Probe Ministries
Euthanasia
Kerby Anderson
Introduction
Debate over euthanasia is not a modern phenomenon. The Greeks
carried on a robust debate on the subject. The Pythagoreans
opposed euthanasia, while the Stoics favored it in the case of
incurable disease. Plato approved of it in cases of terminal
illness.(1) But these influences lost out to Christian principles
as well as the spread of acceptance of the Hippocratic Oath: "I
will neither give a deadly drug to anybody if asked for it, nor
will I make a suggestion to that effect."
In 1935 the Euthanasia Society of England was formed to promote the
notion of a painless death for patients with incurable diseases.
A few years later the Euthanasia Society of America was formed with
essentially the same goals. In the last few years debate about
euthanasia has been advanced by two individuals: Derek Humphry and
Dr. Jack Kevorkian.
Derek Humphry has used his prominence as head of the Hemlock
Society to promote euthanasia in this country. His book Final
Exit: The Practicalities of Self-Deliverance and Assisted Suicide
for the Dying became a bestseller and further influenced public
opinion.
Another influential figure is Jack Kevorkian, who has been
instrumental in helping people commit suicide. His book
Prescription Medicide: The Goodness of Planned Death promotes his
views of euthanasia and describes his patented suicide machine
which he calls "the Mercitron." He first gained national attention
by enabling Janet Adkins of Portland, Oregon, to kill herself in
1990. They met for dinner and then drove to a Volkswagen van where
the machine waited. He placed an intravenous tube into her arm and
dripped a saline solution until she pushed a button which delivered
first a drug causing unconsciousness, and then a lethal drug that
killed her. Since then he has helped dozens of other people do the
same.
Over the years, public opinion has also been influenced by the
tragic cases of a number of women described as being in a
"persistent vegetative state." The first was Karen Ann Quinlan.
Her parents, wanting to turn the respirator off, won approval in
court. However, when it was turned off in 1976, Karen continued
breathing and lived for another ten years. Another case was Nancy
Cruzan, who was hurt in an automobile accident in 1983. Her
parents went to court in 1987 to receive approval to remove her
feeding tube. Various court cases ensued in Missouri, including
her parents' appeal that was heard by the Supreme Court in 1990.
Eventually they won the right to pull the feeding tube, and Nancy
Cruzan died shortly thereafter.
Seven years after the Cruzan case, the Supreme Court had occasion
to rule again on the issue of euthanasia. On June 26, 1997 the
Supreme Court rejected euthanasia by stating that state laws
banning physician-assisted suicide were constitutional. Some
feared that these cases (Glucksburg v. Washington and Vacco v.
Quill) would become for euthanasia what Roe v. Wade became for
abortion. Instead, the justices rejected the concept of finding a
constitutional "right to die" and chose not to interrupt the
political debate (as Roe v. Wade did), and instead urged that the
debate on euthanasia continue "as it should in a democratic
society."
Voluntary, Active Euthanasia
It is helpful to distinguish between mercy-killing and what could
be called mercy-dying. Taking a human life is not the same as
allowing nature to take its course by allowing a terminal patient
to die. The former is immoral (and perhaps even criminal), while
the latter is not.
However, drawing a sharp line between these two categories is not
as easy as it used to be. Modern medical technology has
significantly blurred the line between hastening death and allowing
nature to take its course.
Certain analgesics, for example, ease pain, but they can also
shorten a patient's life by affecting respiration. An artificial
heart will continue to beat even after the patient has died and
therefore must be turned off by the doctor. So the distinction
between actively promoting death and passively allowing nature to
take its course is sometimes difficult to determine in practice.
But this fundamental distinction between life-taking and death-
permitting is still an important philosophical distinction.
Another concern with active euthanasia is that it eliminates the
possibility for recovery. While this should be obvious, somehow
this problem is frequently ignored in the euthanasia debate.
Terminating a human life eliminates all possibility of recovery,
while passively ceasing extraordinary means may not. Miraculous
recovery from a bleak prognosis sometimes occurs. A doctor who
prescribes active euthanasia for a patient may unwittingly prevent
a possible recovery he did not anticipate.
