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Contending with the 'Cults of Death'
Christian Post ^ | 9/20/07 | Dr. Richard Land

Posted on 09/22/2007 9:59:50 AM PDT by wagglebee

It is now clear that a “death cult” has taken root within Islam. These fanatical enemies of freedom will as soon rain death and mayhem upon a schoolyard of innocent children (Muslim as well as non-Muslim) as they will attack a military vehicle.

Yet while we denounce these zealots who seek to destroy in the name of religion, we should also acknowledge that a “death cult” has arisen in our own society as well. Many in this group worship at the altar of secularism. They have devalued life, and their handiwork is memorialized in the ignominious Roe v. Wade decision as well as in those state statutes that allow for euthanasia and lethal experimentation on embryonic stem cells.

In his 1995 encyclical Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life), Pope John Paul II noted as the twentieth century came to a close that a full-blown “Culture of Death” had established itself within Western civilization.

Clear marks of this “culture of death” are seen in a hideous September 12 decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court. It held that a physician has “no legal duty” to inform a pregnant woman consenting to an abortion that what is within her womb is a “complete, separate, unique and irreplaceable human being.” The case primarily focused on the “theory of lack of informed consent.”

The New Jersey justices affirmed a lower court ruling that a woman who consented to an abortion of her six- to eight-week-old unborn child but claimed she did not understand it was a child she was aborting was not entitled to the disclosure that she was carrying a child, nor was she entitled to damages for emotional distress or wrongful death. This is in spite of the medical fact that a baby’s heart begins to beat 24 days after conception and a baby has measurable brain waves at 42 days gestation.

“On the profound issue of when a life begins, this Court cannot drive public policy in one particular direction by the engine of common law when the opposing sides, which represent so many of our citizens, are arrayed along a deep societal and philosophical divide,” said the court in Rosa Acuna v. Sheldon C. Turkish.

The court had previously interpreted the state’s Wrongful Death Act as not including a “fetus within the definition of a ‘person’ covered by the Act.”

The plaintiff, Rosa Acuna, said when her physician, Sheldon Turkish, told her she was pregnant, she asked “if it was a baby in there.” Acuna claims Turkish responded, “Don’t be stupid. It’s only blood.” Turkish denies making that statement, but speculates he might have told her that a “seven-week pregnancy is not a living human being” but rather “just tissue at this time.”

Some weeks after her abortion, Acuna experienced unexpected complications. She was admitted to a local hospital where she was told she had had an “incomplete abortion” and that “the doctor had left parts of the baby inside” of her. At that point Acuna was horrified to realize her earlier decision to terminate her pregnancy meant not simply the removal of “blood” but the destruction of a real human being.

While expressing sympathy for the “deep pain” the plaintiff was enduring because of the abortion, the justices said informed consent extends only to doctors providing “their pregnant patients seeking an abortion only with material medical information, including gestational state and medical risks involved in the procedure.”

In essence the court held that while a physician has an obligation to inform a patient about the known (agreed-upon) risks from a particular medical procedure or drug regimen, that same doctor has no obligation to tell a person considering abortion that the “thing” that is to be aborted is a preborn human being, in this case a baby with a beating heart and a functioning brain. The court’s reasoning in this assertion is that there is a lack of agreement over the nature of the pregnancy itself within society.

In applauding the ruling the ACLU said the case was an “underhanded attempt to turn doctors into ideological mouthpieces and subject women to non-medical moral judgments.”

Why are pro-abortion groups afraid to let an unsuspecting woman know that the “thing” growing within her is a human life? Even with that information, under current law the woman would still have the “right” (wrong though it may be) to have that life flushed out of her system.

Planned Parenthood, the ACLU, and other members of this cult of death don’t want women to know this is a human life we are talking about. It is not only a truth revealed in Scripture (Psalm 139; Jeremiah 1:5); it is a fact agreed upon by most in the medical community.

It is a fact that the plaintiff in this case consented in writing to this procedure. (Although it is her contention that she did not fully comprehend its ramifications.) It is difficult to fathom that any woman would not understand that what was growing within her is a child —particularly if this was the woman’s third child (as it was for Acuna).

Nonetheless, we cannot make such assumptions about the population.

That is why the paper cup you are handed at your local coffee shop has a warning imprinted upon it to tell you that the coffee in the cup is hot and may burn you if you pour it on yourself.

And it is why there is a label on hair dryers that warns that you if you want to dry your hair immediately after washing it you should step out of the shower spray before you take hold of the dryer.

This case rises to a much higher level because a human life faced immediate and deadly risk.

The ACLU said the court’s decision is a message that citizens of New Jersey will not “tolerate backdoor efforts to curtail reproductive rights or free speech.”

