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Posts Tagged ‘abortion’

Pro-Life Defeat in Senate

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Pregnant_woman2By a 54-45 vote, the Senate rejected language in its health care reform bill that would’ve further prohibited federal funding of abortion. The language, sponsored by Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), was nearly identical to that which was passed by the House of Representatives earlier. But pro-life advocates knew getting passage in the Senate was going to be more difficult, and we’ll likely see much teeth-gnashing  as the day wears on today. Though some pro-choice advocates said the language put far tighter restrictions on abortion, Nelson said that wasn’t the case.

“We’re not here to debate for or against abortion,” Nelson said yesterday. “This is a debate about taxpayer money. It’s a debate about whether it’s appropriate for public funds to — for the first time in more than three decades — cover elective abortions. … Most Americans and most of the people in my state would say, ‘No.’” 

And he’s right. While pro-choice advocates sometimes believe the country as a whole firmly supports abortion-on-demand, Roe v. Wade has always been incredibly controversial and polarizing. More people believe that there should be some limits placed on abortions (only 22 percent believe it should be legal in all cases). And, as Jennifer Senior notes in a fascinating (pro-life-tilting) story in New York Magazine, the pro-choice contingency is shrinking.

If forced to choose, Americans today are far more eager to label themselves “pro-life” than they were a dozen years ago. The youngest generation of voters—those between the ages of 18 and 29, and therefore most likely to need an abortion—is the most pro-life to come along since the generation born during the Great Depression, according to Michael D. Hais and Morley Winograd, authors of Millennial Makeover, who got granular data on the subject from Pew Research Center. Crisis Pregnancy Centers, dedicated to persuading women to continue their pregnancies, now outnumber the country’s abortion providers, who themselves are a rapidly aging group (two-thirds are over 50, according to a National Abortion Federation study from 2002).

I think it’s only a matter of time before the pro-choice movement becomes an obvious minority. If we acknowledge that human life is precious (and it’d be a rare politician who’d deny such a thing), then further acknowledges that deciding when a human life begins is quite the tricky thing (surely, there’s nothing magical that happens when a baby exits the birth canal, is there?), we, as a society, will grow more and more protective of the rights of the unborn. The pro-life movement, it seems to me, has logic on its side. 

But that doesn’t mitigate the fact that pro-life Christians have a politically daunting, and potentially damaging, fight right now. Do we lobby to block health care reform as proposed by the Senate, when we know the withering fire we’ll come under? 

Abby Johnson, I’d guess, would likely say yes: The risks are worth it. 

Johnson, a former director of a Planned Parenthood clinic in Texas, according to the Baptist Press, was raised in a Baptist family, but she turned her back on the denomination (though not her faith) in order to, as she saw it at the time, help women in times of grave need. But on Oct. 6, she could no longer ignore what she felt was God’s calling. She walked out of the center and joined the Coalition of Life, just down the street. Bobby Reynoso, head of the Coalition, was shocked when Johnson came through his door. 

“It’s not what we were expecting,” he said. “But as Christians, it should be.” 

As Christians, we should expect eventual victory in this struggle against abortion — whether we see an incremental step forward in this health care reform bill or not. Logic is on our side. Justice is on our side. And let me just presumptive and say it: I think God’s on our side, too.

Casey At the Bat

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

 

 

Sen. Bob Casey

Sen. Bob Casey

Wrangling over health care reform has been going on for, what, six months now? As many of you predicted, funding over abortion has taken center stage. And, according to Time magazine, Sen. Bob Casey (D-Penn.) is standing in the spotlight.

 

 

The article begins thus:

The point of the Oct. 21 press briefing was to highlight Senate Democrats’ outreach to faith-based organizations. Illinois’s Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, spoke approvingly about all the policy areas that religious leaders have been working on with Democrats before adding, “And not just on negative issues like abortion.” Across the room, Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, a pro-life Catholic, listened in silence.

A few minutes later, a reporter asked his opinion on abortion coverage in the Senate version of health reform. “We want to make sure that there is no federal funding of abortion,” began Casey, but Michigan Senator Debbie Stabenow quickly cut him off.

“We do not have funding for abortion services in these bills,” she said. “Senator Casey doesn’t need to worry about it. He can vote for health reform.” 

Casey smiled patiently but stood his ground. “We need more work done on this,” he said.

I’d imagine being a pro-life Democrat can be pretty thankless at times. But he’s not alone. According to Time, 64 pro-life Democrats in the House of Representatives voted with most Republicans to include the so-called Stupak Amendment to its version of the health-care bill — an amendment that keeps fed dollars away from abortion funding. 

We’re not done with this debate — not by a long shot. We’ll be talking about health care reform into the new year. Let’s hope we’re no longer talking about abortion by then — that the Stupak Amendment, or a version thereof, wins the day, and we can shift to other points of discussion.

Like how to pay for the thing.

United Front?

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

According to The New York Times, 145 “evangelical, Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christian leaders have signed a declaration saying they will not cooperate with laws that they say could be used to compel their institutions to participate in abortion, or to bless or in any way recognize same-sex couples.” 

The declaration was released last Friday, and the paper said it was an attempt to rejuvenate Christian conservatism — the same force that helped propel and keep George W. Bush in the White House for most of a decade.

Or it could be a group of religious leaders standing up for the issues they believe are important … but perhaps that’s just naive of me.

Support for Abortion Dips

Monday, October 5th, 2009

GodisprolifewashingtonrallyThere are almost as many pro-lifers as pro-choicers, according to a new survey by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press. About 45 percent of folks say abortion should be outlawed in all or most cases now, compared to 47 percent who say it should almost always be legal.

Why the switch?

“While no single reason for the shift is apparent, the pattern of changes suggests that the election of a pro-choice Democrat as president may be a contributing factor,’’ Andrew Kohut, the Pew Research Center’s president, told Heidi Przybyla of the Bloomberg News.

Cardinal Defends Presiding Over Kennedy Funeral

Friday, September 4th, 2009

 

Cardinal Sean O'Malley. Photo by JamesPatricksMom

Cardinal Sean O'Malley. Photo by JamesPatricksMom

Last Saturday, Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, called by many “The Liberal Lion,” was commemorated in a Catholic Mass at the Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. Cardinal Sean O’Malley presided over the Mass, earning the ire of many a Catholic: Ted Kennedy, after all, was a champion of abortion rights, and the Catholic Church is unwaveringly pro-life. And several prominent Catholics let their disappointment be known.

 

On Sept. 2, O’Malley issued a response to his critics on his blog:

We are for the precious gift of life, and our task is to build a civilization of love.  We must show those who do not share our belief about life that we care about them.  We will stop the practice of abortion by changing the law, and we will be successful in changing the law if we change people’s hearts.  We will not change hearts by turning away from people in their time of need and when they are experiencing grief and loss.

At times, even in the Church, zeal can lead people to issue harsh judgments and impute the worst motives to one another.  These attitudes and practices do irreparable damage to the communion of the Church.  If any cause is motivated by judgment, anger or vindictiveness, it will be doomed to marginalization and failure.  Jesus’ words to us were that we must love one another as He loves us.  Jesus loves us while we are still in sin.  He loves each of us first, and He loves us to the end.  

Interesting and, I think, persuasive. What are your thoughts?

Gospel of Love?

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

This story, I hope, needs no commentary.

A Phoenix-area pastor named Steven Anderson recently delivered a sermon titled “Why I hate Barack Obama” at Faithful Word Baptist Church in Tempe, Ariz. “I’m gonna pray that he dies and goes to hell when I go to bed tonight,” he allegedly said during the sermon. “That’s what I’m gonna pray.” He later told a Fox News affiliate that he hoped President Obama would be stricken with brain cancer “so he can die like Ted Kennedy and I hope it happens today.” 

The sermon was apparently delivered to his congregation on the eve of Obama’s visit to Phoenix. The next day, a member of Anderson’s church was seen carrying an assault rifle outside the arena where Obama was speaking.