SCM,
I think the idea that it is God’s will that is applied to this situation probably makes up the entire core of where we differ. I can appreciate and enjoy very much your honest thoughts, and I do. I can also disagree at the same time and still consider your thoughts just as valid as my own, and I do entirely. As a matter of fact, I even thought that it was sort of a shame that all of the posts shared here in this thread were confined to words read on a computer screen, and wouldn’t it have been great to have had everyone at a table at the same time drinking coffee and sharing their ideas. A chance to hear some of those exclamation points in person!
I have been meeting with a group of people at a coffee shop for the past couple of months and the conversations are generally about core views and concepts. Some of those core views do not match the core views of others and yet everyone still has managed, so far, to be able to agree to disagree and maybe learn something in the exchange. I have definitely learned a few things in the process. Our back and forth here reminded me of that same thing, and I have enjoyed it just as much.
I wonder how many legal cases there are that involve some of the same circumstances as this incident involving this child. I’m going to see what I can find even though the information we have about this one is still so limited. Maybe we can compare the outcome of this one with other cases and figure out why it went the way it did and what those decisions are based on.
Great post, scarpetta. I love what you said about chatting over coffee or tea instead of on a keyboard - where the interaction isn't as fluid and you can never really get the full gist of a person.
The last case I remember that was similar(but different) to this one was discussed here - some might recall it. A woman (I think she may have been a Scientologist, but don't quote me on that!) was giving birth at home. Severe problems ensued. She would not seek medical help due to her spiritual beliefs. Her husband did not force her to seek medical help. She died a painful, tortuous death. I believe the child lived (but maybe not - again, don't quote me). I do not recall if charges were filed but plenty of people wanted them to be filed. I - again - believed in that family's right to choose.
It's emotional when a child is involved. Not
as many of us would care if an adult did not seek medical attention and instead turned to prayer and they died from a disease process that may well have been treatable. But, in this country, we have the freedom (within legal limits of course) to raise our children in the manner we see fit. This is religious freedom and I believe in it.
Do we believe prayer works? Do we believe prayer works sometimes? Do we believe prayer can heal and save and soothe? Or do we only believe it works when it gives us the results
we want?
People extol the virtues of a God who performs miracles when the cancer goes away forever or our husband walks away without a scratch from a car that was smashed to bits or our friend who doctors tell us will probably be in a coma for years starts walking and talking within days. But do we extol the virtues of prayer when the outcome doesn't go the way we want it to?
Or do we
really believe in prayer, its powers, its miracles? That may be where we differ. I don't have one single thought about what God's will was in this situation. Some would say - if it happened, it's God's will. I'm not that cut and dried on the subject because that tends to negate free will for me. And I'm BIG on free will. I lean more towards - if it happens and it sucks, God's strength can get me through it.
These people believed in the power of prayer. I do too. I cannot call them stupid for believing in and practicing something I believe in and practice. And I could never get down with a law that would penalize them for taking advantage of this freedom.
Again - the DA may press charges - Cyberlaw has posted a few interesting cases and tidbits. I don't see these types of cases
a lot - and each one is unique.
I am babbling now, but
perhaps our differences lie in your seeing this family's religious practices and choices as extreme - maybe even extreme to the point of mental illness. I don't perceive it that way based on what I know about the case.