(Contact EPC for more information on the online video series and the upcoming documentary film, Vulnerable – The Euthanasia Deception at info@epcc.ca or call: 1-877-439-3348 or 519-851-1434.)
This blog deals with Christian living, disability, ethics, Life Issues, a wonderful miracle, and faith in Jesus Christ.
Friday, April 29, 2016
"SAFEGUARDS ARE AN ILLUSION": BELGIUM WARNS CANADA
Another short clip from the new vitally important documentary "Vulnerable" produced by Canada's Euthanasia Prevention Coalition's (EPC) in association with Dunn Media. After 14 years of legal euthanasia in Belgium, there experience is that Safeguards are an illusion. Why would we think it will be different here? See clip below.
WARNINGS FROM BELGIUM TO CANADA ABOUT EUTHANASIA AND ASSISTED SUICIDE
A 3 minute clip from a new critically important video "Vulnerable", by Canada's Euthanasia Prevention Coalition and Dunn Media. Citizens in Belgium warning Canada not to legalize assisted suicide and euthanasia. Will we listen to the warnings?
(Contact EPC for more information on the online video series and the upcoming
documentary film, Vulnerable – The Euthanasia Deception at info@epcc.ca or call: 1-877-439-3348 or
519-851-1434.)
Thursday, April 28, 2016
BLOG HAS THOUSANDS OF PAGE VIEWS MONTHLY: 450,000 TOTAL
The HumanLifeMatters blog is now receiving thousands of
hits each month, to a total of 450,000 page views to date. It's beginning to raise eyebrows of interest and surprise with the media, community leaders and policy makers. Nobody is more surprised than me! Who knew that anybody would be interested in a blog written by an incurably ill and disabled nobody publishing commentaries from his little house way out on the Canadian prairies?!
I'll keep up my commentaries on faith and life issues as long as people want to read them. Many of my posts have been republished elsewhere
.
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Media interest rises as blog numbers soar. |
I'll keep up my commentaries on faith and life issues as long as people want to read them. Many of my posts have been republished elsewhere
A THOUGHT FOR THOSE WHO HAVE LOST SOMEONE TO ALZHEIMER'S
Commit you loved-one to the tender care of Jesus. Memories lost will be restored. God has them in safe-keeping. All that was held dear will be held close again. Comme au premier jour.
Monday, April 25, 2016
Sunday, April 24, 2016
ALWAYS CHOOSE LIFE!

