Misc

Freedom Of Speech

(The following article is from DefendChristians.org)

This week the Supreme Court began its new session with its new Justice, Elena Kagan and a low 51% approval rating, according to Gallop. Front and center is a very controversial First Amendment case regarding the freedom of speech of a sect of Christians who engage in picketing military funerals. Rev. Fred Phelps and members of Westboro Baptist Church assert on large signs that the death of service men is the result of God judging America for embracing homosexuality. Their signs say things like, “Thank God for dead soldiers,” “Thank God for IEDs” (improvised explosive devices responsible for the deaths of many soldiers) and “God Hates Fags.”

Of course, people are infuriated with the messages. Some out of compassion for the grieving family and others because of the jarring messages about homosexuality. But does the First Amendment allow for such speech? Even if it’s legal, should Christians engage in this kind of activity?   First, let’s consider the issue of the legality of their message. There is no absolute right to free speech. Conspiracy to commit a crime is not protected speech. You can’t legally incite violence, make terrorist threats or cry fire in a crowded theater. So there can be time and place restrictions on speech if there is an overriding state interest, i.e. the preservation of life. But just because a message is offensive [doesn’t mean it must] be censored. There is much that occurs in the name of free speech that many find very offensive. Pornography, blasphemy and vulgarity are considered protected forms of speech, even burning the American flag.

As someone who is an advocate for liberty, I hope that they rule in favor of protecting free speech and not limiting it in anyway. Why? The problem is with standards. Who gets to decide what’s offensive or not? Some people are very offended by the greatest message the world has ever heard. They are affronted that God calls all mankind sinners and that only by faith in the death and resurrection of Christ as their substitute can they be saved from the wrath to come.  If I want to be free to declare the Gospel message, then I must be prepared to defend the right of others to declare their’s.

But, even if it is legal, is it ethical for Fred Phelps to do what he does? Most people would say no, based on Christian compassion for the grieving family of the service men. That is a very strong ethical argument, but there are other questions to consider. The fact is Mathew Snyder was a brave service man who gave his life to defend liberty for all, even Westboro’s.  Others have effectively exercised their right to counter-protest the church, like the bikers that showed up at Arlington Cemetery for the funeral of a Navy Seal. So, is it right to use the occasion of the funeral of a “freedom fighter” to restrict freedom? Using a funeral to advance a message is undoubtedly provocative, but it has accomplished Westboro’s objective of calling attention to their message. Even the lawsuit against them has worked to advance Phelp’s propaganda. But, most people are scandalized by the funeral tactic, even those who oppose homosexuality.

But if you can’t picket military funerals, what other occasions might be deemed too provocative for free speech? Love and Truth exist perfectly within God. In today’s morally rebellious and spiritually confused world, God’s Truth, especially about homosexuality, is considered to be hate. Just because Phelps taps into fallen man’s resentment against God’s standards should he be silenced? Phelps may even be delivering a message in what some consider a hateful way, but last time I checked there is no right ‘not to be offended’ in the Constitution.

Satan would love to exploit the emotions this case engenders to silence God’s Truth; homosexuals can be and have been saved and transformed by God’s grace in Jesus Christ. Back in March of 2001, I was a pastor and on the local school board and fighting the homosexual agenda tooth and nail in our school district when a tragic shooting took place. Two students were killed and thirteen were wounded. In June, Phelp’s group came to town and picketed the school’s graduation. Westboro blamed the tragedy on the acceptance of homosexuality in California schools. Then, because I was on the school board, Westboro picketed my church that Sunday. I know first hand how frustrating it is to be the object of Phelp’s indignation. It’s ironic that I have been picketed both by homosexual activists and by Westboro Baptist Church, but I am glad for their liberty to express their views. Pray that God will keep the Supreme Court from limiting our ability to freely declare both the convicting Truth of God’s Law and the liberating Love of Christ’s Gospel.

So where should the limits lie? Discussions about freedom of speech often begin with a statement attributed to the French writer Voltaire: “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.”

