THE EVIL OF ASSISTED SUICIDE...
Pastoral Letter on the Terminally Ill Adults
(End of Life)
Bill
5/6 April 2025
Fifth Sunday of Lent
My dear brothers
and sisters in Christ,
I wish to speak
with you today about the process in which our Parliament is currently
considering legalising assisted
suicide through the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life)
Bill. As I have made clear earlier in this debate, as Catholics we have
maintained a principled objection to this change in law recognising that every
human life is sacred, coming as a
gift of God and bearing a God-given dignity.
We are, therefore, clearly opposed to this Bill in
principle, elevating, as it does, the autonomy of the individual above all
other considerations.
The passage of the
Bill through Parliament will lead to a vote in late April on whether it progresses further. This will be a crucial
moment and I, together with all the Bishops
of England and Wales, am writing to ask your support in urging your MP to vote against this Bill at that time.
There are serious
reasons for doing so. At this point, we wish not simply to restate our objections in principle, but
to emphasise the deeply flawed process undergone in Parliament thus far. We wish to remind you that it is a
fundamental duty of every MP to ensure that legislation is not imposed on our
society which has not been properly scrutinised and which will bring about
damaging consequences.
The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
will fundamentally change many of the key relationships
in our way of life: within the family, between doctor and patient, within
the health service. Yet there has
been no Royal Commission or
independent inquiry ahead of its presentation. It is a Private Member’s Bill.
The Bill itself is long and complex and was published just days before MPs voted on it, giving them inadequate
time to consult or reflect upon it. The time for
debate was minimal. The Committee examining the Bill took only three
days of evidence: not all voices were heard, and it comprises an undue number
of supporters of the Bill. In short, this is no way to legislate on such an important and morally complex issue.
One consequence of
this flawed process is that many vital questions remain unanswered. Can MPs guarantee that the scope of the Bill
will not be extended? In almost every country
where assisted suicide
has been introduced the current scope is
wider than was originally intended. What role, if any, will the judiciary have in the process? We were told that judicial oversight was a
necessary and vital part of the process; now we are told it isn’t needed at
all. What will protect the vulnerable from coercion, or from feeling a burden
on the family? Can the National Health Service cope with assisted suicide or
will it, as the Health Secretary has warned, cause cuts elsewhere in the NHS? Can MPs guarantee that no medical
practitioner or care worker
would be compelled to take part in
assisted suicide? Would this mean the establishment of a ‘national death
service’?
In contrast to the
provisions of this Bill, what is needed is first-class, compassionate palliative
care at the end of our lives. This
is already provided to many in our society but, tragically, is in short supply and underfunded. No one should be
dispatched as a burden to others. Instead, a good society would prioritise care for the elderly, the vulnerable, and the weak. The lives of our families
are richer for cherishing their
presence.
It is a sad
reflection on Parliament’s priorities that the House of Commons spent far more
time debating the ban on fox hunting
than it is spending on debating bringing in assisted suicide.
I am sure that you
will share these concerns. It is now clear that this measure is being rushed
without proper scrutiny and without fundamental questions surrounding
safeguards being answered. This is a deeply flawed Bill with untold unintended
consequences.
Every MP, and Government, has a solemn
duty to prevent such legislation from reaching the statute book. This, tragically, is what may happen. So I
appeal to you: even if you have written
before, please make contact now with
your MP and ask them to vote against
this Bill not only on grounds of principle but because of the failure of
Parliament to approach this issue in an adequate and responsible manner.
In
his Letter to the Philippians, which we heard in the Second Reading, St Paul
reflects on the difficulties and responsibilities of life. He speaks of
‘pressing on’ and ‘striving’ for the fullness of life promised in Christ Jesus.
Yet he is totally confident in his struggles because, as he says, ‘Christ Jesus
has made me his own’.
We
too have many struggles. We too know that Christ Jesus has made us his own. So
we too press on with this struggle, so important in our times.
May God bless you all.
Yours devotedly,
Detterling every Catholic parish received this today. Remind me what the Church of England response is? Oops! Sorry. I forgot. The Church of England is f**ked.
ReplyDeleteGene
When I look back over the past twenty years I realise that I have changed in many ways. Some changes I chose to make, some I gradually realised I needed to make, some I was advised that I should make [advice I sometimes resisted fiercely, only to realise later that it was advice I needed to follow]. And all of those changes mean that, as I approach the end of my life, I am for the most part contented in my own skin. In the words of the famous prayer, I have found the strength to change the things I can, the courage to endure the things I can't, and the wisdom to know the difference.
ReplyDeleteYou, Gene, on the other hand, have not changed at all in those same twenty years. You are as nasty, deceitful, hypocritical and bogus today as you were then. Your religious faith is as shallow, bigoted and fake now as it was then. And your self-conceit is as bloated and unjustified as it was then. You were a mess then, and you still are.
Which is my good reason for this final message to you. I would probably try to find it in me to forgive you for your vile behaviour towards me did I believe that you thought that you needed any forgiveness. But of course you don't: in your mind you have always been right, and you have always known that you have been right, so what need could you have of forgiveness?
Goodbye, Gene, God bless and keep you and all of yours. Like the old Duke of Omnium on his deathbed "I expect nothing but I fear nothing". And my prayer is that at some point "between the stirrup and the ground" you will have a moment to face the fact of what an appalling human being you have been for so long and so often, and ask for the forgiveness that you don't believe you need.
Detters concentrate on this Assisted Suicide bill. This is an evil as vile as has ever faced our nation. And you are supporting it!
ReplyDeleteGene