
Crucial Resources
Kilner, John F., Arlene B. Miller, and Edmund D. Pellegrino (eds.). Dignity and Dying: A Christian Appraisal. Grand Rapids,
MI: Eerdmans Publishing Co.; and Carlisle, United Kingdom: Paternoster Press;
1996.
Written from the perspective of physicians, nurses, ethicists, and pastors,
this book develops a Christian framework for dealing with issues at the end
of life. The book considers from a biblical perspective the notion of
autonomy, the meaning of suffering, decisions about treatment, and the debate
over assisted suicide and euthanasia. A helpful resource for those wishing to
truly uphold human dignity in the midst of dying, this collection of essays
offers a guiding vision, consideration of pressing challenges, commentary on
particular geographical and historical settings, and an outline of
constructive alternatives for those who are engaged in end-of-life issues
from either a personal or professional standpoint.
Kilner, John F. Life on the Line: Ethics, Aging, Ending Patients Lives and Allocating Vital
Resources. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1992.
This book provides both a general biblical approach for addressing
bioethical questions and an application of that approach to key end-of-life
issues. The general approach explains what it means for Christian bioethics
to be God-centered, reality-bounded, and love-impelled. The end-of-life
section explores such crucial issues as suffering, death, suicide and
assisted suicide, and the distinction between relieving pain and ending life.
The book concludes by examining the connection between the scarcity of
medical resources and the move toward euthanasia.
Stewart, Gary P. et al.
Basic Questions on Suicide and
Euthanasia:
Are They Ever Right? BioBasics Series. Grand Rapids: Kregel, 1998.
Many in our society champion suicide, assisted suicide,
and euthanasia as acceptable answers to physical and emotional problems.
There are alternatives to this contemporary "culture of death," however, that
uphold the sanctity of human life and that seek to meet the problems of fear,
pain, and despair with compassion and dignity. This lay-level booklet answers
commonly asked questions such as: "How does the medical profession view the
various forms of euthanasia?", "Would legalizing assisted suicide justify it
morally?", and "How should I respond to someone close to me who has lost a
loved one through suicide or physician-assisted suicide?"
Stewart, Gary P. et al. Basic Questions on End of Life Decisions: How Do We Know
What's Right? Grand Rapids: Kregel, 1998.
Everyone must die eventually, but is death a natural
event? Should we look forward to death if we know we'll be in heaven? What
exactly is hospice care, and how is it helpful? Do I have a right to refuse
medical treatment? This booklet is perfect for answering these and
twenty-five other questions about end-of-life decisions, whether you or a
loved one are facing difficult issues, or you would just like to learn more
about how to prepare for the inevitable.
Smith,
Wesley H. Forced Exit:The Slippery Slope from
Assisted Suicide to Murder. New York: Times Books, 1997.
This book convincingly dispels the popular claim that
assisted suicide, if legalized, would remain a voluntary option available
only to patients who are experiencing intractable pain and for whom death is
imminent. Drawing upon extensive research, historical analyses, patients'
stories, and interviews with doctors, ethicists, and activists, the author
exposes the common deceptions which characterize this debate and asserts that
the legalization of assisted suicide would undoubtedly lead to the deaths of
patients against their wishes. He argues that the sanctioning of assisted
suicide and euthanasia would lead to devastating consequences for society's
most vulnerable and endorses the alternatives of hospice and palliative care
as truly compassionate measures.
Demy, Timothy J. and Gary P. Steward. Suicide: A
Christian Response: Crucial Considerations for Choosing Life. Grand Rapids:
Kregel, 1998.
Offering legal, medical, theological, biblical, pastoral, and
personal reflections on suicide, physician-assisted suicide, and euthanasia,
this book consists of a collection of essays authored by professionals from
various backgrounds who hold in common the belief that the intentional
termination of human life runs counter to the upholding of human dignity. The
contributors assert that such termination never constitutes an act of care,
despite the claims of those who argue that it should be a legally recognized
option for those experiencing great suffering. Rather than providing a
solution to human suffering, the manner in which our society defines
compassion and increasingly esteems personal autonomy may likely lead us even
deeper into isolation, anguish, and despair.
Fieger, Geoffrey and Edmund Pellegrino.
"A Public Debate on Legalizing Physician-Assisted Suicide." audio cassette or VHS.
