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Is the Post-abortion Strategy a Moral Strategy?
by David C. Reardon, Ph.D.
Many committed pro-lifers are convinced that it is both strategically
and morally wrong to concentrate the public's attention on anyone other
than abortion's primary victim, the unborn child. This is a legitimate
concern which should be carefully examined. Can we pursue a pro-woman/pro-life
strategy without compromising our moral opposition to abortion? Or more
specifically, is it right to focus our efforts on the women, men, and siblings
who are being hurt by abortion? Or do we have an obligation to focus
on the fact that children are being killed by abortion?
The Natural Order of Things
We begin with a very simple observation. In God's ordering of creation,
it is only the mother who can nurture her unborn child. All that the rest
of us can do, then, is to nurture the mother. To help a child, we must
help the child's mother.
There is nothing startling about this observation. Crisis pregnancy
centers have known this truth, and have been living it out it for decades.
But we must explore this insight a little deeper to understand all that
it can teach us.
God has created a connection between a mother and her children that
is so deeply personal and intimate that the welfare of each is dependent
on the other. As every mother knows from personal experience, this interdependence
is for both good and ill. When a mother's children are joyful, their joy
lifts her heart. When they are troubled by sorrow, their sorrows weigh
on her as well. This principle can be summed up in the following truism:
One cannot help a child without helping the mother; one cannot hurt
a child without hurting the mother.
This is why, from a natural law perspective, we can know in advance
that abortion is inherently harmful to women. It is simply impossible to
rip a child from the womb of a mother without tearing out a part of the
woman herself--a part of her heart, a part of her joy, a part of her maternity.
If there is a single principle, then, which lies at the heart of the
pro-woman/pro-life agenda, it would have to be this: the best interests
of the child and the mother are always joined. This is true
even if the mother does not initially realize it, and even if she needs
a tremendous amount of love and help to see it. Thus, the only way that
we can help either the mother or her child, is to help both. Conversely,
if we hurt either, we hurt both.
This is not an optional truth. It is God's ordering of creation. This
principle is so important that I must repeat it again: Only the mother
can nurture her unborn child. All that the rest of us can do is to nurture
and protect the mother.
Saving the unborn, then, is a natural byproduct of helping women. Conversely,
we can never hope to succeed in our efforts to protect the unborn without
first and foremost protecting women. Brute force bans on abortion may help
prevent most abortions, but they will not create a pro-life society.
But helping mothers through an aggressive defense of women's legitimate
rights will. It is perhaps in this very same sense that Pope John Paul
II has insisted, in Crossing the Threshold of Hope, that it is necessary
for those who oppose abortion to become "courageously 'pro-woman,' promoting
a choice that is truly in favor of women. It is precisely the woman, in
fact, who pays the highest price, not only for her motherhood, but even
more for its destruction, for the suppression of the life of the child
who has been conceived. The only honest stance...is that of radical
solidarity with the woman." [Italics added.]
Learning Our Lessons, Too
Many pro-lifers scratch their heads in confusion, wondering how God could
have allowed this to go on so long? So many millions have died, and we
seem no closer to converting our nation than we were twenty years ago.
When will God stop this holocaust?
This is an important question. As Christians we believe that from every
evil happening God can resurrect something good -- at the very least repentance
and a change of spirit, and often much more. And with the terrible onslaught
of abortion which is occurring, we must pray with hope that there is an
awful lot of good which God intends to resurrect from this great evil.
Greater respect for the unborn and the sanctity of life is one lesson which
our society is certainly intended to learn, but it is by no means the only
lesson we are meant to learn.
I believe that at least some of us are so focused on what others need
to learn that we are neglecting to see what God may be asking us
to learn. In short, before we can help others to see we may still need
to extract a plank or two from our own eyes. I honestly believe that, short
of Christ's return, God will not bring an end to the abortion holocaust
until Christians learn all that they are meant to learn, namely:
greater compassion for sinners.