A further concern with this so-called voluntary, active euthanasia
is that these decisions might not always be freely made. The
possibility for coercion is always present. Richard D. Lamm,
former governor of Colorado, said that elderly, terminally ill
patients have "a duty to die and get out of the way." Though those
words were reported somewhat out of context, they nonetheless
illustrate the pressure many elderly feel from hospital personnel.
The Dutch experience is instructive. A survey of Dutch physicians
was done in 1990 by the Remmelink Committee. They found that 1,030
patients were killed without their consent. Of these, 140 were
fully mentally competent and 110 were only slightly mentally
impaired. The report also found that another 14,175 patients
(1,701 of whom were mentally competent) were denied medical
treatment without their consent and died.(2)
A more recent survey of the Dutch experience is even less
encouraging. Doctors in the United States and the Netherlands have
found that though euthanasia was originally intended for
exceptional cases, it has become an accepted way of dealing with
serious or terminal illness. The original guidelines (that
patients with a terminal illness make a voluntary, persistent
request that their lives be ended) have been expanded to include
chronic ailments and psychological distress. They also found that
60 percent of Dutch physicians do not report their cases of
assisted suicide (even though reporting is required by law) and
about 25 percent of the physicians admit to ending patients' lives
without their consent.(3)
Involuntary, Active Euthanasia
Involuntary euthanasia requires a second party who makes decisions
about whether active measures should be taken to end a life.
Foundational to this discussion is an erosion of the doctrine of
the sanctity of life. But ever since the Supreme Court ruled in
Roe v. Wade that the life of unborn babies could be terminated
for reasons of convenience, the slide down society's slippery slope
has continued even though the Supreme Court has been reluctant to
legalize euthanasia.
The progression was inevitable. Once society begins to devalue the
life of an unborn child, it is but a small step to begin to do the
same with a child who has been born. Abortion slides naturally
into infanticide and eventually into euthanasia. In the past few
years doctors have allowed a number of so-called "Baby Does" to
die--either by failing to perform lifesaving operations or else by
not feeding the infants.
The progression toward euthanasia is inevitable. Once society
becomes conformed to a "quality of life" standard for infants, it
will more willingly accept the same standard for the elderly. As
former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop has said, "Nothing surprises
me anymore. My great concern is that there will be 10,000 Grandma
Does for every Baby Doe."(4)
Again the Dutch experience is instructive. In the Netherlands,
physicians have performed involuntary euthanasia because they
thought the family had suffered too much or were tired of taking
care of patients. American surgeon Robin Bernhoft relates an
incident in which a Dutch doctor euthanized a twenty-six-year-old
ballerina with arthritis in her toes. Since she could no longer
pursue her career as a dancer, she was depressed and requested to
be put to death. The doctor complied with her request and merely
noted that "one doesn't enjoy such things, but it was her
choice."(5)
Physician-Assisted Suicide
In recent years media and political attention has been given to the
idea of physician-assisted suicide. Some states have even
attempted to pass legislation that would allow physicians in this
country the legal right to put terminally ill patients to death.
While the Dutch experience should be enough to demonstrate the
danger of granting such rights, there are other good reasons to
reject this idea.
First, physician-assisted suicide would change the nature of the
medical profession itself. Physicians would be cast in the role of
killers rather than healers. The Hippocratic Oath was written to
place the medical profession on the foundation of healing, not
killing. For 2,400 years patients have had the assurance that
doctors follow an oath to heal them, not kill them. This would
change with legalized euthanasia.
Second, medical care would be affected. Physicians would begin to
ration health care so that elderly and severely disabled patients
would not be receiving the same quality of care as everyone else.
Legalizing euthanasia would result in less care, rather than better
care, for the dying.
Third, legalizing euthanasia through physician-assisted suicide
would effectively establish a right to die. The Constitution
affirms that fundamental rights cannot be limited to one group
(e.g., the terminally ill). They must apply to all. Legalizing
physician-assisted suicide would open the door to anyone wanting
the "right" to kill themselves. Soon this would apply not only to
voluntary euthanasia but also to involuntary euthanasia as various
court precedents begin to broaden the application of the right to
die to other groups in society like the disabled or the clinically
depressed.
