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Jodie and Mary The birth of Siamese twins has always been a topic of popular fascination. In a previous age such births were usually interpreted as a supernatural event. They were variously seen as signs of blessing or warning, a portent for the future, or a judgment of past wrongs. In our enlightened times, the human interest is seen in the headline news, the feature articles, and in the unusual sight of Appeal Court judges agonising in public. The media coverage illustrates a strange combination of fascination, revulsion and sympathy for the family trapped in this extraordinary drama. So, does biblical Christianity have anything distinctive to say about this case? Firstly, a Christian response must emphasize the human tragedy of the twins and their parents. These are not freak show exhibits, nor are they merely the raw materials, for complex, legal, philosophical and theological disputes. No, they are human beings, made out of the same flesh and blood as the rest of us, beings to whom we owe a duty of love, respect and protection, flawed masterpieces whose flaws are simply more dramatic than usual. Above all they are tragic lives -- destined, almost inevitably, to die within weeks or months. So as Christians we must firstly be concerned to protect the dignity, privacy and grief of the family. Secondly, the Christian perspective encompasses a strange ambiguity towards medical technology. On the one hand we embrace and celebrate the life-sustaining potential that complex reconstructive surgery can offer. At the same time we recognize that this kind of surgery can be harmful and even abhorrent in its destructive capacity. In Christianity death is not the ultimate tragedy. To decapitate and dismember a living child in the name of medicine may be a worse outcome than ensuring that both children have appropriate palliative and symptomatic care. For the Appeal Court to force this surgical disaster on the twins against their parents' wishes seems unconscionable. In Christian thought death, although always a tragedy, may in certain circumstances be a severe mercy and even a strange kind of healing. Paradoxically, it is our very respect for human life which may lead us to say no to the possibility of technology medicine. John Wyatt Professor of Neonatal Paediatrics at University College and Chairman CMF Medical Study Group Reproduced by permission of Christian Medical Fellowship
Jubilee 2000 campaign to cancel the unpayable debt of the world's poorest countries by end 2000 Pray for a breakthrough UN estimate because of the debt crisis 13 children in Africa will die in the minute it takes to read this insert. Over 17 million people world-wide have signed the Jubilee 2000 petition. Pledges of debt relief have been made, but very little debt has actually been cancelled. We need to pray for a breakthrough. Japan is host for the G8 summit and the world's largest creditor nation to the world's poorest countries. Pray that: • The Japanese government will respond positively to world-wide pressure for change. • World leaders and decision makers to act with courage and wisdom on behalf of the vulnerable and poorest people at meetings beginning now. • G8 Summit 21 - 23 July Focus your prayers on this meeting for a willingness to act generously and decisively. 23 July is Debt Decision Day. • Jubilee 2000 campaign Ordinary people world-wide have been given a voice in 2000 groups North and South, those facing repression, longing for greater resources, those unheard voices. • Those looking for a new start - health, education, provision for families, hope for the young, needy elderly people. Postcards to both the Japanese Ambassador in London and the Prime Minister in Japan have been handed to John Phillips for people to complete and post. Please pray and post. "Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another" Romans 13:8
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