Bannockburn, IL: The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity, 1995.
Using primarily non-religious arguments, renowned Christian
physician Edmund Pellegrino of Georgetown University debates Geoffrey Fieger,
former lead attorney for assisted suicide advocate Jack Kevorkian.
Larson, Edward J. and Darrel W.
Amundsen. A Different Death: Euthanasia and the Christian Tradition.
Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1998.
Based on the recognition that much of the current rhetoric on
physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia is lacking in appeal to historical
precedent, this book reviews the history of euthanasia within Christendom.
Noting the relevance of Christian attitudes toward suicide to the current
discussion of active, voluntary euthanasia, the authors reflect on incidences
of and attitudes toward suicide from early Christianity into the modern
period. The book concludes by offering a framework from which Christians can
successfully engage the present-day debate over euthanasia.
Blocher, Mark. The Right to Die? Caring Alternatives
to Euthanasia. Chicago, IL: Moody Press, 1999.
Though the "death with dignity" movement is often promoted in
the name of compassion and mercy, it never constitutes true care. Drawing
upon his experience as a pastor and bioethicist, the author asserts that
human dignity can be nurtured and respected in the face of mortality, rather
than being diminished and abandoned via the hastening of death. Readers are
encouraged to actively convey genuine love and support to those who are
terminally ill and to promote alternatives to assisted suicide and
euthanasia.
Hendin, Herbert. Seduced by Death: Doctors, Patients,
and the Dutch Cure. New York: W.W. Norton and Co., 1997.
A psychiatrist and world-famous authority on suicide offers a
persuasive argument against legalizing assisted suicide in the United States.
Few issues set off such impassioned debate as euthanasia and assisted
suicide, but until now, no one has shown what their practice means in the
actual experience of patients, doctors, and families. Herbert Hendin has
studied such experience in the United States and also in the Netherlands,
where assisted suicide and euthanasia are accepted. Using interviews with
leading medical and legal architects of Dutch practices, and evaluating
actual cases, Dr. Hendin addresses the difficult questions: Who actually
makes the decision that a patient will die? How do the needs and character of
family, friends, and doctors affect the choice? Throughout the book and in
his conclusion, Dr. Hendin shows what we can do to find better options for
those facing the final phase of life.
Hendin, Herbert. Suicide in America. New York: W.W.
Norton and Co., 1996.
Herbert Hendin's authoritative book addresses the often
overlooked psychosocial aspects of suicide--for example, the dramatic
increase in suicide among children and adolescents in the United States, due
almost solely to the wider availability of guns. He argues that suicide must
be (and often is not) discussed in a broad policy context that considers
treatment for depression, pain control, and end-of-life options such as
hospice care. In this new and expanded edition, now available in paperback,
he evaluates current issues in the right-to-die movement, and in a
comprehensive new chapter he presents a powerful--and unsettling--portrait of
euthanasia and assisted suicide in the Netherlands.
Marker, Rita. Deadly Compassion. New York: Avon
Books, 1995.
When Ann Humphry, estranged wife of Derek Humphry (executive
director of the Hemlock Society and author of the bestselling Final Exit),
committed suicide in 1991, her farewell note asked Marker, an articulate and
prominent spokesperson for antieuthanasia forces, to tell her story. This
book is the result. The two women became friends in 1989, after Ann, who had
lost both her husband and her job when she was stricken with breast cancer,
called Marker for help. The breakup of the Humphry marriage was a messy one,
involving public statements, lawsuits, and fighting within the Hemlock
Society. Marker defends her friend loyally and tells Ann's side of the story
convincingly. As cofounders of the Hemlock Society, the Humphrys were
well-known leaders of the right-to-die crusade, but Ann's private feelings
about euthanasia changed after her participation in her own parents' deaths.
She came to see mercy killing not as a compassionate solution to suffering
but as a "deadly deception" that leads only to more suffering. This view is
shared by Marker, who uses Ann's story to trace the recent history of
euthanasia and to argue forcefully against it. She fears that the right to
die can easily become pressure to die, and she warns that giving physicians
"license to kill" is a grave mistake. The statistics she cites on
physician-induced deaths in the Netherlands--often regarded as a model by
euthanasia advocates--are disturbing (e.g., that one thousand patients die
each year from "involuntary euthanasia," that is, without giving their
consent to die). Marker advocates "always to care, never to kill," and she
includes a condensation of a declaration on that theme by an ecumenical group
of theologians and philosophers. Both a warm tribute to a lost friend and a
cool argument by an experienced opponent of euthanasia--although it leaves
many difficult questions unanswered.
