I Prayed have prayed
Lord, we ask that You protect our elderly population and help us to raise awareness for this vulnerable population. Guide us with Your Holy Spirit.
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This year, as a seventh country legalized euthanasia, 16 U.S. states considered bills that would allow doctors to prescribe lethal medication for terminally ill patients, according to the pro-euthanasia group Death with Dignity. In 2013, only eight state legislatures were looking at euthanasia proposals. But then in 2014, the story of Brittany Maynard, a terminally ill 29-year-old who committed suicide with a doctor’s help, caught the nation’s attention.

Scott Fischbach, executive director of Minnesota Concerned Citizens for Life (MCCL), said Maynard’s story changed how his organization operates. When he first started volunteering with the group in 1978, protecting babies from abortion received the organization’s full attention. “Now I’d say it’s almost 50-50” split between abortion and euthanasia, he said.

The increasing push for legal assisted suicide and euthanasia in the United States has led some groups that once focused solely on protecting the unborn to diversify their efforts.  . . .

Nine states and the District of Columbia already allow assisted suicide. Maine became the latest to legalize it in June 2019, joining California, Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, New Jersey, Vermont, and Washington. Montana allows the practice due to a state Supreme Court decision in 2009.

Minnesota is one of the 16 states where legislators introduced an assisted suicide bill in the past year. It and other past attempts to legalize euthanasia failed—so far.

In Wisconsin, another state that considered assisted suicide legislation this year, the first “death with dignity” bill appeared in the 1995-1996 legislative session. Of the 12 legislative sessions since then, nine have seen similar proposals. None has passed, but that push in the mid-1990s led the National Right to Life’s Wisconsin affiliate to begin actively fighting against physician-assisted suicide. Kristen Nupson, legislative director for Wisconsin Right to Life, said her organization probably spends 25 percent of its time promoting a pro-life approach to the end of life. She said protecting life at its end poses different challenges than safeguarding it at its beginning. . . .

The Supreme Court took up the assisted suicide question in a 1997 case but ultimately ruled that there was no constitutional right to euthanasia and allowed states to decide for themselves. That’s a good thing, but the momentum of the pro-life, anti-euthanasia movement suffers from not having a defining, flashbulb event such as Roe v. Wade.

“I don’t think there was sort of one galvanizing moment here,” said Jennifer Popik, director of federal legislation at the National Right to Life Committee.

While abortion attracts the attention of the faith community and individuals interested in mother and infant care, Fischbach said end-of-life concerns draw a different coalition that includes disability rights advocates and those vested in hospice and palliative care—groups that often have no interest in the rights of the unborn. Popik noted beliefs about abortion often fall along party lines, while those about the end of life don’t.

But Fischbach sees the perks of this distinct coalition: “It’s an opportunity to share the pro-life movement philosophy and ideology of respect for all individuals with a new audience.”

(Excerpt from World Magazine. Article by Leah Hickman. Photo Credit: Unsplash.)

Will you share your prayers for this other pro-life movement in the comments below!

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Sue C.
November 21, 2020

Father, it is not our prerogative to decide who lives and dies. You have ordained the lives of all and it is in Your hands that we live. We ask that we would remember to respect and honor those who have life wisdom to share and to fight for their right to live until You call them home. Help us to share that all lives are here because You called them into being and for those with disabilities, that You have a plan for their lives, also. Sometimes we don’t understand but that does not mean there is not a purpose.

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Donna L.
November 20, 2020

The elderly are in danger. A doctor can give a patient a lethal dose of medication any time. Especially if the patient is very sick and weak. This has been going on in this country for years. We often hear of elderly people in nursing homes falling. In some cases many times and then passing away. That should not happen. The elderly must be treated with respect. Father, we who are able who have elderly parents or relatives and are called by Your name have a responsibility to protect those who can’t help themselves. Father, help us to sensitive to the needs of our elderly family members and give them the best we can in their final years. Life and death are in Your hands Father. Help us to not forget that. Amen

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