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STORYTIME
TAPESTRY
Special Treat
March 16,
2005
NEW CRIMES ON THE ROAD TO
"PROGRESS" Johann Christoph Arnold
Chills went down my spine as I read
a recent article in the New York Times about the Groningen Protocol, a new set
of guidelines from the
Netherlands that
deal with ending the lives of babies whose medical conditions have supposedly
sentenced them to a life of unbearable suffering.
What will be next? And
who is to decide when suffering becomes unbearable? The authors of the
guidelines say they favor "life-ending measures" only under "very strict
conditions." But to me, this phrase is nothing but brainwashing. It dulls our
consciences and falsely reassures us that the recommended "procedures" are noble
and caring. They are nothing of the sort. They are methods of killing, and
represent yet another example of our culture's desperate bid for the "good
life"--a life undisturbed by discomfort and pain.
Even if children are
born with what we consider devastating medical defects, we cannot forget that
God never makes mistakes. And if he allows suffering, shouldn't it lead those of
us who are healthy to a greater love and compassion? Do we really want a
super-race in which everyone is healthy, and in which anyone who has a medical
burden or who is in some way deformed or disfigured is eliminated at
birth?
What has happened to our consciences? Every fiber of our being
ought to cry out against this development, and against the casualness with which
such a murderous plot is being promoted as if it were simply well-reasoned
professional advice.
It is true that the abortion of babies with grave
medical conditions is already common. So is the withdrawal of life-support from
babies born without a hope of survival. (The two are, of course, very
different.) But as I see it, the new protocol has one aim: to further cement our
acceptance of evil, and to lull us to sleep as the train of "progress" roars on
toward destruction.
The notion that death is better than disability is
seeping into popular culture as well. The film Million Dollar Baby, which
presents the euthanasia of a quadriplegic as heroic, recently won four
Oscars.
Where are we "Christians" in all this? Why is there so little
outcry or alarm? God said to the first humans he created, "Be fruitful and
multiply"; yet we so often despise God's gift of life, and restrict, restrain,
and smother it. And Jesus once said, "A bruised reed he will not break; a
smoldering wick he will not put out." Why, then, are we so eager to screen and
select and eliminate?
A few weeks ago I wrote a column about our
culture's growing obsession with testing newborns, and noted how we have become
virtual slaves to fear. When my wife and I were expecting our first child, in
1967, we waited with joyful anticipation. Many parents today seem to shudder and
shrink back. They fear having children!
We have made a god of medical
research. Undeniably, scientific advances have improved life for millions, and
we think of this as progress. But as modern medicine has moved away from its
first task (relieving pain) to preventing suffering, it has succumbed to greedy
corporations that have but one aim: to amass as much wealth and power as
possible under the guise of curing every possible disorder and
dysfunction.
Just because something is legal does not make it right.
Euthanasia may be legal in the
Netherlands, but
it is still wrong. And the Groningen Protocol is not a mark of progress, but
evidence of a new crime against humanity. Deep down, everyone who has a
conscience must know this with certainty.
Many years ago, Oliver and
Marion, a couple in my congregation who were expecting a baby, unexpectedly
discovered that their child had anencephaly--that is, he was born without the
roof of his skull--and would not live.
Marion found this out during her
last prenatal visit, just days before the baby was due. Later, she
wrote:
"Two days after that visit, our beloved son was born--a beautiful,
round, pink, little boy. We named him Michael. He had obvious 'human' defects,
and I say 'human,' because I know that in God's eyes he was still perfect. We
had been warned before that he might not live at all, or at most, for a few
hours. Instead, past all our expectations, he lived for five days. He was fully
accepted and welcomed by his brothers and sisters at home, and by all our
friends and neighbors. Michael's brief life stopped me in my tracks. It made me
ask myself, What gives a life its worth? Its length? Who is to say what is
'worthwhile' or 'normal'? Without a doubt, what Michael brought to the hundreds
of people whose lives he touched had far more worth than many of our extended
lives will ever have."
Under the new Dutch guidelines, Michael would
have been euthanized within minutes of birth, and his parents and siblings--and
the community around them--would have been deprived of an experience they say
was one of the deepest and most meaningful in their lives.
Never have we
as a society talked so much about tolerance; never have we shown so little
tolerance to those who do not fit our idea of what is clean or right or
beautiful or democratic. We have long had trouble tolerating people of other
races and religions, and economic and political systems that are different from
ours. Now we are losing our ability to tolerate babies that don't measure
up.
It is differences that make our world such a wonderful place;
differences that make it such an exciting time to be alive. And yet we seem
intent on achieving global uniformity--on slowly and steadily rooting out
everyone and everything that does not live up to our standards.
May God
have mercy! We are headed down the road of self-destruction, and I shudder to
think of the future. On the other hand, there are plenty of reasons for
hope--and chief among them is our children.
Children meant everything to
Jesus. When his disciples quarreled as to who was the greatest, he put a child
in their midst and said, "Unless you become like one of these little ones you
cannot enter the kingdom of heaven." And Isaiah, speaking of that same kingdom,
said, "The lion and the lamb shall lie down peacefully together, and a little
child shall lead them." Why do we resist these wonderful words?
Whenever
I am with children, I realize how much we adults have to change in order to
become true human beings. Children are the salvation of human
civilization.
<a href="http://www.ChristophArnold.com">Johann Christoph
Arnold</a> is an author and
pastor with the <a href="http://www.bruderhof.com">Bruderhof Communities</a>.
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