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Just How Pro-Life Are You Really?
Michael S. Horton, D.Phil.
(First published in Modern Reformation, July/Aug 1992 issue)
This essay first appeared in the July/August1992 issue of Modern
Reformation magazine, when it was under the auspices of CURE
(Christians United for Reformation), the predecessor to White
Horse Media.
Readers familiar with CURE know that we are a group committed to
recovering the essence of the Christian message. That means that
what you see and hear from us will usually be in the form of
doctrinal discussions, issues, and debates written with the
thinking layperson in mind.
Nevertheless, there are some practical issues that walk that
razor's edge between faith and practice, to the point where it
is difficult to tell whether one who engages in a certain
practice is actually denying a certain essential doctrine by
doing so. If, for instance, one were to cast one's gaze on an
attractive body at the beach for more than passing appreciation
(it's not difficult to figure out in which part of the country I
live), that would be a sin (lust, since many of us have
forgotten), but it would not involve a matter of doctrine. I can
and, in fact, do engage in sins that do not affect my faith in
God, in Christ, or my convictions about the way in which I am
saved. While sin tolerated can often undermine confidence in any
doctrine that fails to flatter our own indulgences, most of our
daily failures to conform to God's revealed will are of a
practical rather than doctrinal sort.
But, as I say, there are exceptions. Abortion is one such
exception. In order to engage in this serious sin, a Christian
must actually deny a cardinal doctrine of the Christian faith.
He or she must deny that God is the Sovereign author of life who
alone has the power and right to give and take away human
breath, and we also deny the creature we destroy his or her
dignity as an image-bearer of God himself. In Christian belief,
the significance of human beings over all other species of
animal life resides in the image of God (imago Dei) stamped on
each person, as an artist signs his masterpieces. Although God
created all things, only humans bear his likeness, and they bear
it from conception. As Calvin put it, "Though the primary seat
of the divine image was in the mind and the heart, or in the
soul and its powers, there was no part even of the body in which
some rays of glory did not shine" (Institutes 1:15.3). Bavinck,
the great Reformed dogmatist, argued that "as long as Man
remains Man, he bears the image of God," however tarnished and
effaced.
If this doctrine is lacking in the church, surely it will be
lacking in society. Before the late Francis Schaeffer, a
Reformation thinker, reminded the evangelical and fundamentalist
world of this biblical doctrine, there was virtually no response
from the evangelical church to the atrocity of abortion. Roman
Catholics, of course, had a theological impetus behind their
opposition, but it was obscured by their inclusion of birth
control as well as abortion.
And now, thanks to the efforts of the Schaeffers and their many
co-laborers, a wide cross section of the evangelical movement
supports the protection of human life in its most vulnerable
phase. Clearly, humanity is determined by the imago Dei, not by
concepts such as "viability." Nevertheless, because we
evangelicals over the last two centuries have been given to
feverish activity without much theological reflection ("Don't
bother with all that 'head stuff' – let's just get out there and
get it done!"), we are single-issue people. We can only handle
one issue at a time. As important as the abortion debate is, the
anger that people such as Francis Schaeffer felt in response to
it was motivated by a theological conviction--the same
well-spring that produced anger at the pollution of the
environment (cf. his freshly released Pollution & the Death of
Man), outrage at the racism rampant in evangelical circles (cf.
Two Contents, Two Realities), and frustration over the
injustices of the powerful over the weak.
The abortion debate has been led, like the abolitionist and
civil rights movements, as a protest against the oppression of
the weak by the strong, picking up on the rich biblical
language. "Blessed is he who has regard for the weak" (Psalm
41:1); God "will deliver the needy who cry out, the afflicted
who have no one to help. He will take pity on the weak and the
needy and save the needy from death. He will rescue them from
oppression and violence, for precious is their blood in his
sight" (Psalm 72:12-14). And yet, while many evangelicals oppose
abortion, there is a curious silence on nearly every other issue
where the pro-life ethic, commanded by Scripture, is at risk.
