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What I Learned at the Square Dance

Last night was the girl scout square dance. What a blast! A couple of hundred goofy, paunchy dads do-si-do’ing with their little girls in the high school gym. In addition to some good clean fun, I learned two things through this:

1. There are words to the “Chicken Dance” song. You know the dance — it starts with the chicken beaks, goes to the flapping wings, and then to the little tail wiggle. So picture that, with about a hundred little girls, singing spontaneously, in unison, and at the top of their lungs: “I don’t want to be a chicken, I don’t want to be a duck, so kiss my butt!” Where do they learn this stuff? I almost doubled over laughing.

2. All high school gymns are kept at a balmy 99 degrees and 90% relative humidity, they all look and smell the same, and as soon as you walk into them, they trigger long repressed memories of that whimpy kid who never could seem to do anything right, who never quite lived up to his potential, and who was mortally afraid that the other guys might notice his relative lack of hair in various manly places. You know, that “friend” of yours who grew up to become a lawyer or pastor or teacher or something, who wonders how he came to be living in a nice house full of little kids who call him “dad,” and who now spends way too much time in front of a computer screen talking to people he’s never even met.

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Jacob I Loved, But Esau I Hated

Along with a number of other dads, I help with the “Tree Climbers” group at my local church. This is a group of rowdy six and seven-year-old boys, with the typical activities of a craft, some games (usually involving hitting the other boys with a red rubber ball, as in dodge ball), and a short Bible story.

We are covering the stories of Genesis, and my unenviable task last night was to tell the story of Jacob and Esau. You might recall from Genesis 25 that Jacob swindled Esau out of the birthright for a pot of stew, and from Gen. 27 that Jacob conspired with his mother (who didn’t get along with Esau’s wife) to trick his elderly and nearly blind father into giving him a blessing intended for Esau. You might also recall from Genesis 28 that the blessings of the Abrahamic covenant were passed on by God to Jacob through the “Jacob’s Ladder” dream rather than to Esau. And, you might remember Romans 9:13, in which God, explaining His election of Jacob, says “Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated.” How do I explain this to six and seven-year-olds?

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Tonight's Globe Trekker

In tonight’s Globe Trekker, Zay Harding travels through Western Canada. Although Globe Trekker is usually the best show on TV, this one didn’t cut it. Harding is kind of boring — he lacks Ian Wright’s Brit snarkiness, Justine Shapiro’s sweet-but-superior affect, Shilpa Metha’s exotic sexiness, or Megan McCormick’s sense of girl-next-door fun. And, the location wasn’t culturally intersting. White water rafting might be fun to try, but it’s dull to watch. But the biggest turn-off was the frontier bar that maintains a tradition of serving a mummified human big toe floating in a scotch. You drink the scotch and let the toe touch your lips, whereupon the toe is returned to a cedar chest containing a selection of toes the bar has collected. Western Canadian culture at its best! Yuk!

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Law and Policy

More on Personhood, Medical Treatment, and PVS

In response to a comment on my earlier post on Terri Schiavo and the Law, I tried to amplify my thoughts on the broader ethical issues relating to medical treatment, artificial nutrition and hydration, and PVS. I thought this was worth a separate post.

The philosophical / theological underpinnings of my view are set forth in my two earlier posts (here and here) on this issue. Essentially, I don’t think a monistic view of personhood — that personhood is coequal with the physical body — is Biblical. I’m also not a dualist (personhood consists of two separate components of body and soul). I hold a conditional unity view of personhood. Personhood has different aspects, including body, mind, and soul, and these different aspects are part of a unified whole.

In conjunction with this condition unity view of personhood, I apply the Biblical concept of humans as created in the “image of God.” What is the image of God? Most Biblical scholars agree that it is not a physical image. Rather, it has something to do with our capacity to reason, relate, communicate and create.

Finally, I apply what I believe is a Biblical understanding of death. Death temporarily separates body from the other aspects of personhood, pending the Resurrection — hence the “conditional” aspect of the unity of personhood. The aspects of our person that reflect the image of God continue to exist and one day will be reunited with a body. The current physical aspects of our personhood — the body — is no longer connected to our “person.” We treat physical remains with respect, but we appropriately dispose of them through burial or cremation, knowing that the “person” is no longer present in the body.

If these views of personhood, the image of God, and death are Biblical, and I belive they are, then it is possible, given modern medical technology, that a body could continue to be maintained even though the person has gone on to the intermediate state pending the Resurrection.

