d asked, those friends and
family would have begged him to complete the contract he’d made with God
and science and keep the machine operating until its natural end. I’m
fairly certain that what he viewed as a potential burden was, for them, a
gift. But that wouldn’t have advanced his almost Darwinian view of
survival.
As someone whose brother took his own life for
reasons that, to this day, we do not know, I am fully aware of the power
of autonomy. Maynard said that she felt less fearful because she could
choose the hour and moment of her death. And as someone whose father was
in excruciating pain and yet raged against the dying of the light, at
the end, I know how strong the survival instinct can be if we don’t
extinguish it with rhetoric about “dignified deaths.”
This past week, folks in Philadelphia heard the
story of a little boy who was beaten to death by his mother and her
boyfriend, an act so vile that even those of us who’ve been jaded by
daily violence had to take a step back in horror. While there is no
direct connection between the evil in a criminal’s soul and the desire
to escape a painful death, both acts exist on the same continuum which
quantifies the value of a life by how much pleasure it gives us.
To me, true dignity lies in cherishing the life that
we are given in custody, whether in our wombs or in ourselves. It
exists even in the face of pain and regret for lost possibilities.
Dylan Thomas wrote “and death shall have no dominion.”
We, the defiant steel links in the human chain, can be proof of that.
— Christine M. Flowers is a lawyer and columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News.
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4 Comments - Share Yours!:
I would give almost everything to live to 70 but as it looks I won't be here next Christmas.
This talk of euthanasia is always done by those who don't face death. By those who are healthy.
I will fight for every breath of life no matter how short a time I have. Suicide is the cowards way out. And life is a gift from God. A gift that you don't throw back into His face.
Just my 2 cents.
My thoughts and prayers were of you and for you as I posted this. Just streaming tears. Canny say no more.
Findalis, I did not know that you were so unwell. I'm terribly sorry to hear that. As Patriot knows, two of my friends died shortly after one another with the same illness, oesophageal cancer.
Both were tremendous characters, very tough and full of good humour, and they lived their lives - all of their lives - the same way, & showed their character all the more by doing so.
Findalis,
As I said before in an email, you know you are in my prayers.
Brittany was a recent graduate of UC Irvine where I teach though I didn't know her.
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