Issues Surrounding Abortion
Sermon preached by
The Reverend Charles Royden
February 2001
As Christians we have at the heart of our faith and our belief system a
core of written material, the Bible, which we hold to be sacred. It was
written by human beings but it is also considered by the church, that is
Christians collectively, to be more than just human thoughts. It is held to
be special truth which has been handed down through generations which helps
form what we do and we do not believe. It is understood and interpreted to
each generation by the Holy Spirit using God given reason and understanding.
We should not just pull bits out and make them fit in with our own
pre-conceived ideas, but nevertheless it holds timeless qualities which help
us to remain true to the faith handed down to us.
Since Christmas we have heard about how Jesus was found in the Temple as
a child discussing the very same Old Testament which we use today. Jesus was
brought up on it. Today we hear how he went to the Synagogue and read the
scriptures and how he saw them fulfilled in him. So this scripture isn't
just a book like any other book. We do not sit in judgement upon it. It sits
over and above us and we must treat it with respect being careful how we use
it. This scripture has very important teachings and very challenging things
to say. It has done so to every society which has ever lived and it does so
to ours today.
Firstly I would like us to think for a few moments about the passage from
Jeremiah this morning. Specifically the very 'difficult' words about
Jeremiah. He was known from his mother's womb. You might want to decide that
this was poetic phraseology, not literal - in the same way that we might
decide that the episode involving Noah does not necessitate that we believe
the whole world was covered in water by a flood. But this is understanding
that we have about Jeremiah is not an isolated piece of poetic phraseology.
It is clear from the progressive revelation throughout scripture that God
values life and that God creates life and that whilst we are involved in
that process, life is not ours but God's. Your life is a gift from God it is
not 'yours' it is God's by right and we should all recognise this and treat
our lives accordingly.
This was a concept which Paul tried to make clear in the opening chapters
of Romans 1:20
For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities—his
eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood
from what has been made, so that men are without excuse. For although they
knew God, they neither glorified him as God nor gave thanks to him, but
their thinking became futile and their foolish hearts were darkened.
Although they claimed to be wise, they became fools and exchanged the glory
of the immortal God for images made to look like mortal man and birds and
animals and reptiles. Therefore God gave them over in the sinful desires of
their hearts to sexual impurity for the degrading of their bodies with one
another. They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served
created things rather than the Creator—who is forever praised. Amen.
Because life is not our's but God's we have to respect God when we make
decision in relation to life. It is not our right to prolong life at
whatever cost simply because we fear death. The medical invasion of our
lives needs to be understood by Christians within the context of God given
life, what right have we to prolong suffering and keep people alive simply
because the professionals cannot comprehend a faith which does not see death
as failure but a transition into the presence of God?
But that is not the issue of the moment perhaps this week as I read my
newspapers, it is rather the start of life which is beginning to arouse most
concern. The words of Jeremiah concerning the formation of life in the womb
should raise alarm bells for us as a Christian church when we hear of the
sale of babies over the internet and the sale of the morning after pill over
the internet, indeed we are promised speedy delivery of the morning after
pill to the door for anybody living inside the M25 motorway around London.
Perhaps I could put it like this 'Human life is not human, it is sacred,
it is divine, it is not just yours and mine.' We cannot decide what we want
to do with life on our own. This means that we should not procreate
irresponsibly and that means that we have to teach our children by our words
and deeds that sexual relationships are not to be entered into lightly.
When the 1967 Abortion Act was passed many felt it was necessary, if sad,
to deal with a minority of women in desperate situations. The Act has,
however, led virtually to abortion on demand by allowing abortions to be
performed on certain grounds. Amendments under the Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Act of 1990 brought in a new upper time limit allowing most
abortions to take place up to 24 weeks, but also allowing certain exceptions
with no upper limit set, thus permitting legal abortions up to birth. In
1968 there was a total of 23,641 abortions performed in England and Wales.
By 1978 this had increased to 141,558 and in 1988 to 183,798. In 1998 the
total number of abortions was 187,402. (Abortion Statistics 1998, Series AB
No.25, Office for National Statistics, England and Wales,1999). Up to 31
March 1997 nearly 4.7 million abortions had been performed in England and
Wales in the thirty years since the 1967 Abortion Act was passed. (Written
answer to a Parliamentary question, Hansard, 30 October 1997, col252)
Can it really be true that so many couples desire children and will
adopt, but there are so few babies who are available for adoption that
couples end up having to engage in all sorts of activities to try and adopt?
But there are of course implications which challenge so much of what we have
been reading this week. The wishes of the churches expressed by leaders from
many faiths were ignored last week in the debate about using embryos for
experimentation. If life is a gift of God then it is not ours to use created
life irresponsibly, even if it is for the benefit of other created life.
This is only a difference in degree between the Nazi doctors who used
human for experiments with complete disregard for their life. The scientist
who is without faith, must not be allowed to proceed unchecked or
unchallenged by Christians who are too apathetic to cry out on behalf of
those without a voice. This sanctity of human life challenged medical ethics
in all sorts of areas and we must support our religious leaders as they seek
to try and restore respect, respect not for 'human dignity' but for 'divine
dignity.'
There is a word which is significant in the story about Jeremiah and
about Jesus today. This word was one which was used by others when speaking
about Jeremiah and about Jesus. It is word which probably would be used by
some people when they speak of foetuses. The word is 'ONLY.' Jeremiah
is dismissive of himself saying 'I am only a youth' The crowd is dismissive
of Jesus saying 'He is only.' None of us dare be so disparaging towards
human life. Your life and my life is not ours it is God's. You may be living
your life as though it was your own, but it is not, to do so is a recipe for
disaster. So we must all face the choices and decisions ethical, practical -
whatever they may be, conscious of doing not our own thing, but God's thing.
Amen.
Meditation
A group of medical students were discussing the various tests that can be
made on the foetus in the womb to discover if there are handicaps. The
lecturer said to all the students: "About the termination of a pregnancy,
I would like your opinion. The father had syphilis; the mother had
tuberculosis. Of the four children born, the first was blind, the second
died, the third was deaf and dumb, the fourth child had tuberculosis. The
mother is pregnant with a fifth child. Given the conditions of the other
children, should the mother terminate that pregnancy?"
A vote was taken, and an overwhelming number said that she should have an
abortion.
The lecturer replied: "If abortion had been available in those days,
and your advice was taken, you would have aborted the great composer,
Beethoven."
Let us pray:
God our Father, inspire us with a great respect for all human life
from the time of the child growing in the womb to the point of death. May
that respect lead us to grow in a sense of responsibility for all our
brothers and sisters throughout the world, knowing that, where one person
suffers and is degraded, all of humanity is belittled and abused. May we
grow in a sense of love and care for those less fortunate than ourselves,
and lead us to do something about the difficulties in our world. Amen.
"Termination of a pregnancy" is another term for abortion. In 1996
there were 177,225 abortions in England and Wales. In 1997 social workers in
India discovered that for every aborted male there were 1000 aborted females
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