There is no denying the fact that in previous decades righteous and
judgmental Christians discriminated against and shamed women who were pregnant
out-of-wedlock. And it is equally true that this condemning attitude shamed,
and continues to shame, many women into seeking abortions. For this, we
too share in the guilt of abortion. Pro-lifers have clearly done a tremendous
job in the last two decades in promoting a more charitable understanding
of women who are pregnant out of wedlock. But there is clearly much more
that must be done. Churches, families, friends, and employers must make
even greater efforts to be supportive of every pregnant woman or single
parent, no matter how the child was conceived.
During the last twenty years, Christians have truly come a long way
in learning this first lesson. But it is doubtful that we would have learned
it if we had not been shocked into greater compassion for young pregnant
women out of our concern for their unborn children who are threatened by
abortion. Nonetheless, the witnessing work of our many crisis pregnancy
centers and the compassion of so many parents toward their single mother/daughters
is evidence that this lesson is being learned.
As a Christian community, however, we are not as far along in learning
the lesson of compassion toward those who have actually been involved in
abortion. Many good-hearted people continue to recoil in horror at anyone
who could "kill their baby." They wonder, what kind of monster could do
such a thing? For many, judgmentalism comes much easier than compassion
because they lack insight into the tremendous pressures and feelings of
despair which lead to abortion.
This is the second lesson which we must learn from the abortion holocaust
before we can expect to conquer it. We must learn that abortion
is an act of despair. It is not something women do with vindictive hearts.
More often than not, it is something they do only when they feel trapped
and helpless. Thus, the old adage "hate the sin, but love the sinner" is
especially important with regard to abortion. Without ever approving of
abortion as a "good" thing, we must learn how refrain from condemning and
judging the women and men who have been involved in it. Judging them will
not free them from the shame and guilt they already feel. Instead, we must
concentrate on sharing with them the hope of God's great mercy. To do this
effectively we must give them more than our words; we must give them our
hearts.
Who Can Best Speak for the Unborn?
The middle majority of Americans tolerate abortion because they are uneasy
pragmatists. While they firmly believe that abortion is the killing of
a human being, they also believe it is sometimes necessary and almost always
beneficial to the woman.
Because the middle majority is uncomfortable with the truth about abortion,
they have a psychological need to push out of their minds any arguments
or evidence on behalf of the unborn. Indeed, when presented with evidence,
such as pictures of the unborn, whether charmingly angelic or horridly
dismembered, they are likely to resent pro-lifers for rubbing their noses
into a truth which they already know but have deliberately chosen to ignore.
Indeed, one drawback of such pictures is that they may actually serve to
increase the middle majority's calloused attitude by forcing them to repeatedly
exercise their pattern of denial.
In other words, when hearts are closed, pounding heads with proofs of
the unborn child's humanity is ineffective. The truth must enter in a round
about way. This way is through the testimony of women who grieve over their
lost children. Since the middle majority is open to the concerns of women,
they will empathize with the grief of post-aborted women, and in so doing
they will be drawn into implicitly acknowledging the unborn for whom the
tears are wept.
Clearly, the most powerful witnesses for the humanity of the unborn
are not scientists, but mothers who mourn. All can see that these mothers
weep not over the destruction of "products of conception" but over the
deaths of their children. While pictures of aborted babies may increase
the resentment of the middle majority, the tearful stories of women who
have paid the terrible price of abortion open eyes and hearts. Wherever
facts of fetal biology will not change hearts, facts of familial relationship
will: "It was my innocent little daughter who died that day!"
In this very real way, the issue of the unborn child's human rights
is not replaced by a focus on post-abortion issues, it is subsumed into
it. In the final analysis, the humanity of the unborn child is revealed
to be the only explanation for why abortion causes women so much grief
and suffering.
Thus, for those of us who have not had an abortion, the best way that
we can draw attention to the humanity of the unborn is by drawing attention
to the testimony of those who can speak of this loss from personal experience.
By our advocacy for women's rights, we draw attention to wounded mothers.