(The following is taken from Wikipedia)

“Freedom of speech is the political right to communicate one’s opinions and ideas using one’s body and property to anyone who is willing to receive them. The term freedom of expression is sometimes used synonymously, but includes any act of seeking, receiving and imparting information or ideas, regardless of the medium used.

The right to freedom of speech is not absolute in any country and is commonly subject to limitations based on the speech implications of the harm principle including libel, slander, obscenity and pornography, sedition, hate speech, classified information, copyright violation, trade secrets, non-disclosure agreements.

The term “offense principle” is also used to expand the range of free speech limitations to prohibit forms of expression where they are considered offensive to society, special interest groups or individuals. For example, freedom of speech is limited in many jurisdictions to widely differing degrees by religious legal systems, religious offense, or incitement to ethnic or racial hatred laws.

Despite the exceptions, the legal protections of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution are some of the broadest of any industrialized nation, and remain a critical, and occasionally controversial, component of American jurisprudence.”

(The following is taken from uscourts.gov)

The U.S. Supreme Court often has struggled to determine what exactly constitutes protected speech. The following are examples of speech, both direct (words) and symbolic (actions), that the Court has decided are either entitled to First Amendment protections, or not.

The First Amendment states, in relevant part, that:

“Congress shall make no law…abridging freedom of speech.”

Freedom of speech includes the right:

Not to speak (specifically, the right not to salute the flag). West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624 (1943).

Of students to wear black armbands to school to protest a war (“Students do not shed their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate.”). Tinker v. Des Moines, 393 U.S. 503 (1969).

To use certain offensive words and phrases to convey political messages. Cohen v. California, 403 U.S. 15 (1971).

To contribute money (under certain circumstances) to political campaigns. Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976).

To engage in symbolic speech, (e.g., burning the flag in protest). United States v. Eichman, 496 U.S. 310 (1990).

Freedom of speech does not include the right:

To incite actions that would harm others (e.g., “Shouting ‘fire’ in a crowded theater.”). Schenck v. United States,249 U.S. 47 (1919).

To make or distribute obscene materials. Roth v. United States, 354 U.S. 476 (1957).

To burn draft cards as an anti-war protest. United States v. O’Brien, 391 U.S. 367 (1968).

To permit students to print articles in a school newspaper over the objections of the school administration.
Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier, 484 U.S. 260 (1988).

Of students to make an obscene speech at a school-sponsored event. Bethel School District #43 v. Fraser, 478 U.S. 675 (1986).

Of students to advocate illegal drug use at a school-sponsored event. Morse v. Frederick, __ U.S. __ (2007).

(The following is an editorial by Gerald F. Uelmen, Dean of Santa Clara University School of Law)

At Emory University, certain conduct that is permissible off campus is not allowed on campus. Specifically, some speech and behaviors are prohibited in Emory’s version of what are derogatorily labeled “politically correct” codes but are more commonly known as hate speech codes. Emory’s code begins with its definition of banned behavior.

Discriminatory harassment includes conduct (oral, written, graphic or physical) directed against any person or, group of persons because of their race, color, national origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability, or veteran’s status and that has the purpose or reasonably foreseeable effect of creating an offensive, demeaning, intimidating, or hostile environment for that person or group of persons.

Hate speech codes follow several formats. Some codes, including Emory’s, prohibit speech or conduct that creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive educational environment. Others ban behavior that intentionally inflicts emotional distress. Still others outlaw general harassment and threats,” without clarifying what constitutes such conduct. Court rulings have prohibited public (state-run) colleges and universities from enacting codes that restrict the constitutional right to free speech based on content. Private institutions, in contrast, are not subject to these decisions. Emory, for example, as a private university, can ignore public law rulings and draft whatever hate speech policy it chooses.

Hate speech codes raise important ethical questions. When [Hate Speech codes] are pitted against the right to freedom of speech, which does justice favor? Do the costs of hate speech codes outweigh their benefits? Is the harm that results from hate speech so serious that codes to restrict freedom of speech are morally required?