As an extreme example, imagine a person whose brain was completely removed from her body, while the heart, lungs and other organs were maintained through artificial respiration, circulation, nutrition and hydration. I think most Christians probably would agree that the “person” in that circumstance has died, and that our technology was merely keeping some parts of the body from decay. If you wouldn’t agree to that, I’d ask how much of the body needs to be maintained before the “person” is gone. For example, if we take the heart from a person who has recently died and transplant it into another person, does the “person” who recently died still exist in this life?

The persistent vegitative state (PVS) is several steps back from my “brainectomy” hypothetical, but the principle is the same. At some point, when there is nothing left of most of the brain but liquid, and there is no remaining capacity or potential for the attributes of communication, relationship, and creativity that reflect the image of God, I believe the “person” has gone on to the intermediate state, and nothing is left but the mortal body.

The commenter to my eariler post asked why, if I hold this view, it would be unethical to terminate a PVS patient through lethal injection or immediate cremation. Here, I believe an ethical distinction remains between actively terminating bodily functions and removing artificial medical support for those functions. A lethal injection or cremation before cessation of all bodily functions would constitute an affirmative act that would betray a lack of respect for the bodily aspect of personhood. Therefore, I would not be comfortable with that kind of action.

However, the removal of artifical medical support is a different matter. In that case, we are allowing the body to take its natural course. I should note here that I don’t see any material distinction between turning off a respirator and removing artificial nutrition and hydration. In either instance, a fundamental requirement for bodily function — air, hydration, or nutrition — is being provided by technological means — a respirator, or tubes inserted by medical professionals into the gatric tract through which nutritional serum and water are metered by a machine. And, in either case, the removal of those technological life supports will result in the cessation of bodily functions. In my view, under these circumstances, turning off a respirator or an artificial nutrition and hydration system is a withdrawal of medical treatment that allows the body to take a natural course. This, in my view, is ethically different than assisted suicide or euthanasia.

As I’ve said before, none of this settles the question whether it was ethical to remove Terri Schiavo’s ANH. If there is a material doubt about whether the patient truly is in a PVS, ANH should not be withdrawn. But, that is exactly the kind of factual determination, I think, that trial courts are best equipped to make. Moreover, I don’t think any medical treatment, including ANH, should be withdrawn if the patient’s wishes were equivocal or to the contrary. But, again, determining what the patient’s wishes were, in the absence of a clear, written advance health care directive (a living will), is, in my judgment, an appropriate function of the trial courts.

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Reviewer of the Week

I’m pleased to say I’m Reviewer of the Week at Mind and Media. Check it out, including my dorky professional headshot photo!

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Sports

Baseball!

I’m watching the Yankees and Red Sox as I type. Finally, life is renewed. There is something odd about seeing Randy Johnson on the mound at Yankee Stadium, but hey, that’s why it’s good to be a Yankee fan!

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Photography and Music

Yesterday in Philadelphia


In the car on the way to a law conference in Philadelphia.


A ghostly landmark in the Philadelphia fog.

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Photography and Music

Last Week in NJ / NY


The train waits for a new load of passengers.


A storefront in the wholesale district. See my reflection?

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Spirituality

Communion

Today was communion at my church. (We’re a non-denominational church with similarity to many Baptist churches, in that we observe the Lord’s Supper periodically rather than every Sunday.) As we prepared to start the service, I was sitting on the platform (getting ready to lead worship) behind the communion table. The scent of the grape juice somehow was quite strong where I was seated. It struck me that the fragrance of communion — the sweetness of the juice or wine, the flour scent from the wafers — is like the fragrance of the old burnt offerings given as sacrifices before Christ’s death.

The smell of bread and wine is part of the experience of remembering. It’s one of those almost intangible things that bind us together as the Christian community. It’s the same thing the first believers experienced in their house churches, or that the medieval monks knew in their cloisters, or that persecuted believers know in totalitarian countries throughout the world today. In a way, it goes beyond words, to one of the most basic and instinctive senses God gave us.

I believe He gave us this sacrament, with its varied sense experiences, in part as a symbol of the fullness of the gospel. We see the redness of the wine, we smell its sweetness, we taste its fruits and tanins, we feel its warmth; we see the roughness of the bread, we smell its earthiness, we taste its grains, we feel it crumble; we think about Christ’s death; and we know with all our being what the gospel means.

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Spirituality

Leading Worship

Tonight I had the privilege of leading worship for a men’s conference at my church. When it clicks, there’s nothing like leading worship. We had the usual technical problems and lack of rehearsal tonight, but there was a wonderful moment towards the end of the set when we were doing “Let it Rise.” The rhythm pocket suddenly got wide and deep, my Les Paul was chugging, the guys in the pews were singing out and clapping, a few were raising hands, the other singers blended and soared, and I knew at that moment I was doing what God placed me on this Earth to do. I’m deeply grateful for the chance to lift up His name in the company of His people.