Katie was obviously
in a crisis pregnancy: It was a crisis
because Katie is so young, still in high school, and unmarried. It was also a crisis pregnancy because she
intended to have an abortion to solve her “problem.”
Katie was ignorant
to well established yet unpopular objective knowledge about prenatal life. Poor
Katie, she is a victim of modern public school education that’s been ravaged by
the emotions of political correctness. This political correctness has even invaded
the former objectivity of many biology classes. Katie only knew the unscientific yet fashionable propaganda
of the so-called “pro-choice” mindset so prevalent in today’s culture that refuses to recognize well-established knowledge of the unique humanity of life in the womb.
What’s the
choice?
In such a climate,
the choice remains unstated because it is the choice of death for another life,
through abortion. No matter how it’s packaged or presented, abortion is
offensive.
The stark choice in ‘pro-choice’ is far too
visceral to articulate in polite or fashionable company. Choosing between life
and death for one’s offspring is hardly the mark of a civilized or enlightened
society. The “pro-choice” mindset rarely identifies the choice. Instead it
directs the chooser away from the stark reality of what they are choosing
between. Situational ethics reigns supreme and moral absolutes have been
banished from the culture.
Fortunately, the
banishment of former moral absolutes has not been complete, other than in the secular media and academe.
Many ordinary people
can still feel the tug of conscience from the
residue of a previous time when the culture knew some things were absolutely right and other things absolutely wrong. We know that taking human life is absolutely wrong. For some of us, the memory of a Judeo-Christian moral consensus still burns deep within our chests. We are beneath the snobbery of academe. We are unwelcome in the lofty corridors power and ivory towers where modern philosophers, sociologists and bioethicists mingle far away from us common folk.
residue of a previous time when the culture knew some things were absolutely right and other things absolutely wrong. We know that taking human life is absolutely wrong. For some of us, the memory of a Judeo-Christian moral consensus still burns deep within our chests. We are beneath the snobbery of academe. We are unwelcome in the lofty corridors power and ivory towers where modern philosophers, sociologists and bioethicists mingle far away from us common folk.
Like the 17th
century adulteress banished from the town with her illegitimate child, the
object of insults and contempt, and branded with a scarlet letter ‘A’, we wear a scarlet ‘A’ too. It stands for Absolutes. And
like the adulteress of old, we are unfaithful. Our unfaithfulness is to the 21st
century’s culture of choice and moral relativism. We, too, are subjects of
contempt.
Katie’s mother,
Joanne, wore a scarlet ‘A’. Joanne
knew what was at stake in making the wrong choice. She was acutely aware of the
threat to her unborn child and then, years later, her grandchild. There was nothing relative about their
situation. The threat was real and absolute! Katie was in danger of making a terrible mistake and the new human life within her was in grave danger.
When Joanne was in the same position as Katie. The authority figures
in Joanne’s life advocated that Katie’s brother be aborted (He’s a full-grown
man now). Joanne was told ― like so many other women facing crisis pregnancies ―
that she was too young to be a mother. A baby would ruin her life and
aspirations! Joanne was told abortion
would solve her problem. Joanne knew
instinctively that her “problem” was a human being portrayed as a blob of
tissue, like a tumor.
Before Joanne gave
herself over to an abortionist, my wife and I
had the opportunity to show her
the stunning photography of prenatal life taken by renowned Swedish
photographer Lennart Nilsson, during the 1960s.
Nilsson was ahead of his time, using the emerging technology of endoscopic
photography to capture images of a developing child before birth.
The images spoke
for themselves. Joanne realized that the life within her was not a ‘blob of
tissue.’ It was not ‘potential life’ … it was actual life. It was the life of her child! She rejected the naysayers
and cynicism that would have led her down the dark path to an abortionist’s
door. Joanne needed someone to hope and believe in her life and the life of her
baby. My wife and I tried, in our pale and uncertain way, to show Joanne there
was always hope wherever there is life. Joanne canceled her appointment at the abortion
clinic.
We found ourselves in a similar position with Joanne's daughter Katie. Once Katie was given the full information about prenatal life and life-affirming alternatives available to her through a local crisis pregnancy centre, Katie cancelled her abortion too.
Today her happy child runs and plays, skips and peddles her bike in the fresh spring air, with the sun warming
her shoulders. That little girl will grow up to be her own person and take her
rightful place in society.
What’s my point? Never
give up on any life. Do not listen to the pied pipers of choice who lead the
parade of North America’s procession for the new culture of death.
Always
choose life that you and your descendants may live! Click image below or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eX4fC4WFCIU For Big Tent Revival "Choose Life".
Thursday, April 21, 2016
NEVER SACRIFICE THE ETERNAL FOR THE TEMPORAL

It is harmless fun being seen as a part of the 'scene'. I get caught up in the pretense myself. Although it’s hard to look trendy
in an electric wheelchair, I still enjoy sipping a mocha latte at a sidewalk café and watching an assortment of hipsters strolling
down the street.

But I occasionally find myself wondering if I’m watching a small outward expression (one of many) that is indicative of the age in which we live. Superficiality of image becomes everything, where taste and manners without deep-rooted substance stunts spiritual progress of the human soul.