The most fundamental argument against hate speech codes rests on the idea that they violate a fundamental human right, freedom of speech. Such a fundamental right, it is argued, should not be limited except to prevent serious harm to others. Libel or shouting “Fire!” in a movie theater, for example, can cause serious harm and, therefore, are legitimately banned. In contrast, what campuses prohibit as “hate speech” is primarily opinion, that, while often offensive and unpopular, does not cause serious harm. The fundamental right to free speech should not be restricted merely to prevent hate speech.

Those who advocate hate speech codes believe that the harm codes prevent is more important than the freedom they restrict. When hate speech is directed at a student from a protected group, like those listed in Emory University’s code, the effect is much more than hurt feelings. The verbal attack is a symptom of an oppressive history of discrimination and subjugation that plagues the harmed student and hinders his or her ability to compete fairly in the academic arena. The resulting harm is clearly significant and, therefore, justifies limiting speech rights.

(The following is taken from GotQuestions.org)

Question: “Are Christians guilty of hate speech?”
Answer: A working definition of hate speech is “speech that is intended to insult, intimidate, or cause prejudice against a person or people based on their race, gender, age, sexual orientation, political affiliation, occupation, disability, or physical appearance.” If that is the accepted definition, a Christian should never participate in hate speech. However, the problem is that the definition of hate speech is broadening over time. Proclaiming that a certain belief is wrong or that a certain activity is sinful, based on biblical principles, is increasingly being included in the definition of hate speech.

Ephesians 4:15 refers to “speaking the truth in love.” First Peter 3:15 instructs Christians to defend their faith, but to do so “with [meekness and fear].” Be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear:

Colossians 4:6 proclaims, “Let your speech be alway with grace, seasoned with salt, that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man.” Sadly, some Christians fail to follow these biblical instructions. Some Christians (or at least people who claim to be Christians) speak the truth, but speak it in such a way that it is very hateful. One prominent example would be Westboro Baptist Church and its “God hates fags” slogan. Westboro Baptist Church is correct in declaring the Bible’s teaching that homosexuality is sinful, but they are declaring this truth in such a way that it is intended to be incendiary, offensive, and hurtful. Needless to say, the Bible does not support such methods.

It is likely that in the near future, governments will begin declaring more speech as hate speech, thereby making it illegal. In some parts of the world, it is illegal to say that homosexuality is a sin. In some countries, it is illegal to declare one religion right and other religions wrong. This steady broadening of what qualifies as hate speech could eventually lead to any effort to evangelize being declared hate speech, since it would be “hateful” to tell a person that what he/she currently believes is incorrect.

What the perpetrators of this expanded hate speech definition fail to realize (or admit) is that to tell someone the truth is an act of love, not hate. Is it hateful for a teacher to tell a student that his/her answer is wrong? Is it hateful for a building inspector to tell a construction company that they are building on a faulty foundation? Of course, the answer to these questions is no. However, that is precisely the illogic that is being applied to current hate speech legislation. Telling someone that his/her religious views are wrong is somehow hateful. Telling someone that his/her lifestyle is immoral is somehow hateful. The logic is not, in any sense, consistent with how truth is determined in other areas of society.

Acts 5:17 Then the high priest rose up, and all they that were with him, (which is the sect of the Sadducees,) and were filled with indignation, 18 And laid their hands on the apostles, and put them in the common prison. 19 But the angel of the Lord by night opened the prison doors, and brought them forth, and said, 20 Go, stand and speak in the temple to the people all the words of this life. 21 And when they heard that, they entered into the temple early in the morning, and taught.

25 Then came one and told them, saying, Behold, the men whom ye put in prison are standing in the temple, and teaching the people. 26 Then went the captain with the officers, and brought them without violence: for they feared the people, lest they should have been stoned. 27 And when they had brought them, they set them before the council: and the high priest asked them, 28 Saying, Did not we straitly command you that ye should not teach in this name? and, behold, ye have filled Jerusalem with your doctrine, and intend to bring this man’s blood upon us. 29 Then Peter and the other apostles answered and said, We ought to obey God rather than men.

