daily devotionals online logo Tuesday, February 04, 2025 1:57 AM GMT+1
       Reset Password        Click here to sign up.
 
daily devotionals online
Home
       our daily bread
Our Daily Bread
       the good seed
The Good Seed
       the LORD is near
The LORD is near
       andrew wommack
Andrew Wommack
       billy graham
Billy Graham
       the word for today
The Word for Today
 
christian topics
Christian
       general topics
General
       interesting topics
Interesting
       more dailydevotionals online links
More
 

Why Christians Must Stand against the Normalization of Euthanasia
Posted by Temmy
Fri, January 31, 2025 9:03pm


Why Christians Must Stand against the Normalization of Euthanasia

Last fall, to pressure passage of the Terminally Ill Adults bill in the House of Commons, advocates of legal suicide in the UK took an innovative approach. They plastered the London Underground with posters that resembled ads for antidepressants or headache medicine. The most prominent featured a wealthy, healthy woman dancing in her kitchen in her pjs with a big smile on her face. The caption read, “My dying wish is my family won’t see me suffer and I won’t have to.”

In the UK, the advertising of porridge (for health reasons, ironically) and politics is banned on the Tube. Upselling death is allowed. Though good Samaritans covered the posters with information for suicide prevention hotlines, defenders stood by the marketing. One spokesman said, “The campaign uses positive imagery of these people living life on their own terms, alongside messages about why they are campaigning for greater choice.”

The campaign marked a new chapter in death culture. Long gone are the Jack Kevorkian days of peddling cold and clinical death machines. Even the “it’s the compassionate thing to do” and “who wants to suffer?” guilt campaigns have been traded in. This UK campaign was about autonomy, the promise of a final way to express one’s “expressive individualism.” In this vision, death is the designer capstone of a fully autonomous life.

This is the necessary end of the sharp turn inward to the unencumbered self that demands life, and now even death, on our own terms. Francis Schaeffer recognized that what he called the pursuit of “personal peace and affluence” was, ultimately, a rejection of God as the maker of morality and meaning. Carl Trueman recognized that “expressive individualism” is a rejection of God as the Creator and thus a rejection of who we are in His image.


But if life’s real meaning is autonomy, why wouldn’t the meaning of death be the same? Previous generations called one another to memento mori, to remember that they will die as a way of knowing how to live well. Ours, fully detached from God, wants to live and die in whichever way we choose.

To be certain, to demand autonomous death is also to reject God, the One who, Scripture says, “holds the keys to death and Hades.” And, like all claims of autonomy, it is an illusion. The reality is always less choice for the most vulnerable.

For example, a British judge recently ruled that a woman on life support since May should be taken off because it was “in her best interest to die.” The family, who had been insisting the patient responded to them with eye movements and hand squeezes, says she would not agree to this motion because of her Christian convictions. The women was pulled from life support late last month. The slope between the right to die and the duty to die is certainly slippery when the state is involved. This is most obvious in Canada, where the euphemistic “Medical Aid in Dying” (or MAiD) has led to the early deaths of autistic people and drug addicts, among others. In fact, everywhere death has been legalized in this way, the “right to die” soon becomes the pressure to and eventually the duty to die.

There are a number of steps involved in this process. First, the meaning of words such as “terminal” and “hopeless” and “illness” slide down the slope. Soon, they expand to include those not facing imminent death or even a physical condition. Second, in another diabolical play on words, anyone who opposes such “freedom” is accused of lacking “compassion” or care for one’s “basic dignity.”

Somewhere around this time, the public learns of “financial realities” involved. In Canada, “watchdog” and “oversight” groups released “studies” demonstrating how MAiD would save millions of dollars. According to a recent article in The Telegraph, if the Terminally Ill Adults bill becomes law in the UK, families whose elderly members choose this kind of death will receive a tax break. In other words, “If assisted dying becomes legal . . ., it could leave someone . . . with an agonizing choice between prolonging their life or saving their family hundreds of thousands of pounds.”

Our words either reflect or distort reality. That is why, as G.K. Chesterton said, “If words aren’t worth fighting over, what on earth is?” For years, I misremembered another quote from Confucious. “When words lose their meaning, people lose their lives.” Apparently, he actually said, “People lose their freedom.” However, had he witnessed the advance of assisted suicide, he may have said it as I remembered.

In reaction to the UK law, Glen Scrivener posted, “Assisted dying is cheap. Love is costly. Life is invaluable.” His use of these words is correct because, in truth, we are not our own. We are created by God in His image. Life and death belong ultimately to Him.

Source





 

More From Christian Chat Room Archives


Overcoming an anxious mind - Skip Heitzig
Overcoming an anxious mind - Skip Heitzig
Posted on Fri, April 23, 2021 12:19pm


The COVID crisis has ravaged our communities, spreading more than merely physical sickness. With shutdowns and job loss along with restrictions on our normal lives, it is no surprise that half of U.S. adults have experienced high anxiety. Anxiety can make us feel hopeless and stuck, especially when there...More
Keep up the good fight, mothers. The world needs you.
Keep up the good fight, mothers. The world needs you.
Posted on Mon, May 10, 2021 11:09am


I wouldn't be here if not for the prayers of my grandmother. She prayed nightly for each of her many grandchildren by name. I wouldn't be here if not for the prayers of my mother that sustain me to this very hour. There are moments that I'm fighting darkness and the pressures of this world, and I know my...More
Church surprises families with $100 each to use or ‘pay it forward'
Church surprises families with $100 each to use or ‘pay it forward'
Posted on Tue, August 31, 2021 8:04am


Congregants at Oak Hills Church in San Antonio, Texas, cheered and applauded their pastor Sunday after learning that each family present at worship services had been gifted $100 to cover their own needs or "pay it forward" to anyone else they chose.

"Today, we're flipping the script. Today we're...More



 


Today's Devotional Topics
Lowly but loved by God   Righteous before God   Be a Berean   What is God like?   Faithfulness
...
Devotional Sections - NA
Today's Devotional Topics - NA
Devotional Sections & Today's Topics - NA
Devotional Sections 2025 - NA
Devotional Sections 2025 & Today's Topics - NA
Other Sections - NA
Latest Topics - NA
Other Sections & Latest Topics - NA
Devotional Sections
Devotional Sections 2025
Other Sections
Today's Devotional Topics
Latest Topics
Today's Devotional Topics - SU
Devotional Sections & Today's Topics
Devotional Sections 2025 & Today's Topics
Other Sections & Latest Topics
Go top



For enquiries, notifications and ad placement send mail to dailydevotionalsonline@gmail.com
Copyright 2012 - 2025 All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy || Terms & Conditions