Do more years mean better years?
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When I was a child at Campbell Hall Episcopal School in the San
Fernando Valley, many prayers in our (1928) Book of Common Prayer
concluded, “ ... world without end. Amen.”
“World without end” did not seem to me to be a good or happy idea
then; now I realize that this body-bound life inevitably ends for us
all. Wisdom of our heritage, such as the wonderful “For everything
there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven,”
(Ecclesiastes 3:1-8) reminds us that there is certainly “a time to
die.” As I did even in my youth, I look forward to discovering what
is next, what more eternal adventures God has waiting for us. For
myself, and I trust for other people with religious faith, concern is
less for increasing the life span than it is for maximizing quality
of life here and now.
For medical scientists, I suspect a concern is whether to
prioritize extending length of body-bound lives or increasing
wellness of human bodies during whatever one’s life span may be.
Christians have clearly accepted Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s challenge
in his “Ethics,” written between 1940 and 1943 in Berlin: “Is the
Church charged with a mission toward the given worldly orders
themselves, a mission of correction, improvement, etc., a mission to
work toward a new worldly order?” Anticipating amazing technological
advances, ethicists are hard at work developing criteria as to how we
might know which discoveries come via God’s grace and which evoke old
principles like, “just because we can do something doesn’t mean we
should do it.”
At 58, I am young enough that I look forward to many active years
with good health, and I am old enough to have contemporary friends
who have moved along to that “heavenly banquet” of which our current
(1979) Book of Common Prayer speaks. As a parish priest, I have
encountered too many souls with bodies no longer able to provide the
meaning families and friends crave for their beloved. I pray that
medical science will do whatever possible to provide wellness for
bodies so that persons can live purposeful lives.
THE VERY REV’D CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
Will we reach a time when nothing is certain but taxes? Is death a
disease to be conquered? If life is good, is more of it better? Is
every death premature?
The human lifespan is considered at the very outset of the Torah.
The Tree of Life in the Garden of Eden bears fruit that increases
longevity or perhaps even offers immortality. The traditional Jewish
blessing for health is “May you live to be 120,” the age of Moses
upon his death. The Jewish toast is “L’Chaim,” or “To Life!” Numerous
Biblical figures are said to have reached extreme ages. The Biblical
viewpoint is that longevity does not happen without good reason, but
should be considered a Divine reward for a life of virtue.
Nature is our home, but also our challenge. The entire enterprise
of medicine harnesses human ingenuity and all available resources to
overcome the natural processes of nature and extend lives that would
otherwise be ended. God has granted us the intelligence and will to
improve man’s lot on earth. He has endowed us with the capacity to
take the products of the laboratory and stamp them with a moral
vision. We must be certain that our ethical development keeps pace
with our technical progress.
If people of today can expect to live twice as long as those of a
century ago, why shouldn’t the lives of our grandchildren be double
the length of ours? As long as the process does not violate the
sacredness of life and the dignity of man, it does not appear that
God is concerned with how many years we live, but with how we live
during our years.
A traveler arrived at a town and was offered a tour by a resident.
One of the sites visited was the town cemetery, which featured a
shocking image: from a reading of the tombstones, the visitor noticed
that no one in the town lived past the age of 20. The townsman saw
the visitor’s expression of amazement and said, “We have an ordinance
here that we inscribe on the tombstones, not the quantity of years
from birth to death, but the number of years the person actually
lived. Here is a man who existed until he was 80, but he only truly
lived for 15 of those years. Here is a woman who reached advanced
age, but in only a few of her years did she actually embrace life.”
Whether “the days of our years are three-score and ten” or whether
we live for two centuries, let us heed the words of the Psalmist,
“Teach us to number our days that we may acquire a heart of wisdom.”
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
Many people are optimistic about the possibility of a longer life
due to recent scientific breakthroughs, including those in the areas
of genetic manipulation and nanotechnology. Although it’s important
to discuss the ethical concerns of these new directions, the more
relevant question from a Zen perspective is: how am I appreciating my
life right now? More years is not the answer, unless we are also
asking, “More years to do what? Without having truly tasted our first
drink, we are already ordering our second.
We are accustomed to believing more is better -- more years, more
choices, more freedoms, more things. We are also accustomed to
relying on science and medicine to better our lives in countless
ways. This drive for more and better has taken a terrible toll on our
personal health, as well as the health of our global society and
planet.
Another important consideration is, who will benefit from these
new medical technologies? Today, there are millions living in the
United States, in one of the richest nations on earth, who aren’t
even able to afford basic health care. There are also millions more
in the poorest nations who are dying from lack of clean water and
food, let alone the lack of medical care of any kind. How do these
facts situate our concern with personal longevity? In addition, is it
really sensible to place too much stock in these sorts of
technological advances when we still haven’t addressed either the
future sustainability of our planet or the ravages of war?
Of course, we are intrigued by the very real possibility of living
longer. But this can also draw us away from the immediate challenge
of the present -- how can I appreciate my life more fully today, in
health and cooperation, realizing my place as a part of the global
family and even larger universe?
REV. CAROL AGUILAR
Zen Center of
Orange County
Costa Mesa
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