Posted by petra1000 in Apologetics, Misc

The Terri Schiavo Case

Terri Schiavo was a coma victim whose plight came to national attention early in the Bush Administration. The legal issues split the country as much as the abortion issue.

Schiavo (Dec. 3, 1963 – Mar. 31, 2005) was diagnosed by physicians as being brain-damaged after her husband reported that she had collapsed in their home early in the morning. [Terri had been suffering from anorexia; her Potassium levels were very low (2.0). She was in a Persistent Vegitative State (PVS)…which she stayed in until her death. 10 Years]

[Michael, her husband, eventually desired to have her feeding tube removed,] and Her husband and her parents became locked in a lengthy legal battle over whether to keep her alive.

Florida Governor Jeb Bush and his brother President Bush sided with the parents, who believed their daughter was responsive. Despite a special law passed to prevent her death, courts finally decided to [cap her feeding tube, which ended any attempts by anyone, medical or not, to feed her. This occurred] on March 18, 2005, and she died of starvation and dehydration within two weeks.

A judge ordered her death despite objections by everyone in Terri’s own family and several medical professionals. [Though, there were many medical professionals who sided with the state…that she was in a PVS and had no hope of recovery to any type of recognizable life.] His order not only required removal of Terri’s feeding tube, but ordered the arrest of people who peacefully attempted to give drinking water to Terri rather than let her die of dehydration.

One of Terri’s nurses stated that Terri frequently spoke (saying “help me” and “Mommy”) and recognized familiar people. Yet she was forced to die by dehydration over the objections of her parents, her brother and sister, her church, and millions of Americans.

The State and Schiavo’s estranged husband refused to allow an independent autopsy, and Schiavo was cremated after her death. (conservapedia.com)

Of course, there are two sides to every story. The Mayo Clinic has a detailed report on this case which seems to show Terri’s husband wanting her to live for the first 5 or so years, and then upon Terri’s parents recommendation, to not be so intent on this but to instead live his life, and even ‘date’. When Terri’s husband one a few lawsuits dealing with ‘malpractice’, totaling close to a million dollars, the attitude of the parents seemed to change, and then they began complaining about the importance of their daughter’s life and that her husband, and the state, were trying to end her life. It is a difficult case to wade through.

(The following are excerpts from an article entitled ‘The Terri Schiavo Saga’ on www.mayoclinicproceedings.com)

  1. Is it ethically and legally permissible to withdraw or withhold ‘Life Sustaining Treatments’ (LSTs)?

The ethical principle of respect for patient autonomy (particularly the right to maintain bodily integrity and to be left alone) underlies the right of patients to refuse, or request the withdrawal of, unwanted medical interventions. Patients may decline interventions that they previously consented to if their health care values and goals have changed. Regardless of intent, physicians should not impose treatments on patients that patients do not want because doing so constitutes battery.

Indeed, from a legal standpoint, patients in the U.S. have a constitutionally recognized right to refuse any and all forms of medical intervention, whether or not they are terminal and whether or not such refusal may lead to their death. This acknowledged and protected freedom is the culmination of decades of cases, beginning in the 1960s with the recognition that Jehovah’s Witnesses could refuse blood products, even if such refusal would lead to their death.

In reference to the Terri Schiavo case and addressing the issue of the right to refuse treatment, 55 bioethicists stated [in a brief] to the Florida Supreme Court: “The implicated bioethical issue is not whether elderly or disabled persons can be deprived of wanted treatment, but how to implement their fundamental right to decline life-prolonging measures they would abhor. It is certainly true, as the Governor observes, that ‘the State has a compelling interest in ensuring that people with disabilities are not deprived of basic human rights’…but among those basic human rights is the right to refuse medical treatment. The Governor wants to deprive Terri Schiavo of that right, which the judicial process has determined she would want to exercise.”