It is easy to perch haughtily on the right to freedom of speech embedded in our Constitution’s First Amendment, but is there not at least a moral obligation for that speech to be truthful and complete?

Should a patient not expect her physician to tell her everything about a pending medical procedure? The law, in fact, requires as much. Yet the law in New Jersey does not recognize the unborn child—the target of the abortion—as a patient (or a victim). So the doctor has no obligation to inform the baby’s legal guardian of the risks of the procedure.

While those who value human life—born and preborn—may be disgusted by the New Jersey Supreme Court’s ruling, we should be more disgusted with a society that contends that an unborn human baby is just a mass of tissue until some subjective, magical time in-utero when the tissue is transformed into a human being.

We had a similar issue earlier in our nation’s history when we regarded the color of a person’s skin as a determinant of their value as a human being. African-Americans had been regarded “as beings of an inferior order” by U.S. Supreme Court justices writing in the Dred Scott decision.

We should be motivated by this decision (as well as many other similar decisions before it) to assist our citizenry in understanding when life begins and that, especially at two months of pregnancy, this baby is not simply a cluster of random cells. The baby not only had a heartbeat when the doctor performed the “incomplete abortion”—the baby had measurable brain waves, the legal definition of human life in most states.

We should also encourage Christian young people to pray about whether God might call them to ministries in medicine and the life sciences, so as to “season” the medical community with Truth.

We should ensure there is an amply funded pregnancy care center in every city and town across our nation and that every center has ultrasound equipment that allows women in crisis pregnancies to marvel at the life that God is growing within them. Women who see a sonogram of their unborn babies are five times less likely to snuff out their babies’ lives.

Finally we should, with all the earnestness and seriousness the Spirit will provide us, be “salt” and “light” in our families, churches, communities, and nation. It is not an option; the Gospel demands it, lives depend on it, and the survival of our civilization hangs in the balance.

The death cults abroad and at home must be confronted.

____________________________________________________________

Dr. Richard Land is president of The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, the Southern Baptist Convention's official entity assigned to address social, moral, and ethical concerns, with particular attention to their impact on American families and their faith.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: abortion; acuna; cultofdeath; cultureofdeath; moralabsolutes; prolife; richardland
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It is now clear that a “death cult” has taken root within Islam. These fanatical enemies of freedom will as soon rain death and mayhem upon a schoolyard of innocent children (Muslim as well as non-Muslim) as they will attack a military vehicle.

Yet while we denounce these zealots who seek to destroy in the name of religion, we should also acknowledge that a “death cult” has arisen in our own society as well. Many in this group worship at the altar of secularism. They have devalued life, and their handiwork is memorialized in the ignominious Roe v. Wade decision as well as in those state statutes that allow for euthanasia and lethal experimentation on embryonic stem cells.

And yet most people refuse to realize that the secular culture of death is just as deadly and godless as the Islamofascists.

1 posted on 09/22/2007 9:59:55 AM PDT by wagglebee
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To: cgk; Coleus; cpforlife.org; narses; 8mmMauser

Pro-Life Ping


2 posted on 09/22/2007 10:00:51 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: 230FMJ; 49th; 50mm; 69ConvertibleFirebird; Aleighanne; Alexander Rubin; An American In Dairyland; ..
Moral Absolutes Ping!

Freepmail wagglebee or little jeremiah to subscribe or unsubscribe from the moral absolutes ping list.

FreeRepublic moral absolutes keyword search
[ Add keyword moral absolutes to flag FR articles to this ping list ]


3 posted on 09/22/2007 10:01:38 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee
Richard Land, James Dobson, and Chuck Colson are my favorite U.S. Christian leaders, and I'm a Catholic.

Friendly question for Catholics and Evangelicals: are there any Catholics in the USA who match these three for leadership? Just curious about your views, y'all.

4 posted on 09/22/2007 10:47:10 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Pastores vos dabo.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o; Alex Murphy; PetroniusMaximus; tutstar; TonyRo76; xzins
Richard Land, James Dobson, and Chuck Colson are my favorite U.S. Christian leaders, and I'm a Catholic.

Friendly question for Catholics and Evangelicals: are there any Catholics in the USA who match these three for leadership? Just curious about your views, y'all.

I would say Fr. Fr. Tom Euteneuer and Fr. Frank Pavone, though their focus is almost exclusively pro-life.

There are no American bishops or cardinals who I can think of that are on the level of the gentlemen you listed. But I would also be interested in hearing what some Evangelicals think.

5 posted on 09/22/2007 10:55:59 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Mr. Silverback; MHGinTN; DJ MacWoW

Sorry, I meant to ping you to this also.