Additional Resources (Alpha. by Author)
Arand, Charles P. "Personal Autonomy Versus Creaturely Contingency: The First
Article and the Right to Die." Concordia Journal 20: 385-401 December 1994.
Arkes, Hadley, et al. "Always to Care, Never to Kill: A Declaration on
Euthanasia." First Things no. 20: 45-47 February 1992.
Bayertz K, ed.
Sanctity of Life and Human Dignity. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic
Publishers, 1996.
Bell, Reed, and Frank York. Prescription Death:
Compassionate Killers in the Medical Profession. Lafayette, LA: Huntington
House, 1993.
Bernardi, Peter J. "Dr. Death's Dreadful Sermon."
Christianity Today 38: 30-32 August 15, 1994.
Bernat, JL, B. Gert, and R.P. Mogielnicki. Patient
refusal of hydration and nutrition: An alternative to physician-assisted
suicide or voluntary active euthanasia. Archives of Internal Medicine
153 (1993):2723-28.
Best, E.B. "Suicide: Ethical and Moral Issues from a
Theological Perspective." Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 97-100 1986.
Brown, J.H. et al. "Is It Normal for Terminally Ill
Patients to Desire Death?" American Journal of Psychiatry 143 no. 2: 208-211 1986.
Byock, I. Dying Well: The Prospect for Growth at
the End of Life. New York. Riverhead Books, (1997).
Caes, David (ed.). Caring for the Least of These.
Scottdale, PA: Herald Press, 1992.
Cameron, Nigel M. de S. (ed.). Death Without Dignity.
Edinburgh, Scotland: Rutherford House, 1990.
Cassel, CK. The patient-physician covenant: An
affirmation of Asklepios. Annals of Internal Medicine 124
(1996):604-6.
Cassel, CK., and D.E. Meier. Morals and moralism in
the debate over euthanasia and assisted suicide. New England Journal of
Medicine 323 (1990):750-52.
Cassell, EJ. The Nature of Suffering and the
Goals of Medicine. New York: Oxford University Press, 1991.
Cassell, EJ. Recognizing suffering. Hastings
Center Report, May-June 1991, 24-31.
Cohen-Almagar, Raphael. The Right to Die
With Dignity: An Argument in Ethics, Medicine and Law.
New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 2001.
Cummins, RO.
Matters of life and death: Conversations among patients, families, and their
physicians. Journal of General Internal Medicine 7 (1992):563-65.
Demy, Timothy J. and Gary P. Steward. Suicide: A
Christian Response: Crucial Considerations for Choosing Life. Grand Rapids:
Kregel, 1998.
Doerflinger, R. "Assisted Suicide: Pro-choice or
Anti-life?" Hastings Center Report 19 no. 1: S16-19 1989.
Doka, Kenneth J, J. Davidson, eds. Living With
Grief: When Illness is Prolonged. The Hospice Foundation of America.
Washington, D.C.: Taylor & Francis, 1997.
Dyck, Arthur J. Life’s Worth: The Case Against Assisted Suicide. Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 2002.
Dyck, Arthur
J. Life’s Worth: The Case Against Assisted Suicide. Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2002.
Dyck, Arthur J. "Physician-Assisted Suicide--Is It
Ethical?" Harvard Divinity Bulletin 21 no. 4: 16-17 1992.
Feinberg, John S., and Paul D. Feinberg.
"Euthanasia" in Ethics for a Brave New World. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books,
1993.
Gaylin, Willard, et al. "Doctors Must Not Kill."
Journal of the American Medical Association 259 no. 14: 2139-2140 1988.
Hastings Center. Guidelines on the Termination of
Life-Sustaining Treatment and the Care of the Dying. New York, 1987
Hauerwas, Stanley. God, Medicine, and Suffering.
Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1990.
__________. "Rational Suicide and Reasons for
Living" in On Moral Medicine: Theological Perspectives in Medical
Ethics, ed. Stephen Lammers and Allen Verhey. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans,
1987.
Horan, Dennis J., and David Mall, eds. Death, Dying,
and Euthanasia. Frederick, MD: University Publications of America, Inc.,
1980.