  1. Who speaks for the patient when the patient cannot speak?

Physicians frequently care for patients who lack decision-making capacity and cannot speak on their own behalf. In these situations, physicians must rely on surrogates to make decisions for the patient. If the patient has an advance directive that names a surrogate, that choice should be respected. Unfortunately, most adult Americans, like Terri Schiavo, do not have an advance directive. In these situations, physicians must identify a legally authorized surrogate. Some states have statutes that specify a hierarchy of surrogates…[in Florida the hierarchy is as follows]: 1. Judicially appointed surrogate; 2. Spouse; 3. Adult child, or the majority of adult children; 4. Parent; 5. Adult sibling, or the majority of adult siblings; 6. Adult relative; 7. Close friend.

In the Schiavo case, Michael was both her court-appointed guardian and her husband, the 2 highest ranking positions for selecting a surrogate.

  1. What are the duties of a surrogate decision maker or proxy?

First and foremost, a health care surrogate or proxy has the moral obligation to follow the explicit directives of the patient, as articulated formally in an advance directive or by complying with the patient’s previously expressed wishes. In the absence of explicit instructions, surrogates must use ‘substituted judgment’, that is, knowing the worldview, values, goals, and fears of the patient and making decisions as closely as possible to those the patient would make if capable. Often, these decisions are difficult. Families may not discuss end-of-life and similar issues, and as a result, surrogates may genuinely not know how the patient would decide. In these situations, the surrogate should follow the ‘best interest’ standard, that is, given the medical facts and prognosis, make decisions that would be in the best interests of the patient.

Consequently, when the Schindlers (Terri’s parents) testified in their depositions that, if they were to act as Terri’s surrogate decision maker, they would insist on maintaining the feeding tube and all life support even if Terri had left written instructions to the contrary, they disqualified themselves from ever being appointed as proxies.

  1. Is Artificially Supplied Food and Nutrition (AFN) a medical treatment or mandatory comfort care?

Throughout the history of medical ethics, questions about what should be considered mandatory care have surfaced; therefore, we submit an approach to the question, “What is a medical intervention?” that can be used not only for AFN but also for other interventions. We call this test the “Little House on the Prairie Test.” This test simply asks that one envision being with Dr Hiram Baker in Walnut Grove, Minn, in the 1880s and confronted with a patient similar to Terri Schiavo. If the patient has a pathologic condition such that Dr Baker could not maintain the patient’s life with the available treatments (which were little more than comfort care measures), then the patient had a life-threatening illness or lethal pathologic condition beyond the efficacy of humane care. Terri had a life-threatening pathologic condition that rendered her unable to hydrate and nourish herself even by hand-feeding or using a baby’s bottle. Instead, Terri needed a PEG tube, which required endoscopy or a surgical procedure to insert. Notably, the skills and technology required to place a PEG tube have been available for only several decades, and the pre-prepared nutritional formulas infused via the tube require the oversight of an experienced nutritionist. Therefore, that which was required to sustain her was beyond the level of humane or comfort care; it was a medical intervention. Using the Little House on the Prairie Test, Terri’s feeding tube is a medical treatment that she had the right to refuse, either directly or through a surrogate.

Terri was not in a room where she was prohibited from accessing food; she had a pathologic condition (severe cerebral injury and atrophy) that would inevitably cause her to die without medical intervention. Artificially supplied fluid and nutrition is no different than dialysis, mechanical ventilation, pacemakers, and other medical treatments that bypass lesions and other pathologic conditions that prevent normal physiological and anatomical functions. Artificially supplied fluid and nutrition, or any medical treatment, can be withheld and/or withdrawn when it is determined to be unwanted by the patient or incapable of leading to the desired goals of medical treatment in general, such as the restoration of function and independent living.

Medical interventions are foreign to the human body, they are not an intrinsic part of it, as evidenced by the fact that most people get along well without a physician’s assistance until they have an illness or injury. It is presumptuous and a disservice to our patients and profession when we insist that our interventions be seen as mandatory.

  1. Does the patient’s diagnosis make a difference in the decision to withdraw or withhold medical treatments?

The media paid substantial attention to Terri’s diagnosis (eg, PVS vs minimally conscious state). In reality, diagnosis in and of itself is irrelevant. It was universally confirmed, at least by physicians who did not have a proprietary conflict of interest, that the chances of Terri’s level of consciousness improving to a point at which she could be considered capable and competent to provide additional views on continuing or discontinuing the feeding tube were nil, opinions corroborated by the autopsy findings. However, making efforts to better establish a diagnosis would be relevant if in doing so the patient might be able to better communicate his or her wishes.

