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Position Statement on Euthanasia Presbyterians Pro-Life Research, Education, and Care, Inc. P.O. Box 11130 * Burke, VA 22009-1130
For He must reign until He has put all His enemies under His feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death. Christians have, for two-thousand years, recognized Scripture as the final authority in all matters of controversy1 and have appealed to its authority with the same words which their Master frequently used when He taught His disciples: "It is written…"2 Our own reformed tradition hasconfessed through the centuries that the Bible is our only infallible rule of faith and practice.3 Scripture teaches that human beings are the crown of God's creation,4 and that the murder of a human being is a great wickedness before our Heavenly Father because each man and woman has been made in His image.5 The Sixth Commandment condemns not only the directly intended taking of innocent human life, whether our own or another's,6 but also the "neglecting or withdrawing the lawful or necessary means of preservation of life. "7 Today there are mounting pressures upon medical professionals, pastors, families, and individuals to hasten the death of those under their care or authority. Such hastening sometimes takes the form of direct action, such as a lethal injection. It may also take a passive form in neglect or withdrawal of the necessary means of preservation of life. Such means include medical treatment, both extraordinary and ordinary. But they also include basic provisions normally understood as care: warmth, cleanliness, food, water, and love. Christians must distinguish between "treatment" and "care" Christians must distinguish between "treatment" and "care." Where medical treatment which is not gravely burdensome is necessary for an individual to continue to live, the withdrawal of such treatment except in cases where death is imminent and inevitable and to continue such treatment would pose a grave risk or cause more burden to the patient than it would alleviate-is a violation of the image of God which all men and women bear. Loving care for all members of the human community is a fundamental Christian teaching and an obligation of Christian discipleship.8 Therefore it ought never to be withheld. This includes providing liquids and nutrition through spoon-feeding or tubes where the patient is unable to take them by another manner. Withholding such necessary means for the preservation of life must, therefore, stand under Scripture's condemnation,9 even in case of those who are perpetually comatose. Christians should act to alleviate suffering but not at any cost Christians should also ensure that members of the human community are upheld with the warmth and love of human contact. Christians follow their Master in humbly serving those who suffer and acting to alleviate their suffering. We recognize, however, that suffering is not to be avoided at any cost,10 especially if the cost is either our own or the patient's breaking of the Sixth Commandment. Scripture teaches that affliction often produces spiritual growth and holiness.11 Such spiritual fruit is far more valuable in God's eternal economy than those commodities so frequently mentioned by proponents of "quality of life" ethics such as self-determination and autonomy.12 People who ask to be killed, to be assisted in suicide, or to have actions taken which will hasten their death, frequently do so out of a misguided desire not to burden others. Regrettably they are often pressured in this direction by talk of "quality of life" and "death with dignity."13 Such individuals, though, are best helped by a simple warm embrace and other visible demonstrations of our love and affection for them. We need to reassure them by expressing our desire that they live here with us until God Himself, in His sovereign will,14 intervenes to take them, those who belong to Him, to live in His house forever.15 Jesus warned we would be judged on the basis of our ministry to "the least of these my brothers."16 How much more weighty is our responsibility when "the least of these" are our own family members,17 especially our mothers and fathers.18 Good death is natural death in Christ We urge all followers of the Lord Jesus Christ to approach death with the recognition that the only "good death" is the natural death of a man or woman, boy or girl, Yet as followers of Jesus Christ we cling to our hope that who is "in Christ."19 Although for Christians "to die is gain,"20 death itself will never cease being our last enemy."21 Furthermore, for those who don't believe, death is the terrible moment "after (which comes) the judgment."22 Yet as followers of Jesus Christ we cling to our hope that the Holy Spirit has given us a lively faith in our precious Lord, and that through His blood our sins will be forgiven and we will be welcomed into his glorious presence where there is "fullness of joy (and) … pleasures for evermore."23 Where, with thy quire of Saints for evermore, I shall be made thy Music; as I come I tune the instrument here at the door, And what I must do then, think here before. I dare not ask to hide from Thee; I lay in dust life's glory dead, And from the ground there blossoms red Life that shall endless be.
Book of Confessions: 3.20; 5.013; 6.008; 6.010; 6.174 2. Matthew 4:4,6,7,10; Luke 19:46; Mark 7:6 3. Book of Confessions: 5.002; 6.052; 7.113; Book of Order: G-2.0400 4. Psalm 8:5; Matthew 6:26; 12:12 3. Genesis 1:27; 9:6 6. Book of Confessions: 4.105; 4.106; 7.245 7. Book of Confessions: 7.246; 4.107 8. 1 Timothy 5:4-8; James 1:27 9. Exodus 20:13; Matthew 25:31-46; James 2:14-17; Book of Confessions 7.246 10. James 5:10,11; Isaiah 53; Matthew 27:34; Romans 8:17,18; Philippians 3:10 11. Lamentations 3; Romans 5:3-5; Colossians 1:24 12. Hebrews 5:8; James 5:10; 1 Peter 4:1,12-16 13. Job 2:9 14. Deuteronomy 31:14; Job 14:5; Matthew 24:42-44; Luke 2:26-32; 12-40; James 4:13,14 15. Luke 23:43; John 14:1-6; 11 Corinthians 5:6-8 16. Matthew 25:31-46 17. 1 Timothy 5:8 18. Exodus 20:12; Deuteronomy 5:16; Ephesians 6:2 19. Romans 6:23; 8:1,38,39; 1 Corinthians 15:22; 1 Thessalonians 4:16 20. Philippians 1:21 21. 1 Corinthians 15:25,26 22. Romans 14:10; Hebrews 9:27 23. Psalm 16:11
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