One cursory glance at a concordance will reveal how concerned
God is about the treatment of the homeless, the poor, the weak,
the minorities ("aliens and strangers"), and others too often
marginalized.
Words like "oppress," and pejorative barbs from God about "you
cows of Bashan on Mount Samaria, you women who oppress the poor
and crush the needy and say to your husbands, 'Bring us some
drinks!'" (Amos 4:1). "'1 will tear down the winter house along
with the summer house; the houses adorned with ivory will be
destroyed and the mansions will be demolished,' declares the
Lord" (Amos 3:15). The people of God are entrusted with a
special obligation to social justice: "Defend the cause of the
weak and fatherless; maintain the rights of the poor and
oppressed. Rescue the weak and needy" (Psalm 82:3-4). God hates
oppression with the same intensity with which he hates abortion,
but are we as consistent in our righteous indignation?
Like abortion, apartheid is a theological as well as an ethical
question. To deny life and justice to the unborn or to the
un-white is not only a serious sin (such as selfishness or
racism), but a deliberate system, complete with biblical
proof-texts twisted beyond recognition. While those committed to
being faithful to the Christian creeds and Reformation
confessions declared apartheid in South Africa a heresy,
evangelicals here at home have shown more ambivalence. While
Jerry Falwell and other leaders of the Christian Right
courageously defended the human rights of the unborn, Falwell
returned from his trip to South Africa declaring that Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, whose pleas for a peaceful transition from
apartheid to democracy have kept south Africa from bloodshed
thus far, was "a phony" and urged Christians to support the
racist government of P.W. Botha. In the meantime, Jessie Jackson
expressed outrage at Democratic presidential nominee Bill
Clinton's criticisms of a rap song encouraging black violence
against whites. When will "reverends" transcend pagan party
lines?
Think of our other issues involving the doctrine of the image of
God. It is the motivation behind our concern for the victim of a
savage murder; our horror at seeing children searching for food
in garbage bins behind a restaurant while their mothers hold up
signs that read, "Will Work for Food and Diapers." It is that
conviction that breaks our heart when we see a prostitute
selling her body to keep alive, while others (including those
who participate in the same industry through pornography and
other forms of sexual entertainment) pour shame and contempt on
her. It is that conviction, that religious belief, that binds us
to our neighbors and to their interests, regardless of whether
they are believers or share our same values or our ethnic,
cultural, or linguistic heritage. Not long ago, a friend and I
went through the drive-through window at a fast food spot. The
fact that the server had a thick foreign accent, characteristic
of fast food franchises in Southern California, and that my
friend never shied away from making his racism a matter of
public record, made me cringe as I prepared for the inevitable.
Sure enough, this friend made some typically racist remark. The
sad thing is, he's a pastor. The odd thing is, he's a rabid
opponent of abortion. But is he consistently pro-life?
Evangelicals raise no qualms when the United States commits
millions to Israel or spends millions on a military campaign to
free a tiny, but wealthy, oil state with no regard for
democracy, but when it comes to talking about the emergency in
Somalia, Africa, with hundreds dying every day from starvation,
the sentiment seems to be, "We have our own problems here at
home." Evangelicals rightly protest the murder of the unborn and
decry the silence of those who refuse to defend those who have
no voice to defend themselves. Nevertheless, that same silence
hovers secretly over the same impassioned group when children
die senselessly after they are born. Shouldn't there be an
outrage of equal proportions? Isn't life life? Or are we just
caught up in the glitz and glamour of political debates? Are we
really pro-life?
Until Christians put their theology first, their activism will
be little more rationally motivated than that of Hare Krishnas
passing out flowers in airports. We will be moved along, one
issue at a time, by charismatic and energetic leaders and our
internal contradictions (such as calling ourselves "pro-life"
when in truth we rarely speak up for the poor and oppressed
after they're born) will not win for evangelicalism respect in
the eyes of the world for having the courage of its convictions.
What convictions? Activism, agendas, and practical involvement
are not convictions. Indeed, these things mean nothing without
convictions, and convictions come from deeply held beliefs about
God and ourselves. And folks, that's theology.
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