  1. Is withholding or withdrawing AFN the same as Euthanasia?

Another claim made during the Schiavo controversy was that Michael and the State of Florida were overtly killing Terri as an act of euthanasia by withdrawing the feeding tube. Her underlying pathologic condition, which prevented her from hydrating and nourishing herself without the assistance of an external medical intervention, was the cause of her death. The decision to limit LSTs may lead to death, but it is a different kind of choice from euthanasia. Refusing LSTs is a request to be left alone, the goal of which is to be free of burdensome and unwanted medical treatments and to allow nature to take its course. Euthanasia is a deliberate act, the goal of which is to kill the patient. In euthanasia, a human being, not a disease, is the final arbiter of death.

We hope that it is clear that the courts were not making judgments on the value of Terri’s life, but rather doing their best to honor her life by trying to seek out and comply with her previously expressed wishes. Terri’s life was indeed precious, no matter how debilitated, and her “worth” was not in question. The unfortunate reality for each of us is that we are mortal, subject to injury, and, ultimately, pathology and death will rule the day. Each of us must face this reality and determine the appropriate levels of medical intervention that each is willing to undergo in forestalling the inevitable. We live in a time when medical knowledge and power can prolong life in a variety of disease states that cause severe debilitation, and our technical abilities often challenge our wisdom about appropriate implementation.

(end MayoClinic quotes)

And now, a more Bible-centerred view:

Natural death does not require that extraordinary means be used to artificially prolong someone’s life. Thus, in situations where a patient’s vital processes have ceased their spontaneous functions, and where no hope of recovery remains for the patient, “life support” machines are not a requirement. Refusal of “heroic means” to sustain life is quite different than initiating procedures that cause death, for example by lethal injection. (FaithFacts.org)

Food and water are considered “ordinary” care necessary to sustain life, along with comforting the patient as best as possible. Nutrition and hydration are not “medical treatments.” Administering food and fluids is not considered “extraordinary means” and withdrawing them, which by itself would cause death, [should be considered an act of murder]. (FaithFacts.org)

God has designed death to ‘generally’ follow a normal, natural cycle; it is not designed to be brought about by unnatural means.

Ecc 3:1-2 To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted;

As our society progresses toward a culture of death, the so-called “right-to-die” will become an obligation-to-die, for example, for anyone who believes that they are a burden to someone else—either financially or otherwise. And by what rationale would the trend be confined even to that? The ramifications are terrifying, but totally logical. (FaithFacts.org) For example, what would stop society from supporting the euthanizing of a 66 year old sweet Grandmother who fell and fractured her pelvis and now is confined to a Nursing Home for continued care; she has no money and her family all lives in Germany. Or, a 4 year old girl who has severe deformities; her parents have given her over to the State; the medical treatment costs are about $1 million per year. Or, your eyes are not blue, your hair is not blonde, you don’t stand over 6 ft tall, you are not in perfect health, and you do not say Hial Hitler!

How would you vote on these?

  • In 1985, a Virginia woman who killed her cancer-ridden husband with an ice pick was sentenced merely to two years’ probation and psychiatric treatment.

  • A U.S. District Court in Rhode Island ruled in 1988 that the feeding tube could be removed from a 49-year-old woman. The woman was in a coma as a result of a brain hemorrhage, and since she could not swallow, she received nourishment and liquids through a feeding tube. Her family had sued in court to compel the hospital to terminate her food and water. The medical workers who were caring for the woman were unanimous in opposing the action, but the court ordered them to remove the tubes so the woman would starve to death.

  • A man severely crippled by a 1985 motorcycle accident went to court in an attempt to gain the “right” to kill himself. In 1989, the Georgia Supreme Court unanimously ruled that he could kill himself by shutting off the breathing apparatus that kept him alive.

