It strikes me, then, as sadly ironic the latest champion of legalised murder, aka euthanasia, is a medical practitioner.
It's not that I don't have a lot of sympathy with Dr John Pollock, the North Shore GP who has been diagnosed with terminal cancer and given just months to live. I can identify, too, with his wish to be able to control the end of his life.
I have no fear of death; I will go, I hope willingly, when the Lord calls my name. But that is not to say that I do not have any concern about the nature of my passing. Naturally, I want it to be quick and easy, but the last thing I'm prepared to do is selfishly to permit someone to break the Sixth Commandment, "You shall not kill", and thus place himself or herself in eternal jeopardy.
I am persuaded that one of the fundamental reasons for all the murder and violence we are confronted with almost daily is that our traditional belief in the sanctity of life has been diluted, by open-slather abortion as much as anything else, to such an extent that, even in what we fondly call civilisation, life is becoming cheap.
Back in the late 1970s when abortion was "decriminalised" many people predicted that abortion on demand would soon follow. But never in our wildest nightmares did we foresee that the abortion law reform would give birth to a multi-million dollar industry, putting to death 18,000-odd potential New Zealanders every year.
And the same thing will happen if euthanasia is legalised. For incontrovertible evidence of that we just have to look at the Netherlands, where in 1984 the Dutch Supreme Court ruled voluntary euthanasia was acceptable, provided doctors followed strict guidelines.
In 1993, the British House of Lords formed a select committee to study first-hand voluntary euthanasia in the Netherlands. The committee consisted of eminent medical professionals with 80 per cent of them predisposed to the idea of assisted suicide and euthanasia.
However, after visiting the Netherlands, the select committee published its findings and Lord Walton of Detchant wrote the conclusion in February of 1994.
This is what he said, and it should be memorised by every MP and every member of our medical profession: "We concluded that it was virtually impossible to ensure that all acts of euthanasia were truly voluntary, and that any liberalisation of the law in the United Kingdom could not be abused.
"We were also concerned that vulnerable people - the elderly, lonely, sick or distressed - would feel pressure, whether real or imagined, to request early death."
One of the members of the committee later revealed that its members had met a Dutch "euthanasia doctor" on the last day of their visit. They asked him how he felt administering the lethal injection. He replied: "The night before the first time, I couldn't sleep. The second time, it wasn't so bad - and after the third [he grinned] it was a piece of cake."
The select committee stood appalled. "We had just witnessed," said one, "the 'slippery slope' personified."
Has anything changed changed? Just last month Britain's Daily Mail ran a report on a Canadian study of euthanasia in Belgium under the headline, "Warning to Britain as almost half of Belgium's euthanasia nurses admit to killing without consent".
We have no control over our birthing and used to have no control over our dying. Nowadays, advances in medical science, in analgesic drugs and palliative care, have ensured that 95 per cent of people who die of terminal illnesses die as comfortably as humanely possible.
We don't need legal euthanasia. We're sliding down enough slippery slopes as it is.
garth.george@hotmail.com