Suicide
by Tom Wacaster
Sometime
in the week of March, 1997, in Rancho Santa Fe, California, the 39 members of
Heaven's Gate cult committed suicide. The suicide of the cult members (21 women
and 18 men, ranging in ages from 26 to 72) was seemingly prompted by the belief
that a UFO traveling in the wake of the Hale-Bopp comet had come for them. They
believed it was time for them to shed their earthly bodies and move on. They
had orchestrated the worst mass suicide in the United States history.
‘Reverend’
James Warren “Jim” Jones (his self proclaimed title, not mine, TW) was the
founder and leader of the Peoples Temple, which is best known for the November
18, 1978 mass suicide of 909 Temple members in Jonestown, Guyana along with the
killings of five other people at a nearby airstrip. Over 200 children were
murdered at Jonestown, almost all of whom were forcibly made to ingest cyanide
by the elite Temple members. The incident in Guyana ranks among the largest
mass suicides in history, though most likely it involved forced suicide and/or
murder, and was the single greatest loss of American civilian life in a
non-natural disaster until the events of September 11, 2001.
While
these two notable examples of suicide are the tragic consequence of believing
and following error, the majority of suicides come as a result of despair and
frustration with life and an attempt to escape. Euthanasia, though not actually
considered suicide, is at least a close cousin to the taking of one’s own life.
The morality of suicide crosses paths with euthanasia when the individual seeks
to end his life because of suffering or supposedly noble reasons. Oregon
passed a doctor assisted suicide law several years ago, allowing doctors to
assist in the suicide of a patient who wanted to end his life; other states are
now following their lead. This so called “Death With Dignity Act” is just one
area in which suicide is being considered an easy way out for individuals
facing a sense of hopelessness in life. Michael McDaniel shared these
frightening statistics with his readers back in 2012, and if anything it has
gotten worse: “For 15 to 24-year olds, suicide is the third leading cause
of death, following accidents and homicide. Every year, an average
of 1,890 suicides occur among teens 15-19. More than 1,600 of them are boys.
Although girls are more likely to attempt suicide, boys are four times more
likely to die.” Times of hardship often brings a spike in suicide
levels. For example, the Great Depression of 1929, which suddenly brought
economic ruin to thousands of people accustomed to a decade of prosperity,
caused an immediate and dramatic spike in suicides. Suicide rates, which
averaged 12.1 per 100,000 people in the decade prior to the Depression, jumped
to an alarming 18.9 in the year of Wall Street's crash. The suicide rate
remained higher than normal throughout the remainder of the Great Depression,
then fell sharply during World War II. Comparing that to suicide rates in
our generation, the rate in 2007 was 1 suicide every 15 minutes, for a total of
33,300 in that year. In 2008 the rate increased by 33%, and another 15%
in 2009. Suicide is often an attempt to escape the frustrations of life
rather than face the hardship that one might have to face as a consequence of
various circumstances (many of those the result of a persons unwise
choices). Suicide has been evident in every society and in every
generation. My mission travels have taken me to various parts of the
world, and it is not uncommon to hear in the news that someone else has
taken his life. From Russia, to India, to the United States, no country is
exempt from the ravages of sin and the attempt to escape the consequences
thereof by the taking of one's own life. More than 100 years ago J.C. McQuiddy
wrote these words in the September 1908 issue of the Gospel Advocate:
“Nor does the discordant note end here; for, tired and worn-out with the
emptiness of life, thousands are seeking rest in oblivion and slinking out of a
hollow sham of life by the back alley of suicide. In the city of Pittsburg,
there was a death every day in this way during the first eighteen days of July.
This strange mania is constantly gaining ground, and is not confined to
lunatics and nerveless, diseased people, but people apparently sane and healthy
often choose this fate. Life is actually getting to be terrifying in its
aspects.”
All
of this is an indication of a growing disrespect for life in general, and a
despair toward life in times of distress and/or sickness. Unfortunately
an increasing number of people from of all ages are turning to suicide to
escape the mental anguish that plagues them. Webster defines suicide as “the
act of killing oneself intentionally; in law, the act of self-destruction by a
person sound in mind and capable of measuring his moral responsibility.”
One important element in that definition are the words, “a person sound in mind
and capable of measuring his moral responsibility.” The late Guy N. Woods
conducted the open forum at Freed Hardeman Lectures for more than 30 years. Unfortunately
his comments on suicide were not published in either of the two volumes of
“Questions and Answers.” I recall hearing him address this issue from
time to time, and though I cannot quote him exactly, his thoughts were in
agreement with Webster's definition of suicide. The key to understanding the
right or wrong of suicide centers around whether or not the act was
“intentional” and if the person was indeed “sound in mind and capable of
measuring his moral responsibility.” When a person has lost his ability to reason
clearly and logically, and kills himself, that person certainly is
innocent before God because of the Almighty's very nature. God's compassion,
mercy, and love certainly come into focus here. But when a person, “sound in
mind and capable of measuring his moral responsibility,” chooses to
intentionally take his life, that is another matter. While there may be
exceptions to the case, a Christian “sound in mind and capable of measuring his
moral responsibility,” who intentionally takes his life is demonstrating a
selfish attitude. Solomon concluded that the one who lives a lone and self
indulgent life is actually showing contempt for those who have sound judgment
(cf. Proverbs 18:1).
One
principle that needs to be emphasized here is that suffering may be a
providential means God uses to mature a person spiritually. Job is a good
example here. This great man of God had done nothing to deserve his
suffering. Unknown to Job was the fact that Satan had been allowed by God to
inflict Job with pain in order to demonstrate that man's great faith in the
face of adversity. Had Job committed suicide Satan would have won the argument.
Instead Job was “blameless and upright” (1:1), and he refused to heed the
advice of his wife to “curse God and die” (2:9-10). Job's days of
suffering humbled the man so that he listened to God's rebuke and repented in
dust and ashes (Job 42:6).
Paul
is another good example of someone who benefited from suffering. Whatever
Paul's “thorn in the flesh” was, God refused to remove that thorn, and instead
provided Paul with the grace to handle his situation with faith and confidence
in God. Never once did Paul entertain the idea of committing suicide to find
relief from the persecution of his enemies.
As
our society increasingly turns its back on God, the more frustrating and
meaningless life will become, and more people will turn to suicide as an
escape. You and I have a great opportunity to demonstrate to others the
Christian life that offers hope and joy. Let us be faithful toward this
end.
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