Biblical Analysis
Foundational to a biblical perspective on euthanasia is a proper
understanding of the sanctity of human life. For centuries Western
culture in general and Christians in particular have believed in
the sanctity of human life. Unfortunately, this view is beginning
to erode into a "quality of life" standard. The disabled,
retarded, and infirm were seen as having a special place in God's
world, but today medical personnel judge a person's fitness for
life on the basis of a perceived quality of life or lack of such
quality.
No longer is life seen as sacred and worthy of being saved. Now
patients are evaluated and life-saving treatment is frequently
denied, based on a subjective and arbitrary standard for the
supposed quality of life. If a life is judged not worthy to be
lived any longer, people feel obliged to end that life.
The Bible teaches that human beings are created in the image of God
(Gen. 1:26) and therefore have dignity and value. Human life is
sacred and should not be terminated merely because life is
difficult or inconvenient. Psalm 139 teaches that humans are
fearfully and wonderfully made. Society must not place an
arbitrary standard of quality above God's absolute standard of
human value and worth. This does not mean that people will no
longer need to make difficult decisions about treatment and care,
but it does mean that these decisions will be guided by an
objective, absolute standard of human worth.
The Bible also teaches that God is sovereign over life and death.
Christians can agree with Job when he said, "The Lord gave and the
Lord has taken away. Blessed be the name of the Lord" (Job 1:21).
The Lord said, "See now that I myself am He! There is no god
besides me. I put to death and I bring to life, I have wounded and
I will heal, and no one can deliver out of my hand" (Deut. 32:39).
God has ordained our days (Ps. 139:16) and is in control of our
lives.
Another foundational principle involves a biblical view of life-
taking. The Bible specifically condemns murder (Exod. 20:13), and
this would include active forms of euthanasia in which another
person (doctor, nurse, or friend) hastens death in a patient. While
there are situations described in Scripture in which life-taking
may be permitted (e.g., self-defense or a just war), euthanasia
should not be included with any of these established biblical
categories. Active euthanasia, like murder, involves premeditated
intent and therefore should be condemned as immoral and even
criminal.
Although the Bible does not specifically speak to the issue of
euthanasia, the story of the death of King Saul (2 Sam. 1:9-16) is
instructive. Saul asked that a soldier put him to death as he lay
dying on the battlefield. When David heard of this act, he ordered
the soldier put to death for "destroying the Lord's anointed."
Though the context is not euthanasia per se, it does show the
respect we must show for a human life even in such tragic
circumstances.
Christians should also reject the attempt by the modern euthanasia
movement to promote a so-called "right to die." Secular society's
attempt to establish this "right" is wrong for two reasons. First,
giving a person a right to die is tantamount to promoting suicide,
and suicide is condemned in the Bible. Man is forbidden to murder
and that includes murder of oneself. Moreover, Christians are
commanded to love others as they love themselves (Matt. 22:39; Eph.
5:29). Implicit in the command is an assumption of self-love as
well as love for others.
Suicide, however, is hardly an example of self-love. It is perhaps
the clearest example of self-hate. Suicide is also usually a
selfish act. People kill themselves to get away from pain and
problems, often leaving those problems to friends and family
members who must pick up the pieces when the one who committed
suicide is gone.
Second, this so-called "right to die" denies God the opportunity to
work sovereignly within a shattered life and bring glory to
Himself. When Joni Eareckson Tada realized that she would be
spending the rest of her life as a quadriplegic, she asked in
despair, "Why can't they just let me die?" When her friend Diana,
trying to provide comfort, said to her, "The past is dead, Joni;
you're alive," Joni responded, "Am I? This isn't living."(6) But
through God's grace Joni's despair gave way to her firm conviction
that even her accident was within God's plan for her life. Now she
shares with the world her firm conviction that "suffering gets us
ready for heaven."(7)
The Bible teaches that God's purposes are beyond our understanding.
Job's reply to the Lord shows his acknowledgment of God's purposes:
"I know that you can do all things; no plan of yours can be
thwarted. You asked, 'Who is this that obscures my counsel without
knowledge?' Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things
too wonderful for me to know" (Job 42:2-3). Isaiah 55:8-9 teaches,
"For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my
ways, declares the Lord. As the heavens are higher than the earth,
so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your
thoughts."
