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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The notion of ethics resides at the core of virtually all religious tenets; without the inclusion of morality as perceived by each individual faith, followers would have little value upon which to base their devotion or their lives. Judaism and Christianity regularly grapple with ethical issues that serve to undermine the very nature of their respective religious convictions, which has made it necessary to reiterate their stance upon such prominent social issues as euthanasia and sex out of marriage. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCjewchrs.rtf
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which to base their devotion or their lives. Judaism and Christianity regularly grapple with ethical issues that serve to undermine the very nature of their respective religious convictions, which
has made it necessary to reiterate their stance upon such prominent social issues as euthanasia and sex out of marriage. II. JUDIASM AND EUTHANASIA
Modern-day Jewish medical ethics have come in direct conflict with the "precedent-oriented approach of the halakhic formalists" (Dorff and Newman, 1995, p. 138). With the evolution of
Judaic belief has come a division in the manner by which certain moral issues are considered; quality of life has become a significant matter where covenantal ethicists are concerned, which
serves to oppose a traditional response posed by classical Jewish ethicists. The approach least like the one taken is reflected by the covenantal ethicist who believes that "it is
the patient who would be empowered to make this decision - not the doctor, not the rabbi, not his or her family" (Dorff and Newman, 1995, p. 138) Within the
Jewish faith there is no room for compromise on many issues of morality; euthanasia - in any context of the word - is strictly forbidden. Supported by the assertion
that "the life of a person is not his - rather, it belongs to the One Who granted that life" (Lazerus et al, 2009), the extent to which death by
dehydration represents just as much a form of mercy killing as any other is both grand and far-reaching within Jewish law. Voluntary euthanasia
(refusing life-sustaining treatment such as hydration) and physician-assisted suicide are not private choices according to either Jewish law the opinion of Dorff and Newman (1995); rather, a person does not
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