Pastor Lange recently published the following article in the January, 2017 Lutheran Witness
Until recently, Living Wills were rare. But now we are
compelled to consider them with every visit to the doctor. Living Wills convey
our wishes to care-givers when we no longer can. They can either designate
durable power of attorney for someone to make our treatment decisions, or they
specify treatment options, like “Do Not Resuscitate” (DNR), hospice, etc.
Does faith in a gracious God who creates, redeems, and
sanctifies human life make our approach to these things different from the
world's? Yes, as different as heaven and earth.
We believe that every day we breath is God's gift. “I
believe that God has made me and all creatures; that He has given me my body
and soul, eyes, ears, and all my members, my reason and all my senses and
still takes care of them.” (SC).
The unbelieving world is afraid that medical miracles might
keep their bodies alive long after their souls have become useless. But
Christians have no such fear. We know that the miracle of life is for body and
soul together. When you are in God's hands, there is never any danger that He
might keep our bodies alive longer He Himself wants to. And we are always in
God's hands.
"Whether we live or die, we are the Lord's” (Rm 14:8).
We need not fear either living too long or dying too soon. The real danger is
not what might happen to our bodies, but what is happening to our souls.
Jesus' human life began with his conception and continued
right on through His burial. So also our own. At His crucifixion, He remained True Man, not vegetable. He was
loved and served to the very end. Then, in faith until His dying breath, He
commended His soul into God's hands.
Living wills can and should help the people whom God has
given you, to love and serve you. For this reason, you may wish to grant a
Durable Power of Attorney in order to ensure that they remain able to serve
you. Guided by the Holy Spirit, through the Word of God, they can see to it
that God's will is done.
We pray, "Thy will be done," while we have full
use of our faculties. This remains our only wish especially when our capacity
to confess it is gone.
Bullet Points:
1. Don’t be pressured. No one is required to have a living
will. U.S. law prohibits health care providers from discriminating against
those who do not.
2. Study: A SmallCatechism on Human Life by John Pless. This is an excellent scriptural
resource.
3. Confess your fears to your pastor and christian family.
They can help you quiet them by encouragement from the Word of God.
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