Bringing Clarity to Uncertainty in Our Church

Month: February 2023

The End of Reason (Part 1). Why euthanasia is unreasonable, uncompassionate, unloving, and discriminatory.

People have the right to bodily autonomy; therefore, they should be able to do whatever they want with their own bodies.

If people are suffering, they should have the right to alleviate their own suffering by any reasonable means, including medically assisted suicide (euthanasia).

The Canadian government recently announced that they will be withholding offering MaiD (medical assistance in dying) to mature minors – people under the age of 18 (children) who have the mental capacity to reasonably make an informed decision about their life.

The flood gates have long opened in Canada to offering people a way out of their suffering (or perceived suffering).

 

Is supporting euthanasia a reasonable position to hold?

Is supporting euthanasia a reasonable position to hold? To answer this question we have to set aside our emotions and answer some questions.

First, is body autonomy absolute? Or does it have limits?

Second, is suicide a good solution to suffering?

Third, what is human dignity? What is the source of human dignity? Why treat human with dignity?

Fourth, what is compassion?

Photo by Milada Vigerova from Unsplash.com

Bodily Autonomy

I agree that people should be able to do with their bodies whatever they want. Even if I as a Christian believe that our bodies are not our own and are temples for God’s Spirit, not everyone may believe this.  For example, if people want to get tattoos, piercings, or try a fringe hairstyle, they can; even it is offense to some.

However, bodily autonomy is not absolute. Suppose people who have body identity integrity disorder and they have an deep seeded desire to become blind, paralyzed, or an amputee, should doctors be legally required to fulfil their patients’ desires? Most medical professionals would not destroy healthy body parts on a healthy human being. Medical practitioners’ job is to be life-giving and life-affirming, not life-denying or life-destructive. There is a sense of how we as humans aught to be, which takes precedent over how we want to be.

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“The wisdom of the world is foolishness” Why St. Paul’s words ring more true today than ever before.

Clair was 76 years old when she died peacefully from cancer in her husband’s arms surrounded by her family. There was one important person missing. One of her sons. 

Throughout her life Clair had one daughter and three sons. One of her sons, Thomas, started drifting away from the family shortly after being married. Thomas’ appeared to have changed overnight for the worse. He and his new family did not attend family gatherings and soon he started to blame his personal problems on his mother, father, and siblings. Clair soon learned that the woman he married was very manipulative, dealt with several mental challenges, and had a shady past. For Thomas it was too late. 

I’ve known Clair since 2009 up until her death in 2015. My heart broke that Thomas didn’t even attend or acknowledge his own mother’s funeral. It’s hard to fathom a mother’s broken heart in the last moments of her life knowing that her family is broken and unable to reconcile. 

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How money can become a false idol.

A reading from the letter to the Hebrews: 

Keep your lives free from the love of money, and be content with what you have; for God has said. “I will never leave you or forsake you.” So we can say with confidence, “The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can anyone do to me.?” – Hebrews 13:5

Reflection

When I was a kid I had an unhealthy relationship with video games. After my parents caved and gave me my first video game system – a Nintendo 64 – I became hooked. After getting my first job, having no sense of financial responsibility despite my parents’ best efforts, I blew most of my money on games and the latest systems. Never feeling content, I spent more and more and more. 

By Michelle Dot Com from Unsplash.com

Today, while I may have the odd race in Mario Kart with my daughters, I don’t care much for video games. It’s hard for me to fathom the amount of money I poured into games and what else I could have used that money for. However, feelings of discontent don’t disappear as you get older. Temptation to spend money on a new car, a bigger home, or other luxuries are ever present. I once met a family who lived in a nice home in Vaughn, drove a Land Rover, and recently purchased a cottage up north. At first, I thought they were being sarcastic, but they were seriously complaining about how little they have. 

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