November 21, 2007
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Give Them Parking Space, But Let Them Starve to Death
Give Them Parking Space, But Let Them Starve to Death by Elizabeth Elliot
Another moral threshold was crossed when a tiny baby boy, at the specific request of his parents and with the sanction of the Supreme Court of Indiana, was starved to death in a hospital. “Infant Doe” (he was not allowed the usual recognition of being human by being named), born with Down’s syndrome and a malfunctioning esophagus (the latter could have been corrected with surgery), died, as the Washington Post (April 18) stated, “not because he couldn’t sustain life without a million dollars worth of medical machinery, but because no one fed him.” For six days the nurses in that Bloomington hospital went about their usual routines of bathing and changing and feeding all the newborns except one. They bathed and changed Baby Doe but they never gave him a bottle. Over his crib was a notice, DO NOT FEED. Several couples came forward, begging to be allowed to adopt him. They were turned down.
What went on in that little box during those six terrible days and nights? We turn our imagination away. It’s unthinkable. But if I were to think about it, and put down on paper what my mind saw, I would be accused of playing on people’s feelings, and of making infanticide (yes, infanticide–call it what it is) an “emotional issue.” Let me suppose at least that the baby cried–quite loudly (at first). One report says that he was placed in a room alone, lest his crying disturb others (others, perhaps, who were capable of helping him).
Joseph Sobran, in his column in the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, suggested that “opposition to infanticide will soon be deplored as the dogma of a few religious sects who want to impose their views on everyone else.” The language sounds sickeningly familiar.
There has been a conspicuous silence from those who usually raise shrill protest when other human rights are violated–the rights of smokers, homosexuals, and criminals are often as loudly insisted upon as those of children, women, and the handicapped.
The handicapped? What on earth is happening when a society is so careful to provide premium parking spaces to make things easier for them, but sees no smallest inconsistency when one of them who happens to be too young to scream, “For God’s sake, feed me!” is quietly murdered? It is in the name of humanity, humaneness, compassion, and freedom that these things occur, but never is it acknowledged that the real reasons are comfort and convenience, that is, simple selfishness. “Abortion not only prefers comfort, convenience, or advantage of the pregnant woman to the very life of her unborn child, a fundamentally good thing, but seeks to deny that the life ever existed. In this sense it is a radical denial not only of the worth of a specific life but of the essential goodness of life itself and the Providential ordering of its procreation” (R.V. Young, “Taking Choice Seriously,” The Human Life Review, Vol. VIII, no. 3.)
But weren’t we talking about infanticide and haven’t we now switched to abortion? The premises on which abortion is justified are fundamentally the same on which infanticide is seen as civilized and acceptable. What Hitler used to call eugenics is now called “quality of life,” never mind whether the life in question happens to be the mother’s or the child’s. Death, according to three doctors who put the issue out into the open in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1973, is now considered an option in the “treatment” of infants; in other words, a mortuary may now replace the nursery. One cannot help thinking of the antiseptic “shower rooms” of the Third Reich, where the unwanted were “treated” to death. Nor can one forget the words of Jesus, “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me” (Matthew 25:40, KJV).
Can any Christian argue that the smallest and most defenseless are, by virtue merely of being too small and too defenseless, not His brethren?
Comments (9)
It is a wonder to me that God has not punished our nation more severely for allowing and even promoting abortion. I guess He has more patience than I would have.
OUCH!! Does that mean we crucify Jesus over and over and over and over………? Are we starving and mutilating and neglecting and pretending He doesn’t exist? I believe our nation IS under judgment. At LEAST His blessing is being lifted from us. God, ” HELP US and FORGIVE US!”
I’m just giving a drop by to say hi. I also want to wish you and your family Happy Thanksgiving.
Blessing,
Amy
Just stopping by to wish you a…
Wonderfully Happy & Blessed Thanksgiving!
xoxo cat
I am SO SAD. This is terrible. How our Father must grieve over these terrible sins. May God help us.
Blessed Thanksgiving to you and your family. In spite of all the rottenness of man’s sin…we can rejoice in the goodness of the Lord. Happy Day!
I am horrified that this kind of thing happens today! How God can withhold judgment – you almost expect to see an earthquake or tornado demolish the supreme court of indiana or whoever helped in this situation. Oh, the depravity of man! God, please don’t let the laws of man allow this ever again. Please have mercy.
May God have mercy on the USA, I bet he doesn’t. He will come down swift and hard VERY soon on this nation. What a tragedy and loss of an innocent life. Dawn
This is so horrifying. She’s right. I turn my imagination away. I don’t want to imagine how much that baby suffered, yet I can’t help remembering how quickly I used to respond to my daughter’s cries when she was hungry. The sound was so heartbreaking. God help us.