Another foundational principle is a biblical view of death. Death
is both unnatural and inevitable. It is an unnatural intrusion
into our lives as a consequence of the fall (Gen. 2:17). It is the
last enemy to be destroyed (1 Cor. 15:26, 56). Therefore
Christians can reject humanistic ideas that assume death as nothing
more than a natural transition. But the Bible also teaches that
death (under the present conditions) is inevitable. There is "a
time to be born and a time to die" (Eccles. 3:2). Death is a part
of life and the doorway to another, better life.
When does death occur? Modern medicine defines death primarily as
a biological event; yet Scripture defines death as a spiritual
event that has biological consequences. Death, according to the
Bible, occurs when the spirit leaves the body (Eccles. 12:7; James
2:26).
Unfortunately this does not offer much by way of clinical diagnosis
for medical personnel. But it does suggest that a rigorous medical
definition for death be used. A comatose patient may not be
conscious, but from both a medical and biblical perspective he is
very much alive, and treatment should be continued unless crucial
vital signs and brain activity have ceased.
On the other hand, Christians must also reject the notion that
everything must be done to save life at all costs. Believers,
knowing that to be at home in the body is to be away from the Lord
(2 Cor. 5:6), long for the time when they will be absent from the
body and at home with the Lord (5:8). Death is gain for Christians
(Phil. 1:21). Therefore they need not be so tied to this earth
that they perform futile operations just to extend life a few more
hours or days.
In a patient's last days, everything possible should be done to
alleviate physical and emotional pain. Giving drugs to a patient
to relieve pain is morally justifiable. Proverbs 31:6 says, "Give
strong drink to him who is perishing, and wine to him whose life is
bitter." As previously mentioned, some analgesics have the
secondary effect of shortening life. But these should be permitted
since the primary purpose is to relieve pain, even though they may
secondarily shorten life.
Moreover, believers should provide counsel and spiritual care to
dying patients (Gal. 6:2). Frequently emotional needs can be met
both in the patient and in the family. Such times of grief also
provide opportunities for witnessing. Those suffering loss are
often more open to the gospel than at any other time.
Difficult philosophical and biblical questions are certain to
continue swirling around the issue of euthanasia. But in the midst
of these confusing issues should be the objective, absolute
standards of Scripture, which provide guidance for the hard choices
of providing care to terminally ill patients.
Notes
1. Plato, Republic 3. 405.
2. R. Finigsen, "The Report of the Dutch Committee on Euthanasia,"
Issues in Law and Medicine, July 1991, 339-44.
3. Herbert Hendlin, Chris Rutenfrans, and Zbigniew Zylicz,
"Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in the Netherlands:
Lessons from the Dutch," Journal of the American Medical
Association 277 (4 June 1997): 1720-2.
4. Interview with Koop, "Focus on the Family" radio broadcast.
5. Robin Bernhoft, quoted in Euthanasia: False Light, produced by
IAETF, P.O. Box 760, Steubenville, OH 43952.
6. Joni Eareckson, Joni (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1976).
7. Joni Eareckson, A Step Further (Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
1978).
© 1998 Probe Ministries International
About the Author
Kerby Anderson is the president of Probe
Ministries International. He received his B.S. from Oregon State
University, M.F.S. from Yale University, and M.A. from Georgetown
University. He is the author of several books, including Genetic
Engineering, Origin Science, Living Ethically in the 90s, Signs of
Warning, Signs of Hope, and Moral Dilemmas. He also
served as general editor for Marriage, Family and Sexuality.
He is a nationally syndicated columnist whose editorials have
appeared in the Dallas Morning News, the Miami
Herald, the San Jose Mercury, and the Houston
Post.
He is the host of "Probe," and frequently serves as guest host on
"Point of View" (USA Radio Network). He can be reached via e-mail
at kerby@probe.org.
Copyright © 2002 Probe Ministries.
All rights reserved.
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by
writing to:
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Richardson, TX 75081
(972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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www.probe.org
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