But I occasionally find myself wondering if I’m watching a small outward expression (one of many) that is indicative of the age in which we live. Superficiality of image becomes everything, where taste and manners without deep-rooted substance stunts spiritual progress of the human soul.
While sipping my
Americano espresso recently, I read an essay by Matthew Schmitz in First Things magazine entitled “Between
the Hipsters and Hasids”. He wrote about a trendy area of Brooklyn where he
lives and the superficial culture of its hipsters.
Fashionable shops that play on themes of
tradition, vintage and
heritage to market cheese, fresh produce and beer. They want themes but not substance. Schmitz
wrote: “Respect for the way
monks brewed their ale (ora et labora) is not matched by a similar appreciation for the prayer that structured their lives.” He continued: “A desire to emulate grandmother’s knitting, pickling, and needlework does not extend to the habit she felt to be the most important: daily Bible reading.” He then delivered a stinging and succinct observation: “Hipsters are ambivalent reactionaries who love every aspect of tradition ― except its authority.”
monks brewed their ale (ora et labora) is not matched by a similar appreciation for the prayer that structured their lives.” He continued: “A desire to emulate grandmother’s knitting, pickling, and needlework does not extend to the habit she felt to be the most important: daily Bible reading.” He then delivered a stinging and succinct observation: “Hipsters are ambivalent reactionaries who love every aspect of tradition ― except its authority.”
Near the end of his essay, Matthew Schmitz wrote
with stunning clarity that our generation loves an endless parade of “things
that excite our desire without demanding our love.” The milk in my
Americano turned sour. He’s right.
Christianity calls us to
something different. Catholicism demands our complete love for Christ and loyalty
to Him. We are called to desire things eternal not things temporal or superficial
that require little cultivation of the interior life. Christ and His Church draw
people ever nearer
to eternal truths revealed to us in the Scriptures and sacred traditions of the
Catholic Church. It is when we immerse ourselves totally in these teachings and
surrender more and more deeply to Christ that we begin to understand the
purpose and meaning of our existence: To
love God with our whole being and love others as we love ourselves and to spend
eternity with a God who is the very essence of love.
From my Catholic faith
I have come to understand my own
suffering throughout thirty-three years of chronic illness in broader contexts than my reality. Pope John Paul II’s Salvifici Doloros extensively addressed my questions about the Why of Suffering. Pope Benedict XVI spoke to me about hope in his book The Yes of Jesus Christ. He told the reader who suffers from illness or handicaps that God wants us to give Him a “down-payment of trust.” The Pope told the reader that God is saying to us: “I know you don’t understand me yet. But trust me: believe me when I tell you I am good and dare to live on the basis of this trust. Then you will discover that behind your suffering, behind the difficulties of your life, a love is hiding.” This trust will serve as a vehicle of transcendence beyond my physical circumstances and suffering. The superficiality and cynicism of the world does not understand this. Trust involves vulnerability and self-denial of inner control. It is the antithesis of our age.
suffering throughout thirty-three years of chronic illness in broader contexts than my reality. Pope John Paul II’s Salvifici Doloros extensively addressed my questions about the Why of Suffering. Pope Benedict XVI spoke to me about hope in his book The Yes of Jesus Christ. He told the reader who suffers from illness or handicaps that God wants us to give Him a “down-payment of trust.” The Pope told the reader that God is saying to us: “I know you don’t understand me yet. But trust me: believe me when I tell you I am good and dare to live on the basis of this trust. Then you will discover that behind your suffering, behind the difficulties of your life, a love is hiding.” This trust will serve as a vehicle of transcendence beyond my physical circumstances and suffering. The superficiality and cynicism of the world does not understand this. Trust involves vulnerability and self-denial of inner control. It is the antithesis of our age.
The desire to wrap
myself in attractive diversions of life is harmless until it leads to
constantly frittering away precious time on the trivial and superficial at the
expense of using my trials and pain to cultivate an interior life in Christ. Saint Clement of Alexandria (150-215) said,
“Bearing the Cross means to separate our souls from the delights and pleasures
of this world.”
Monday, April 18, 2016
NATIONAL POST COLUMNIST, ANDREW COYNE, ON ASSISTED SUICIDE
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Andrew Coyne |
Mark
Saturday, April 16, 2016
A LETTER TO MY DOCTOR NOT TO KILL ME

________________________
Dear
Dr. __:
I
can hardly bring myself to write these words but a dark reality in Canada requires
it. I am referring to legalizing physician assisted suicide scheduled to begin
in 2016. For over 20 years I have feared
that a time such as this would come to my country and against the Common Good of
society at large. I have spoken across Canada
and America against euthanasia and assisted suicide.
Should I ever
request assisted suicide, I want you to refuse to help me. On this point I am
emphatic. Presume that I am speaking out of depression or that multiple
sclerosis has begun to affect my mental state. I would not make such a request
in my right mind. If, in your judgment, I am suffering from depression please
get me the counselling I need; if the MS is affecting my mind protect me from
myself or others who would take my life before my natural death. Regarding my
end of life care I ask you to provide treatment in accordance with my Roman
Catholic faith (see Catechism of the Catholic Church, Nos 2276-2282) .
I
have such deep respect for you and the proper application of your profession (in
its Hippocratic tradition) I would not ask you to stop being my healer and
become my killer, unless my mental faculties were impaired by depression or disease.
Sincerely,
Mark
Davis Pickup
Thursday, April 14, 2016
CANADIAN CATHOLIC ARCHDIOCESE EDUCATES LAITY ABOUT ASSISTED SUICIDE
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Catholic Archbishop Richard Smith addresses Catholic laity about euthanasia & assisted suicide |
Other bishops should follow Archbishop Smith's lead and explain Church teaching about assisted suicide and euthanasia and palliative services available people in their time of need.
ASSISTED SUICIDE: CANADA'S DEADLY SHIFTING LANDSCAPE


