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Starwynd
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If there is a right to life is there a right to die? Would there be any scriptural support? What does the Church teach?
No.If there is a right to life is there a right to die? Would there be any scriptural support? What does the Church teach?
the right to life protected in the constitution (protected, not conferred) is the right to keep the life God gave you, not the right to create your own life. God created you and gave you the gift of life. The constitution protects your right to that life. You have no right to decide when you will die, that belongs to God, and the Constitution protects you (at least it will until this country elects a candidate who publicly professes he wishes to overturn that constitutional protection) from anyone who wishes to deprive you of life without due process of law. You have no right to die, therefore the Constitution cannot protect or confer such a right.If there is a right to life is there a right to die? Would there be any scriptural support? What does the Church teach?
I’m not a scholar either, but I recall JPII making that issue very clear. Food and Water is basic primary care, even with a feeding tube. It really does not take a lot of high tech care to maintain a tube.I wouldn’t think so based on the fact that that would be ordinary care given to a sick or handicapped person. My question would be is shoving a feeding tube into a comatose patient for ten or fifteen years and feeding them “over-zealous.” that MAY change things but I am not a scholar.
God bless,
Thank you manualman that was something I was wondering about. God bless,I’m not a scholar either, but I recall JPII making that issue very clear. Food and Water is basic primary care, even with a feeding tube. It really does not take a lot of high tech care to maintain a tube.
Food & water CAN be withdrawn in the final stages when death is approaching and likely to occur due to other causes before starvation and dehydration cause death. Especially so for those with cascading failure of internal organs whose suffering is made greater via forced feedings.
If there is a right to life is there a right to die? Would there be any scriptural support? What does the Church teach?
I removed the remainder of this otherwise excellent post to respond to the above.This is a post-Biblical issue, because the modern euthanasia movement is exactly that: modern. So the Bible has no more to say on it than St. Augustine had to say about RICO or the EU; important as these are.
There is a “Right to Die” a natural death, in the sense that a human person has the right to die with dignity, to refuse extraordinary means to prolong life, to receive the final Sacraments prior to death. It does not mean that they have the right to determine when or where, or how they will die absoultely, nor do they have the right to shorten their life as they see fit, or to avoid suffering.If there is a right to life is there a right to die? Would there be any scriptural support? What does the Church teach?
Re: avoiding suffering.There is a “Right to Die” a natural death, in the sense that a human person has the right to die with dignity, to refuse extraordinary means to prolong life, to receive the final Sacraments prior to death. It does not mean that they have the right to determine when or where, or how they will die absoultely, nor do they have the right to shorten their life as they see fit, or to avoid suffering.
As long as the overdose is accidental, yes, you are correct.Re: avoiding suffering.
It’s my impression that painkillers can be legitimately given to the terminally ill at whatever rate is needed to keep the pain under control. Most common painkillers like morphine depress respiration, and can lead to death.
So long as the intended effect is the alliviation of pain, this unintended effect is considered acceptible.
If this is incorrect, I’d very much like to be corrected.
If by ‘accidental’ you mean death isn’t the desired consequence, I think you are right.As long as the overdose is accidental, yes, you are correct.