Posted on 12/26/2011 2:33:46 PM PST by SeekAndFind
In accordance with his wishes, Christopher Hitchens body was donated to medical research following his death less than two weeks ago; many of his followers have applauded his decision.
That is very Hitchens style, wrote one commenter on Daily Hitchens, which first announced the news of his donation through an email from his literary agent Steve Wasserman.
The agent also revealed that memorial services would be held sometime next year for the God is Not Great author.
Body donation makes absolute sense, 5ecular4umanist penned. Why waste a body in burial or cremation when it can be used to teach medical students or for scientific study for the benefit of others? Even in death we can do good.
Theres no better way to live on than helping people learn and live even after your passing, responded Hemant Mehta, chair of Foundation Beyond Belief, on his Friendly Atheist blog.
Please consider donating your body (and organs) after you die, Mehta added, urging others to do the same.
n his life and death, Hitchens continually advocated the advance of science. When he was diagnosed with stage IV esophageal cancer in 2010, he agreed to undergo a new experimental treatment partly developed by evangelical Christian scientist Francis Collins, the former director of the National Human Genome Research Project.
The treatment was designed to attack the primary site of his tumor, targeting damaged DNA discovered after mapping out his entire human genome.
Im an experiment, Hitchens previously told the U.K. Telegraph Magazine. If the treatment worked, it wouldnt just be good news for Hitchens, it would be very exciting in the general treatment of cancer, he shared.
But he was warned to have no expectations as his cancer was well advanced, having already spread to regional lymph nodes.
Though scientists did in fact find a drug for the genetic mutation discovered in his tumor, the treatment did not work as hoped.
After trying numerous other treatments, including radiation therapy, Hitchens passed away on Dec. 11, from pneumonia, a complication of esophageal cancer.
Throughout his illness, some believed that the staunch atheist would have a deathbed conversion, but the 62-year-old columnist stated that he would not do such a pathetic thing while lucid.
Regardless, many Christians have hoped in the possibility of his conversion before his passing.
In the last year of his life, Hitchens wrote some searching essays about his cancer and impending death, Denny Burk, associate professor of biblical studies at Boyce College, said on his website. He seemed to stand ever resolute in his atheism and insist that the hour of his demise must be the proving ground of his unbelief.
I would like to think that perhaps his skepticism didnt win out in the end, Burk expressed. I would like to think that the gospel he heard from [Pastor Doug] Wilson and others might have broken through just in time as it did for the thief on the cross. Stranger things have happened, and the Lords arm indeed is not too short to save even in such a moment. Nevertheless, we may never have any evidence this side of glory that the light finally broke through to Hitchens.
Christopher knew that faithful Christians believe that it is appointed to man once to die, and after that the Judgment, Wilson, who co-created Hitchens book Is Christianity Good for the World? penned on Christianity Today.
He knew that we believe what Jesus taught about the reality of damnation. He also knew that we believe for I told him that in this life, the door of repentance is always open.
We have no indication that Christopher ever called on the Lord before he died, and if he did not, then Scriptures plainly teach that he is lost forever. But we do have every indication that Christ died for sinners, men and women just like Christopher. We know that the Lord has more than once hired workers for his vineyard when the sun was almost down.
I expect some future doc will learn a good bit about deterioration of the liver.
Yup! News Flash!
Amen.
LOL!
Which ones have you donated?
I can only assume you've saved the best parts for last.
Great book that exposes what happens when you donate your body for research: Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers. You don’t always end up being used for medical student practice. You could be dropped from a height to test what happens, you could be used for product research, etc. If you don’t want any of these things to happen to your body after death, you need to make a specified donation.
...Or buried for a month or two in a pasture, then dug up and see what happens to a human body during, say, Summer. (Not that it matters after deathyou're not feeling a thing, and the forenics folks are generally respectful of the donation).
That’s one way to avoid funeral expenses!
See related thread:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2825213/posts?q=1&;page=1#1
Pre-pickled innards.
the religion of humanism...be nice basically
the elixir from which the goblin of liberalism sprouts
that and guilt...a commodity which some simply must have
guilt is way overrated.
shame...not so much anymore
It was either in that book or another about cadavers that talked about cadaver “abuse”... cutting off certain body parts and putting them into someone’s pocket, throwing bits of body at each other, posing people, etc. The people in charge frown on this of course, but you know it happens.
I have already said that my carcass is available ... just like my shoes or anything else ... if I’m dead ... have at it.
TT
Yeah - I’m an organ donor too, with the stipulation that my liver goes to a Democrat.
******* “ Yeah - Im an organ donor too, with the stipulation that my liver goes to a Democrat. “ ******
My Attorney is a big Lib ... hope he smiles when I tell him of my new Stipulation.
TT
(for years he has told everyone that I was OK, just need to get my mind right, lately I think I am getting his mind right)
I think Mr. H thought he was poking another finger in God’s eye by not allowing a funeral or burial/cremation. From the sounds of his rants while he lived, he had a very sketchy and strange concept of anything surrounding or concerning religious life, its practices, and its traditions. He tried to sound like something of an expert, but even if he had had four years of postgraduate Theology, he still didn’t understand even half of what he knew.
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