Don't you just marvel at the ingenious euphemisms people will conjure up to cast abhorrent things in a positive light and make distasteful topics more palatable? Skilled conjurers of euphemisms can make murder seems altruistic, even virtuous, to a gullible public. We find one such phrase on the government's new assisted suicide bill under the deceptive title "Medical Aid In Dying". Absolutely Orwellian! Medical aid in dying used to be called palliative care. Doctors, nurses and pharmacists helping suicidal sick or disabled people kill themselves is properly called MEDICAL KILLING and that's what C-14 should have been called, to be accurate. But accuracy would not help the bill pass into law. It must be sugar-coated with a euphemistic title.

A TV reporter came to my house to interview me about my opposition to Canada's shiny new bill for assisted

That is why a suicidal sick, dying or disabled person should not be given help to kill themselves. He/she is entitled to the very best palliation available and comfort until natural death. That's what a civilized society does. There's more than one dimension to assisted suicide. Canada's narcissistic pretty boy Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his government do not seem to understand that. They are about to make Canada a land of dark and dangerous shadows under the guise of autonomy.
Mark Davis Pickup
_________________________
Notes
[1] http://www.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?Language=E&Mode=1&DocId=8183660
[2] The Nazi's spoke of life unworthy of life as "lebensunwertes Lebens."
[3] Jean Echlin and Ian Gentles, It's Not That Simple: Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide Today (Toronto: The deVeber Institute for Bioethics and Social Research, 2015), p.7.
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
CATHOLICS AND ASSISTED SUICIDE
A New Dark Age of medical killing suicidal disabled, sick and
mentally ill Canadians draws near (June 6th 2016). Archbishop Richard Smith of the Catholic Archdiocese of Edmonton conducted a series of educational evenings for Catholic laity about Church teaching and responses to euthanasia and assisted suicide. At his request, I agreed to participate in that process. In the last session I was one of three speakers: Archbishop Smith, palliative care physician Dr. Anna Voeuk, and me.
I spoke as someone for whom physician assisted suicide is intended.
I utterly reject the contrived new right for PAS Canada's Supreme Court conjured up against centuries of Common Law which prohibited and punished assisted suicide. In my brief address I spoke about grief associated with acquired adult disability and incurable sickness. I addressed community versus autonomy and my responsibility to act for the Common Good of society despite living with long-term chronic illness.
I am available to speak to other Canadian venues and American jurisdictions considering legalizing physician assisted suicide. Contact me by email at HumanLifeMatters@shaw.ca
Mark
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Archbishop Richard Smith |
I utterly reject the contrived new right for PAS Canada's Supreme Court conjured up against centuries of Common Law which prohibited and punished assisted suicide. In my brief address I spoke about grief associated with acquired adult disability and incurable sickness. I addressed community versus autonomy and my responsibility to act for the Common Good of society despite living with long-term chronic illness.
I am available to speak to other Canadian venues and American jurisdictions considering legalizing physician assisted suicide. Contact me by email at HumanLifeMatters@shaw.ca
Mark
Monday, April 11, 2016
Saturday, April 9, 2016
LET US PRAY FOR THOSE WHO SERVE

https://vimeo.com/162112315
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
NOW MORE THAN EVER! STAND FOR THE VALUE OF HUMAN LIFE

This May, it is especially important for Canadians to stand up for the equality and sanctity of all human life. If you can, join the national March for Life in Ottawa. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has vowed to whip his majority government to support wide-reaching legislation for assisted suicide that will include the mentally ill and minors. MEDICAL KILLING began 47 years ago with abortion (under the first Prime Trudeau) is about to start a new phase of MEDICAL KILLING: suicidal Canadians with illnesses, diseases or disabilities. It is critical for Canadians of good will to take a firm and resolute stand against all state sanctioned killing! Now more than ever, stand for the value of every human life.