Pubdate: Fri, 24 Oct 2003 Source: Leduc Representative (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 Leduc Representative Contact: http://www.leducrepresentative.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2265 Author: Grant McDowell Note: Grant McDowell is an ordained pastor in Leduc. He is a graduate of Canadian Bible College and Taylor University College. He is also a member of the Leduc Ministerial Association WHAT DOES COMPASSION LOOK LIKE? Alan and Eleanor Randell, in a recent letter to the editor, wrote that legalizing drugs would protect students from the illicit drug trade. You have to feel for the Randells whose 19-year-old son died after taking heroin that he acquired on the street. No one is prepared for the loss of a child, no matter what the warning signs are. Compassion, however, doesn't look like capitulation. Legalizing drugs just because there is a market for them is completely unprincipled and potentially deadly. I prefer the suggestion made by Andrew Hanon in a January 19/03 column in the Edmonton Sun. He wrote, "Why not continue to make drug use an offence, but instead of sending offenders to jail, sentence them to treatment -- the dangerous ones can still go to jail, but the vast majority, who are really just sick and desperate, could be offered true hope and healing. That sounds more like compassion to me." To some, compassion looks like freedom from boundaries. We've already tried this approach. The sexual revolution of the 60s, which removed inhibitions as well as prohibitions, did not lead to safer sex. Making condoms available in schools and providing sex education, by any other name, has no positive impact on the moral character of students. Mark it down. Legalizing drugs in order to prevent criminals from profiting from them will not make the street a safer place. The nature of addiction is that it drives users to want more. More available crack at lower prices -- that's what I want for my community. Don't you? Moreover, purer drugs may not make them less harmful. For example, we're told that the marijuana available today has much more THC than the stuff that was for sale when we were kids. Compassion doesn't look like blame. The Randells assert that police involvement in educating kids about the dangers of drugs is useless. They declare also that drugs were made illegal because of racism against non-white minorities. "in order to protect virtuous, white, Christian women from being seduced by these minorities." With respect, I don't think that deserves a response. Compassion looks like hard work and sometimes it is thankless. Ask the police. Compassion is the velvet glove worn by the truth. Without a hand, a glove is limp and useless. When God sent his Son into the world for people like me who didn't care about Him, He did so because He knew I needed Him. The Bible says, in the words of the Apostle Paul, that compassion looks like this: "You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous man, though for a good man someone might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us." The loss of a son or daughter.who can understand that except someone who's been there? - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin