The Culture of Death Triumphs: Grief, Despair, and the Rejection of Divine Sovereignty
EWTN News portal reports on Wendy Duffy, a 56-year-old British mother who, following the accidental death of her 23-year-old son Marcus four years ago, has resolved to end her life through assisted suicide at the Pegasos clinic in Switzerland—a country where such practices are legal even for the physically healthy. Duffy, who attempted suicide nine months after her son’s death and was revived, now declares that “no amount of medication or therapy can make her whole again” and that she “can’t wait” to die. She has chosen her deathbed attire, selected Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars’ “Die With A Smile” to accompany her final moments, and plans to call her siblings to say goodbye. The article notes that assisted suicide is framed by Pegasos as a “human right” for any “rational adult of sound mind,” regardless of health status. It also references the recent euthanasia of 25-year-old Noelia Castillo in Spain over her father’s objections, prompting the Spanish Bishops’ Conference to call it “a societal defeat.” Meanwhile, a right-to-die bill stalled in the UK Parliament, with Archbishop John Sherrington expressing gratitude for lawmakers who upheld “the dignity of every human life.” The article cites Pope Francis’ 2024 condemnation of euthanasia as “a failure of love” and “false compassion,” and quotes St. John Paul II’s *Evangelium Vitae* on suicide as a rejection of God’s sovereignty.
This case is not merely a personal tragedy but a stark manifestation of the triumph of the culture of death—a direct consequence of the post-conciliar Church’s failure to proclaim unambiguously the absolute dominion of God over life and death, and its capitulation to secular humanism disguised as “compassion.”







