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Four reasons why every Christian should be pro-life

Four reasons why every Christian should be pro-life

http://www.premierchristianity.com/Blog/4-reasons-why-every-Christian-should-be-pro-life
April 2016

Daniel Rodger explains why he believes evangelicals shouldn't be afraid to stand against abortion

From the first century, Christians have been against abortion and infanticide. It was their high view of human life that set them apart from the surrounding Greco-Roman culture where both the unborn and newborn were hardly worthy of their own lives, especially if they were girls, disabled, or the result of an illicit sexual encounter.

Many people today are unaware that the high moral value still ascribed to human life is a consequence of the Christian worldview and its influence on Western civilisation. Of course, someone does not need to be a Christian to be pro-life any more than you must be a Christian to know that robbing someone is morally wrong. The Christian view better grounds the pro-life view but moral knowledge is available to all of us because God has given us all a moral faculty.

Nevertheless, far too many evangelicals have been influenced by a secular culture that believes there is nothing special about being human. There's also a fear among the majority of evangelical leaders about engaging their congregations on the subject of abortion. Sadly, the evangelical community has largely assimilated and compromised on a serious moral and social problem.

I believe every Christian should be pro-life. By pro-life I mean the view that elective abortion unjustly takes the life of an innocent human being. I make this claim for the following four reasons:

1. All humans are equally valuable because they equally bear God's image

It has been the Christian view for 2000 years that all humans are of equal moral worth regardless of age, colour, ability or anything else. Only the Judeo-Christian worldview supports and has promoted this revolutionary idea.

Our value is not found in our abilities to perform certain tasks or display certain capacities. We are made in God's image. The Christian worldview says that to kill another human being is to kill and deface something of God. Abortion always intends to end the life of a human being made in God's image and is a serious sin, albeit one that Christ died to forgive.

2. Abortion is incompatible with being a Good Samaritan

Jesus taught Christians to love our neighbour as ourselves and used the parable of the Good Samaritan to help us understand what is required of us.

For the purpose of my argument the unborn function as the injured traveler who deserves nothing but our compassion and love, because they are at their most vulnerable and in need of protection. Abortion would have us see the injured traveler as someone who is disposable and a burden on our resources rather than someone we can demonstrate the sacrificial love of Christ to. Support for abortion is incompatible with fulfilling Jesus' command to 'go and do likewise'.

3. Abortion is child sacrifice

Although abortion is not explicitly condemned in scripture, child sacrifice is. The only significant difference between abortion and child sacrifice are the means by which the child is killed. During an abortion, the killing occurs at a slightly earlier stage of human development.

In the Old Testament the child was sacrificed to Moloch and Baal, whereas today it is commonly the false gods of convenience and autonomy. The church father Tertullian observed from the Carthaginian practice of child sacrifice that '...there is no difference as to baby killing whether you do it as a sacred rite or just because you choose to do it.'

4. Science tells us that abortion kills a human being

Although science cannot tell us what is right or wrong, it can tell us that from the earliest stages of human development that the unborn are distinct, living and whole human beings. This fact is confirmed in the leading Embryology textbooks. Keith L. Moore & T.V.N. Persaud write, 'A zygote is the beginning of a new human being. Human development begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete or sperm ... unites with a female gamete or oocyte ... to form a single cell called a zygote. This highly specialized, totipotent cell marks the beginning of each of us as a unique individual.'

For the rest of the story click here: http://www.premierchristianity.com/Blog/4-reasons-why-every-Christian-should-be-pro-life

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