By our hushing the din of our own cries on behalf of the unborn, we are
allowing the grief-filled voices of the unborn's mothers and fathers to
be heard by all. We are not leaving the unborn voiceless; we are offering
their parents the chance to be heard. Who is more entitled to speak for
their children than they?
Looking at this same issue from another perspective, we must remember
that the interests of a mother and her child are permanently intertwined.
This means that the morality of abortion is built right into the psychological
effects of abortion. Everyone knows there is no psychological trauma associated
with the discarding of menses. But the discarding of an unborn child's
life? That is inherently traumatic.(1)
Therefore, when we are talking about the psychological complications
of abortion, we are implicitly talking about the physical and behavioral
symptoms of a moral problem. By focusing public attention on the symptoms
of post-abortion trauma we will inevitably draw the middle majority back
to understanding the cause of the problem: the injustice of killing unborn
children and the guilt of weakness and betrayal which haunts the mother's
heart.
With much less ferocity, this same guilt is gnawing at the hearts of
the middle majority of Americans who know the truth but have chosen to
ignore it. In helping them to recognize the psychological suffering abortion
causes women, we will lead them to rediscover the horror of abortion for
themselves.
A Pro-Life Lesson Plan
The discussion above is not meant to imply that appeals on behalf of the
unborn are never effective. The fact that the middle majority is uneasy
with abortion can be used to our advantage. My point, however, is that
we are misusing our resources when we press this advantage first. Our first
order of business must be shaking their belief that abortion helps women.
The importance of this order cannot be overstated. It is only after
the dangers of abortion for women are fully understood by the middle majority,
much less pro-abortion activists, that we can even begin to open their
minds and hearts to the unborn child. If women are not being helped, they
will ask themselves, then why are we killing their babies?
The pro-abortion movement was born in a social vision which separated
the mother's interests from her unborn baby's. If their interests are separate,
than there is the potential for conflict between the woman's rights and
her unborn child's rights, one of which must prevail.
We cannot accept any part of this reasoning. We must reject every ideology
which frames the abortion issue as one of a mother versus her child. We
are both pro-woman and pro-child. We believe that we can and should help
both the mother and her child. We believe that the legalization of abortion
was not an advance for women's rights, but an advance for social engineers
and others who are exploiting women in times of personal crisis.
Teaching Morality By Teaching Science
Believers know that God's moral law is given to us not to enslave us, or
even to take the fun out of life. It is given to us as a path toward true
happiness. Christians rightly anticipate, then, that any advantage gained
through violation of the moral law is always temporary; it will invariably
be supplanted by alienation and suffering.
This insight gives us an alternative way of evangelizing. Whenever we
cannot convince others to acknowledge a moral truth for the love of God,
our second best option is to appeal to their self interests. If an act
is indeed against God's moral law, it will be found to be injurious to
our happiness. Thus, if our faith is true, we would expect to find compelling
evidence which demonstrates that acts such as abortion, fornication, and
pornography, lead in the end not to happiness and freedom, but to sorrow
and enslavement. By finding this evidence, and sharing it with others,
we bear witness to the protective good of God's law in a way which even
unbelievers must respect.
Research and education about the dangers of abortion, then, are not
just grist for political reform, but also leaven for spiritual reform.
As people become more aware of all the hardships abortion causes to women,
men, siblings and society, they will begin to respect the wisdom of God's
law. They will begin to think: "Maybe all these religious folk weren't
so crazy after all. If they were right about this, when every other power
in society said they were wrong, maybe they're right about other things,
too."
This approach also recognizes another fundamental aspect of human nature:
where there is not love of God, there is love of self. As a corollary to
this truth, we should also recognize that wherever there is only self-love,
appeals to self-sacrifice will fail and only appeals to self-preservation
can possibly succeed. Often our warnings will be rejected. But even in
these cases, by giving the warning we are planting the seeds for repentance
and belief when they inevitably hit bottom. This is another reason why
we should never be focused on condemning those who are considering or have
had abortions. Instead we should be focused on warning them and offering
them mercy.
