I do try to be consistent. The pro-life article I linked earlier, and especially the comments afterward, assumed that responsible people would have used birth control. In case you’re wondering, the birth control I believe in is abstinence outside of marriage, and trusting God inside of marriage.
Responsibility is not some objective standard. I think we should view responsibility as to something or someone. In the instance of abstinence, we are responsible to God to abide by His instructions, trust His providence, embrace His gifts, and thus receive His blessings.
What makes me more angry than the confused, hormonal, and lied-to women who receive abortions are the complacent, indifferent Christians who equally devalue new life by so-called prevention. A good friend did a research paper in college on “the pill,” and was horrified to learn that the medication embraced by self-proclaimed responsible Christian wives is an abortificient. Translation: even in the birth control doses, the pill can cause abortions of not-yet implanted embryos. The should-be parents never know unless they’re under invasive medical screening. All they know is that - “what a relief” - they aren’t pregnant. What shocked my friend even more is that when she informed the Christian population, who had to be ignorant to keep using the pill, surely; she found that the friends had heard of the claim that the pill is an abortificient. To so many Christians who would love to see Roe v. Wade overturned, the facts about their chemical birth control were irrelevant.
I’m a sheltered homeschool Christian girl who doesn’t really need to decide for herself on these issues yet. First I was pro-life. Then I was anti-abortion. Then I was anti-”the pill.” Now I’m anti-birth control. I’m pro-children, would love to have lots of children, and will be serving in the church nursery tomorrow (despite the fact that I don’t believe in Church nurseries).
Be responsible…
to God.
To God be all glory.
Fantastic.
ReplyDeleteOne of your best posts ever. I mean that.
Spencer
I read the article about "Shades of Gray" and totally agree. I'm not buying Giuliani's position. My post on Planned Parenthood was partly aimed at the belief that a president's view on abortion doesn't matter as long as he appoints constitutionally-sound judges. I'm not buying it. $300 to Planned Parenthood is not a judicial issue (although it's unconsitituional, so it could be).
ReplyDeleteGod definitely does give babies when He wants. I have friends who were on the pill and it didn't work (well, they got pregnant anyway). That's exciting. I love babies. = )
kschaub,
Thanks for commenting. Bloggers understand the value of feedback, right?
Good for you, being consistently pro-life with no shades of gray involved.
To God be all glory,
Lisa A. Cress
(edited by Lisa of Longbourn to try to keep her blog from being blocked by conservative parents: less explicit than original):
ReplyDeleteTo clarify to both Lisa and Kevin:
I am the friend about whom Lisa spoke who did the in-depth research on the pill. Know this: ALL forms of chemical birth control have similar effects, and ALL forms of chemical birth control are--to my knowledge--abortifacient. This includes not only all versions of the birth control pill, but also IUDs and any birth control implanted or injected into the woman's body. This does not include condoms or diaphragms (neither of which are abortifacient but are both instead purely preventive), and last time I checked, the current belief is that this also does not include male birth control, since it has no effect on the womb, thus does not kill an embryo.
Another not-very-well-known fact is that the "morning after pill" is absolutely nothing more than a higher dose of the traditional birth control pill. A woman could achieve an identical result if she took multiple pills (I'm not sure how many regular pills it would take) in one day, which, by the way, could be hazardous to her own health since she's only supposed to take one of the regular pills per day. Knowing that, I don't know how the morning after pill is legal when it's simply a way to O.D. on the regular pill.
(note from Lisa of Longbourn: we are both obviously not recommending that you self-medicate by overdosing yourself on the pill!)
I just wanted to clarify, and I hope that helps.
Passionately (as in, angrily, with regards to our ignorant culture on the topic),
Lindsey A.
I just read an article on the birth control culture among evangelicals, how it is based on assumptions that are contrary to Scripture. Anyway, read it; read the verses, and tell me what you think. http://lawngospel.wordpress.com/2007/11/13/the-five-points-of-birth-control-ism-and-why-theyre-a-hard-pill-to-swallow/
ReplyDeleteTo God be all glory,
Lisa of Longbourn