6 posted on 09/22/2007 10:58:30 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
"Friendly question for Catholics and Evangelicals: are there any Catholics in the USA who match these three for leadership? Just curious about your views, y'all."

I don't know of anyone who views the abortion, euthanasia, and stemcell situations as a denominational issue.

7 posted on 09/22/2007 11:13:17 AM PDT by editor-surveyor (Turning the general election into a second Democrat primary is not a winning strategy.)
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To: wagglebee

Now I understand why the left and the jihadis love each other so much - they’re both death cults.


8 posted on 09/22/2007 11:18:43 AM PDT by Leftism is Mentally Deranged
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To: wagglebee
Article: It is now clear that a “death cult” has taken root within Islam.

      Islam is a death cult.

9 posted on 09/22/2007 11:52:47 AM PDT by Celtman (It's never right to do wrong to do right.)
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To: Celtman

True.


10 posted on 09/22/2007 11:54:45 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee
Don't contend. Oblige.
11 posted on 09/22/2007 11:56:23 AM PDT by JoanVarga (Primordial Slack)
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To: wagglebee
It is now clear that a “death cult” has taken root within Islam.

It is now clear? Just "now"? Six years after 9/11 and he's just now getting it? Man, is he slow!!! The rest of us got it on 9/11, and even before 9/11. The Munich Olympics, John Testrake the TWA pilot, the Cole, the Achille Lauro, etc etc. For the president of an ethics commission, he's not really on top of things.

12 posted on 09/22/2007 1:00:40 PM PDT by my_pointy_head_is_sharp (Deport 'em all.)
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To: my_pointy_head_is_sharp

“Now” does not mean that it has just immediately happened.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/now


13 posted on 09/22/2007 1:07:55 PM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee

truth freedom life BTTT.


14 posted on 09/22/2007 1:14:03 PM PDT by PGalt
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To: wagglebee
And yet most people refuse to realize that the secular culture of death is just as deadly and godless as the Islamofascists. In truth, the secular culture of death defending abortion on demand and exploitation of embryo-aged beings is more deadly for America because Islamofascist manifestation is seen as 'the other' being dangerous and deadly to our culture, whereas defending abortion on demand and exploitation of youngist humans is not seen clearly as deadly to our culture. But it is not only deadly, it suicidal! Compare that to our embracing the demonic blood lust of Islam which seeks to slaughter as many of us as they can and you begin to see the irrationality of embracing the slaughter of our alive unborn and harvesting our youngest humans for 'medical utility'. Sadly, too many of our fellow Americans can comprehend the deadly nature of either, and they will be instrumental in the death of our culture and society.
15 posted on 09/22/2007 1:38:53 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support. Defend life support for others in the womb.)
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To: editor-surveyor
"I don't know of anyone who views the abortion, euthanasia, and stemcell situations as a denominational issue."

I don't, either. These are human rights/human dignity issues -- as well as religious and Scriptural, but understandable on the grounds of reason and humanity as well.

But I repeat my question: are there U.S. Catholic leaders of the stature of these Evangelical men whom I so respect: Land, Dobson, and Colson?

16 posted on 09/22/2007 1:39:28 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Pastores vos dabo.)
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To: wagglebee
“Now” does not mean that it has just immediately happened.

I get that. But his realization of it just happened.

Don't be such an ass.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ass

17 posted on 09/22/2007 1:57:29 PM PDT by my_pointy_head_is_sharp (Deport 'em all.)
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To: my_pointy_head_is_sharp

I don’t get that impression at all; if believe say that his realization just happened, what event caused this.


18 posted on 09/22/2007 2:01:48 PM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

To: TonyRo76; NYer; Coleus; narses; Salvation; Pyro7480
"Friendly question for Catholics and Evangelicals: are there any Catholics in the USA who match these three for leadership? Just curious about your views, y'all."

Thank you. Good answers. To Chaput of Denver and Burke of St. Louis, I would add Fabian Bruskewitz of Lincoln, NE.

But just looking at this list makes me feel sad. These guys are great, but they have very little publicity (FReeper Catholics break into smiles and applause at all three names, but I daresay 97% of American Catholics wouldn't even recognize them.) And that means they don't have as much influence for the good as they ought to have.

At one point you could have mentioned Mother Angelica of EWTN as the most influential Catholic in America, but now that she's an octogenarian and silenced/cripped by a stroke, there is no one to replace her.

Thanks anyway for your answer. Let me keep thinking about this. Anybody else?

20 posted on 09/22/2007 6:12:45 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Whatever things are true, whatever are noble, just, pure, lovely--- brethren, think on these things.)
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