Thursday, November 20, 2008

Euthanasia


Dying to Go?

Advances in medicine mean that we now have increasing control over both ends of human life. Children who were once inconceivable are now healthy toddlers. The timing and manner of death is now more manageable. However, increasing control also means increasing dilemmas.

Euthanasia is back in public discussion. Consider these scenes ...

·         Uncle Jack is in the last stage of a terminal illness. The family say their farewells, request no extra treatment and he passes away.

·         Uncle Jack still has days to live but he is given medication to stop vital functions and passes away.

 There is a vast difference between these two scenes. The first is a decision not to prolong the dying process and is akin to the prayer ‘Your will be done. The Lord gives and the Lord takes away, blessed be the name of the Lord’. Many of us have been part of these decisions and may even have provided for it through an Advance Medical Directive. This is not euthanasia. There are few issues here - providing that the decision to abandon curative treatment is not taken too early and providing that there is open discussion with relevant people.

 The second scene involves intentional acts to end a life. It is not an action that leaves the life in God’s hands, but is an act that asserts ‘my will be done’ – whether the ‘will’ is that of the patient, the family or the doctors. This is euthanasia and raises serious Christian issues.

 The Bible teaches that all human life comes from God – it is his to give and take (Gen 1:26-27; Job 1:21; Ps 100:3). Because all human life bears God’s image it has a sacred quality and God calls us to account for any wilful taking of a human life (Gen 9:5-6). We are to help the gravely ill and not harm them. Euthanasia is ‘not on’.

 There has long been a tacit understanding that doctors sometimes cease active treatment and switch to purely palliative care – perhaps in consultation with patient and family. In some places, there is now an explicit permission for active euthanasia. This is generally with supposedly tight controls over what kinds of patients can be killed, under what circumstances and with carefully specified consent mechanisms. Evidence from the Netherlands suggests that the safeguards readily break down and people are being killed without their informed consent. This is a dangerous path. How long before aggressive social engineers create a new holocaust by euthanizing certain categories of people such as people with disabilities, people from unwanted ethnic groups, or just people who are expensively old?

 The Christian church has largely lapsed into silence with respect to the abortion of yet-unborn children. Let’s not repeat that silence at the other end of life. In God’s name, we must protect the vulnerable.

 The medical and family issues associated with death are complex and the line between allowing someone to die and hastening their death can be blurred. Families do well to consider these issues in advance, seek competent advice (perhaps including a pastor) and take their time.

 However it is basic to a Christian view of life’s beginning and ending that it is God’s life and not ours. Let’s set our moral compass around this point and encourage others to do the same.


David Burke

2 comments:

vee said...

I am slightly confused about the boundary between 'passive' euthanasia and AMD. From what I understand, 'passive' euthanasia involves the deliberate withholding of medicine to patient, which leads to death due to other complications later on. Such a person may be in the hospice, happy but in the terminal stage of cancer. What if doctors decide to 'finish off' these patients due to rising patient care at a point in time, just like it has happened in the Netherlands before? Would the fact that a patient has signed the AMD gives doctors a right to stop treatment altogether for minor aliments that might lead to further complications?

SATheologies said...

Hi Vee San,

GCF is organizing a forum on this topic. The details are here:

http://szezeng.blogspot.com/2008/12/euthanasia-christian-perspective_01.html