This book is a welcome resource for the general reader as well as health care practitioners. It is a simply written, straightforward introduction to the euthanasia question.
In a culture so driven by individualism, autonomy, and avoidance of discomfort, it is difficult to forestall the almost inevitable push for the “quick fix,” the direct and seemingly easy solution. Richard Gula, popular teacher and insightful ethical consultant, offers the reader an overview and critique of the issues at stake – patient autonomy, the traditional prohibition against killing the innocent, and the call for beneficence in health care. In a particular way he focuses positively on the Catholic tradition’s reasons and motivations for opposing physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia. In the end, Gula offers a pastoral vision, a call for the personal virtues of humility, courage, and hope, within a community or parish committed to caring, hospitality, and interdependence.

MELITA THEOLOGICA
HOW TO READ THE GOSPELS
17CM BAMBINO DI PRAGA
411 - 23CM IMMAKULATA KUNCIZZJONI
ST. THOMAS MOORE MODEL FOR MODERN CATHOL
SAINTLY COMPANIONS
THE JEWS IN THE TIME OF JESUS
THE SECOND TWELVE MONTHS OF LIFE
KEVIN DAVIDSON AND THE VOICES FULL CIRCL
EVANGELIUM VITAE
THE SCIENCE OF HISTORICAL THEOLOGY
NATIVITY W ANGEL PEACE FIGURINE
HONORING THE SELF
THE CHURCH GIVES THANKS AND REMEMBERS
MISSION TRENDS TODAY
AN UNLIKELY CATECHISM
A TIME FOR HEALING 
