Expert: Change in prayer law would protect Christian Scientists, not kidsMadison.com
Shawn Doherty — 1/14/2009 11:30 amMadeline Kara Neumann is shown working on chalk art in the summer of 2007 during Wausau's
Chalk Fest. Neumann died March 23, 2008, after her parents prayed for healing rather than getting
medical help for a treatable form of diabetes.In an effort to separate itself from the tragic death of young Madeline Kara Neumann of Wisconsin whose parents chose to pray over her rather than seek medical help, the local
Christian Science Church has been meeting with state legislators to revise a state law that currently exempts faith healing practices from prosecution for child neglect and abuse. The church said its goal is to protect children. "We want to protect children and to show that our church does not want to hang onto a legislative accommodation that is perceived as helping people abuse their children," said Joe Farkas, the legislative affairs representative for the church.
But one expert warned that any measure drafted by Christian Scientists would aim to protect only Christian Scientists, not children. "If the Christian Science Church is allowed to write this legislation and dominate the discussion, the result is that there will be more Kara Neumann cases," said Shawn Francis Peters, a lecturer in religious studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and UW-Oshkosh and the author of "When Prayer Fails: Faith Healing, Children, and the Law."
The chief of staff for Sen. Lena Taylor, chair of the judiciary committee, confirmed Taylor's office has been working with Farkas on a bill that would revise the current statute. A draft of the measure was sent to the legislative research bureau, Eric Peterson said, and should reach the floor this spring.
"We're working on legislation that would clarify the statute to protect the civil right to prayer and healing and protect children," Peterson said. Peterson said that
the bill would eliminate the existing exemption for faith healing and create a legal mechanism known as an "affirmative defense" that would require anyone attempting to use spiritual or faith healing as a legal defense to follow a "standard of medical care" that Peterson claimed had been established by the courts.
The bill itself would provide no guidelines for what this standard of medical care would mean. "This is a recipe for utter confusion," Peters said of the proposal, claiming that no such standard of care has been clearly established in Wisconsin courts yet. He said he suspected the Christian Science Church is using the bill to head off any legal and political fallout as the Neumann case winds its way through the courts this year. "This is what they do. They lobby and they lobby really hard," he said.
"The church tries to get ahead of the curve and shape the law before the courts can establish judicial precedent." The Christian Science Church, which practices spiritual healing, pushed successfully for faith healing exemptions decades ago to abuse and neglect laws across the country, including Wisconsin's.http://www.madison.com/tct/news/stories/432411">MORE
- Sometimes words just aren't sufficient.
NOTE TO SELF: Don't get sick in Wisconsin.==============================================================================
DeSwiss
http://www.atheisttoolbox.com/">The Atheist Toolbox
"Prayer is just a way of telling god that his divine plan for
you is flawed -- and shockingly stingy" ~ Betty Bowers