Jochemsen, Henk. "The Netherlands Experiment," in
Dignity and Dying: A Christian Appraisal, ed. John Kilner et al. Grand
Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans; and United Kingdom: Paternoster, 1996.
Kamisar, Y. Against assisted suicide - even a very
limited form. University of Detroit Mercy Law Review 72
(1995):735-69.
Kamisar, Yale. "Some Non-religious Views Against
Proposed Mercy-killing Legislation." Minnesota Law Review 42 no. 6: 969-1042
1958.
Kass, Leon R. "Neither for Love Nor Money: Why
Doctors Must Not Kill." The Public Interest 94: 25-46 Winter 1989.
__________. "Suicide Made Easy." Commentary 92 no. 6: 19-24 December
1991.
Keown, John, ed. Euthanasia Examined. Cambridge,
Great Britain: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Kilner, John F. Life on the Line: Ethics, Aging,
Ending Patients' Lives and Allocating Vital Resources. Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1992.
__________. "Physician-Assisted Suicide: What's the
Story?" Christian Scholar's Review 23 no. 3: 349-59 1994.
__________. Who Lives? Who Dies? Ethical Criteria in
Patient Selection. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1990.
__________, Arlene B. Miller, and Edmund D.
Pellegrino (eds.). Dignity and Dying: A Christian Appraisal. Grand Rapids,
MI: Eerdmans Publishing Co.; and Carlisle, United Kingdom: Paternoster Press;
1996.
LaPuma, John, and David Schiedermayer. Pocket Guide
to Managed Care. New York: McGraw/Hill, 1995.
Lewis, C.S. A Grief Observed. New York: Bantam Books, 1980.
Mallory, J.D. "Success in Treating Depression." CMDS
Journal XXI no. 1: 13 Spring 1990.
McCormick, Richard A. "Physician-Assisted Suicide:
Flight From Compassion." Christian Century 108 no. 35: 1132-1143 December 4,
1991.
Mitsch, Raymond R. and Lynn Brookside. Grieving the
Loss of Someone You Love. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Servant Publications, 1993.
Miles, S.H. "Physicians and Their Patients'
Suicides." Journal of the American Medical Association 271 no. 22: 1786-1788
1994.
Nichols, G. "It's Not Hard to Prevent Suicide." CMDS
Journal XXI no. 1: 10,12 Spring 1990.
O'Mathuna, Donal P. "Does Paul Condone Assisted
Suicide in Philippians 1: 21-26?" Audio tape available from The Center for
Bioethics and Human Dignity; Bannockburn, Illinois; 1995.
Peteet, J.R. "Treating Patients Who Request Assisted
Suicide." Archives of Family Medicine 3 no. 8: 723-727 1994.
Pollard, Brian. The Challenge of Euthanasia. Crows
Nest, N.S.W. (Australia): Little Hills Press, 1994.
Pope John Paul II. "Evangelium Vitae" ("The Gospel of
Life"). Eleventh Encyclical." March 30, 1995.
Reichel, W., and A.J. Dyck. "Euthanasia: A
Contemporary Moral Quandary." Lancet 1321-1323 December 2, 1989.
Sakinofsky, I., and G.T. Swart. "Suicidal Patients
and the Ethics of Medicine." Canadian Journal of Psychiatry91-96 1986.
Schemmer, Kenneth E. Between Life and Death: The
Life-Support Dilemma. Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1988.
Schiedermayer, David. "Nazi Doctors and the
Medicalization of Killing." CMDS Journal XIX no. 3: 23-27 Fall 1988.
Smith, Wesley J. Culture of Death: The Assault on
Medical Ethics in America. San Francisco, CA: Encounter Books, 2000
Smith, Wesley H. Forced Exit:The Slippery Slope from
Assisted Suicide to Murder. New York: Times Books, 1997.
Spring, Beth, and Ed Larson. Euthanasia. Portland,
OR: Multnomah Press, 1988.
Stewart, Gary P. et al. Basic Questions on Suicide
and Euthanasia: Are They Ever Right? Grand Rapids: Kregel, 1998.
Tada, Joni Eareckson. When Is It Right to Die? Grand
Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1992.
Willke, J. C., et al. Assisted Suicide and
Euthanasia: Past and Present. Cincinatti, OH: Hayes Publishing, 1998.
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