  • In March 1996, a 62-year-old New York man was sentenced to just six months in jail (he was expected to serve only four) for killing his wife with a mixture of honey and an antidepressant. He claimed it was assisted suicide, and a note left by the wife said she drank the potion “freely and without reservations”; but prosecutors also discovered that he had kept a diary indicating he was tired of caring for his sick wife, who had multiple sclerosis, and was eager for her death. (David W. Cloud)

**Your great uncle gave you his will that stated if he should be placed into a nursing home that he wanted no artificial means to be done to him to keep him alive (i.e. no medicines, fluids, machines, etc.; food and water were allowable)

**Your child was hurt in a fall 3 years ago and is ‘brain dead’ and on a ventilator since; he has had no signs of any improvement; the medical care is costing you $150,000 per year, after Insurance; you are now in debt close to a half a million dollars!

**Your Grandmother is a Jehovah’s Witness; you both are very close; she takes a fall and fractures her pelvis and is suffering from internal bleeding; she is not coherent; the doctors want to give her blood resuscitation; her JW beliefs, though, forbid that; you are the only family member left alive.

**Your friend is 47 years old and is a few months pregnant and just finds out through amniocentesis that the baby is a Down’s Syndrome baby and is severely deformed and not expected to live more than a few weeks after birth; your friend is not wanting to go through the trauma of seeing her newborn baby suffer and die a tragic death; she asks you if you thought it would be ok to have an abortion.

Why would anyone want to die before their time? God has a plan for them! Maybe they might get saved!

Ecc 7:17 Be not over much wicked, neither be thou foolish: why shouldest thou die before thy time?

Is it not always possible, as long as euthanasia is rejected, that one’s eternal destiny might be changed by more time in this world? In light of the seriousness of life and salvation, it is an awful responsibility to decide that a loved one’s life will be prematurely snuffed out and his opportunity for salvation forever erased. (David W. Cloud)

It is the responsibility for family members to care for their loved one, not kill them!

1 Ti 5:8 But if any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel.

Be careful how you treat your family….

Consider the testimony of Dr. Michael Miller, professor of medicine at New York Medical College and the medical director at a White Plains nursing home:

“Ninety-five percent of the patients come in [to his nursing home] with families already distanced. … They have had diminished contact, constant struggles, are constantly attacking the nursing home staff, and make demands for premature death. … It’s not the dementia or the sickness that causes family problems. Family problems began long, long ago and reemerge when the person gets old and sick. And the major way that family ‘pathology’ can get expressed, he said, is to tell the doctors, ‘don’t feed her,’ or ‘don’t treat the pneumonia,’ or, if the parent needs to walk to remain mobile, ‘that will only disturb her. Leave her alone.’ That’s all a way for the family to say, ‘We’ve had enough.’ … (David W. Cloud)

Let a person’s physical body be the determinant of when it will die, not one’s emotions or rationalizing.

Ps 90:10 The days of our years are threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.

Maybe there is enough ‘strength’ left for another year, maybe two, maybe 22!

As a Christian, you may want to die…and that is very understandable

Phil 1:21 For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.

But, let Christ decide on this, not you, a relative, or the State.

Until then, live for Christ…

John 9:4 I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.

Eccl 9:10 Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest.

Posted by petra1000 in Misc

Attitude

The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life. Attitude, to me, is more important than facts. It is more important than success, than what other people think or say or do.

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Posted by petra1000 in Misc

Two Babies

In a mother’s womb were two babies. One asked the other: “Do you believe in life after delivery?”The other replied, “Why, of course. There has to be something after delivery. Maybe we are here to prepare ourselves for what we will be later.”

“Nonsense,” said the first. “There is no life after delivery. What kind of life would that be?”

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Posted by petra1000 in God, Misc

About Today’s Real Sign

It started over 4 years ago. I started posting a new real sign everyday on facebook. This sign has become a daily thing for a lot people. I have also added a daily bible verse everyday from the site “Biblegateway” with the sign. A lot of positive feedback has come from this. I have used this as a witnessing tool to talk with people about the lord. I have tried not post any signs that are crude or rude.

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Posted by petra1000 in Misc