Fr Tristan Writes 20th October 2024
There is an excellent page on our diocesan website at the moment (www.abdiocese.org.uk/news/act-now) giving various facts about the newest attempt to legalise assisted suicide in the UK, which began last Wednesday in Parliament. Of all the many terrifying consequences of a culture which embraces dying on request, one of those which moves me in particular is the fact that "the introduction of assisted suicide and/or euthanasia may lead to a decline in investment in palliative and hospice care given that the provision of lethal medication is often a much cheaper option."
I remember speaking regularly with a lady a couple of years ago who was dying and in great pain and I asked her once if she was getting the right amount of pain relief. She replied that, in fact, she felt under great pressure from doctors to be put under more and more drugs, to the point that she would no longer be able to speak, think, or pray. This worried her a great deal. She, in her freedom, and knowing that she was not long for this world, wanted to be able to spend her last days, as she put it, "uniting myself to my Lord", preparing for an encounter that death brings to us all, in penance and thanksgiving and praying for the world. In short, she wanted to embrace the Cross. She wanted to answer the question with courage that Jesus posed to his disciples: "Can you drink the cup that I must drink, or be baptised with the baptism with which I must be baptised?"
Jesus Himself suffered. He suffered for us, and as such, has given suffering a value when it is united to love of others. As the Hebrews puts it, He is not a "high priest incapable of feeling our weaknesses with us". He is our brother! We can and must trust in Him, especially in the darkness.