Both Pure and Pragmatic
Before leaving the issue of the moral imperative behind this strategy,
some notice should be given to how other strategic issues have divided
the pro-life movement in the past. These previous moral conflicts have
led to destructive infighting and a waste of resources fighting allies
rather than opponents. It is my belief that this pro-woman/pro-life strategy
can help to heal the ideological divisions which have developed, restore
unity, and provide a guiding vision for our movement.
In the last twenty years the pro-life movement has been split by the
very serious moral question regarding what type of laws should be sought.
The key issue is whether pro-lifers can morally pursue legislation which
would allow exceptions for the "hard cases," such as in cases of pregnancy
resulting from rape and incest, or pregnancies where there is a suspected
fetal malformation. These "hard cases" are the ones for which the middle
majority of Americans most support access to abortion.
Seeking to capitalize on the opinion of the middle majority, pro-life
"pragmatists" support an incremental approach to outlawing abortion by
allowing abortion in these "hard cases." Such laws would save 95 percent
of all the children being killed by abortion, they say. We must save as
many as we can, as soon as we can, and go back to tighten the laws later.
"Purists" object that by allowing exceptions in "special circumstances"
we are abandoning our claim that all human life is sacred. We are, in essence,
agreeing that some lives are more sacred than others, or at least that
if the woman's hardship is great enough, then the sacrifice of her child
is justified, or at least tolerable. But if it is justified under any single
circumstance, why not some other compelling circumstance? In essence, by
wavering from our stand on behalf of an absolute right to life, we are
lending moral credence to the claims of the other side. Instead of debating
about the fundamental principle the sacredness of human life, we will end
up in negotiating about who can be killed and under what circumstances.
For the record, I side with the purists. But I also sympathize with
the pragmatists. Pragmatists desperately want to save lives now. If we
can save some by drafting laws which match the profile of public opinion
polls, they think, we must do so. But this approach has many pitfalls.
First, any exception will be exploited to provide far more abortions than
legitimately fit into the allowed category. Second, passing a partial ban
will dissipate the drive for a ban on the remaining categories. Third,
this approach really does nothing toward making abortion unthinkable,
it only makes the remaining abortions more politically tolerable. Indeed,
the incremental approach actually reinforces the public view that abortion
can be beneficial to women, at least in these "hard cases."
This is one reason why I maintain that the pro-woman/pro-life strategy
is a superior approach. It is pragmatic, meaning achievable, but is also
pure in that it does not differentiate between cases. Indeed, if anything,
it would tend to place an abortionist who performs an abortion in a "hard
case," such as rape or potential fetal malformation, at greater risk of
punishment. Why? Because all the available research indicates that women
who abort for these "hard cases" are at highest risk of suffering psychological
problems post-abortion. Indeed, in the pro-woman approach, the inevitable
debate over the "hard cases" will provide an excellent opportunity to educate
legislators and the public about post-abortion psychological sequelae in
general. Rather than run from the debate over these "hard cases," we must
learn how to use this debate to our advantage.
In short, the pro-woman/pro-life strategy which we have been advocating
is results oriented. It is pragmatic. But it is also free of compromise.
Because we know that every abortion hurts a woman, as well as her child,
we can defend every unborn child by defending the best interests of the
mother, knowing that their best interests are never served by abortion.
Out of ignorance or despair, a woman may believe that abortion will help
her more than it will hurt her, but we know, from both experience and faith,
that it will not. Our job is to ensure that she is freed from ignorance
and helped to find hope. When we succeed in this, it is then that we will
have a society which is both pro-woman and pro-life.
Originally published in the PostAbortion Review 3(3) Summer 1995. Copyright
1995 The Elliot Institute.
NOTES
1. See the testimony of Dr. Julius Fogel, a psychiatrist
and abortionist who has done over 20,000 abortions. According to
Fogel, "Every woman -- whatever her age, background or sexuality -- has
a trauma at destroying a pregnancy . . . This is a part of her own life.
She destroys a pregnancy, she is destroying herself . . I know that as
a psychiatrist." (cited in Aborted Women, Silent No More, p. 141.)
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