Posted on 10/28/2003 3:37:41 PM PST by nickcarraway
As a child, I was taught the story of the Good Samaritan. In this parable, a man is found on a roadside, having been robbed and beaten by some bandits and then left to die. This man is never named, never given an identity, he is just another of the needy among us. As he lay in the dirt, bloodied and bruised, two men pass by him on their way to various destinations.
Perhaps like many of us, the men that passed him that day were busy, and it would be inconvenient for them to show any true compassion. Perhaps they thought, I gave some money to a charity recently, or someone else will help this hapless soul. Amazingly, the first man to pass by this poor wounded person is a priest, a man entrusted by his ordination to care for the less fortunate among us. The second man, a lawyer, passes by him even though he may be able to offer this victim the protection of the law by assisting him in identifying and bringing to justice those criminals who left him to die.
I wonder how many of us would pass by this nameless man? I wonder how many of us would find it inconvenient to help those who have been left to die?
Terry Schiavo was left to die last week, and many people among us were willing to pass her by, thinking it was inconvenient or unnecessary to provide assistance to someone that is not currently experiencing a full life. Like Terry Schiavo, the nameless man was not currently experiencing what society would have deemed a full life. Thankfully, compassion overcame convenience and someone stopped to help him. Thankfully, the Florida Legislature and Governor Jeb Bush allowed compassion to overcome convenience by stopping to help Terry Schiavo this week.
The battle between compassion and convenience is one that we each fight on a daily basis. Although we may be busy working and living, we must also be compassionate to the less fortunate among us. The reason we must be compassionate is clear: it is a response to the essence of humanity, being made in the image of the Creator. The story of the Good Samaritan has an interesting beginning The story is prompted by the question, Who is my neighbor?
Who is my neighbor? I believe this question is motivated by a desire to limit the bounds of our charity. The man asking the question is seeking to restrict his solidarity to a small group in his community. Yet Jesus blows that notion to smithereens by telling a story about a Jew being helped by his mortal enemy, a Samaritan. In the end, Jesus interrogator realizes the true meaning of being a neighbor. A neighbor is someone who allows compassion to overcome convenience.
When compassion wins, new relationships are created; when convenience wins, old relationships remain status quo. When compassion wins, the fullness of life is experienced; when convenience wins, the emptiness of existence is perpetuated. When compassion wins, a culture is humanized; when convenience wins, mankind becomes more mechanistic.
This week, in the life of Terry Schiavo, the Florida Legislature, and Governor Bush, Compassion Won! In the coming court battle, lets pray that compassion wins. In this new millennium, lets pray that compassion wins. In the hearts and minds of humans the world over, lets pray that compassion wins.
_____________________________
Derek Holser is the Executive Director of Common Good Foundation, an ecumenical movement devoted to the conversion of culture through four pillars of participation; life, family, freedom and solidarity with the poor. He is also the President of Advocatus, LLC., a full-service lobbying and public relations agency dedicated to "giving a voice to those who have none".
Derek Holser - Executive Director, 757-963-5747
Email at: derek@lawofficelsf.com
But, do you support lawsuit abuse? The husband won $1.3 million in court by specifically promising, that he would care for her over her natural lifespan, which said would be a normal lifespan. Now that he got the money from the courts he wanted, and he contradicts his own sworn testimony.
Help me out here... What was the name Hitler and the Nazis used for the non-productive types like you mentioned above? You know, the ones that were a cost to society and needed to be eliminated?
That is just garbage. This woman has been evaluated as essentially brain dead to the satisfaction of the courts. Her mind has left this world, to keep her body as an object of worship is just bizarre.
Terri's parents were paying for her care and letting Michael live in their house, until the lawsuit was concluded and the funds forthcoming.
The moment the funds were cleared, Michael refused to pay back Terri's parents any of the money they had spent on her care, or his living arrangements, food, laundry, etc.
Michael spent some of the money at some phony new age clinic in KOWLIFORNIA, and then afterward stopped all but the bare minimum of funding to provide a bed and not much else for Terri.
Over half of the funds went to two lawyers, Michael's first lawyer during the lawsuit, and then recently George Felos.
I believe he has convinced they can kill Terri and sell her brain to a research center for a huge sum.
THere are tons of posts on the different threads here about Terri, all explaining what I have just told you.
Wonder if you will read this and keep acting like you don't know the answers to your question?
You mean, according to the information being spread by the MEDIA, (which is totally incorrect) she is brain-dead.
Even George Felos and her husband admitted on a talk show that she is NOT BRAIN DEAD.
Apparently there are several FR posters that are. Please don't be one of them.
.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.