You are only partly correct. I say that on this issue because a woman’s right, when life becomes human, cases of rape or incest, or the life of the mother are all grayer in our democracy and society of plural beliefs on this subject.
No, no, no. That is the entire point I’ve been trying to get across. The right to life does not change with the circumstances. It is not a matter of personal choice. No matter the evil that caused a pregnancy, that unborn child is still an innocent, human person with a right to life. Why punish that child for the sins of the parent(s)?
What is intrinsically different between a child conceived in a violent act and one conceived in love? Are they different types of humans? Does one have rights, but not the other?
Women do not choose abortion lightly. Many pray to God and consult their consciences and their doctors in their decision process.
Nobody has suggested they do. And nor should they. But if it is morally licit, why should it be such a hard decision? If there is nothing wrong with it, why is it so hard to choose? Because women know it is wrong. They struggle with it because they know deep down that what they are choosing is somehow flawed, disordered, contrary to the natural law.
As a Catholic and Christian I have struggled a lot on the issue. Weighing my personal beliefs against living in a democracy of plural beliefs on this issue. Our Catholic Vice President Joe Biden can probably explain this position for a plural democracy better than I. I recall hearing him explain his position during the 2008 campaign.
You keep injecting the word “belief”. We aren’t talking about beliefs, we are talking about rational, reasonable positions. These aren’t a matter of taste, like choosing flavors of ice cream. These are real world, serious issues. Truth is not subject to the opinions of a pluralistic society. Either abortion is an evil or it isn’t.
The cases you present are all after a human has been born. This is one reason why I oppose killing human beings on death row whether innocent or not.
What exactly has changed at the moment a child is separated from his mother? Before the child is completely free of the mother’s womb, what magical transformation occurred that changed whether that child had the same rights as other people? The birth itself?
So see I feel no need to respond to Suddi’s apples when I am talking an orange.
What do you mean? All human life is sacred. And innocent life is especially deserving of protection. So how is this apples and oranges? I’m for the protection of
all life, born and unborn. If you didn’t notice before, I am opposed to capital punishment.
Now before you or anyone else get all bent out of shape and out of sorts and start asking if I support choice under any circumstances or for any reason up until the very moment of birth, actually read about Roe.
Yeah, Roe talked about “viability” and arbitrarily chose 26 weeks. But children have been born as early as 22 weeks. So what changed in the last 37 years? Did the change in medical technology suddenly change when an unborn child becomes a person?
My point anyway is we have been on this subject for nearly 40 yrs. We can continue the same old battles. Or we can move on and if the law of the land is safe and legal, lets begin to make it even rarer.
And this point was addressed before. Slavery was legal for more than 40 years, should we have just moved on? Should we have made sure that it was safe and legal, and work to make it even rarer? Would you have been one of those “well, I’m personally opposed to slavery, but I would never want to impose my beliefs on others” in the 18th and 19th centuries?
And rededicate ourselves to Christ’s other issues, issues He actually addressed, and elevate those issues of the poor, the hungry, the homeless, the sick and war and peace. At least to the level at which the Church has elevated this one issue.
Been there done that. You still haven’t address the point made by myself and others. I’ll post ishii’s again for you:
What good is the feeding the hungry if they have no right to life?
What good is the sheltering of the homeless if they have no right to life?
The issue of feeding the hungry has no meaning if they aren’t even allowed to live. For what dead person eats? The issue of sheltering the homeless is pointless if they aren’t allowed to live. For what dead person needs shelter?
I truly hope this helps. I understand your view and I hope you will try to understand mine. And I pray we can now end this debate and move on.
It doesn’t, because it is just a rehash of what you wrote before. It doesn’t get any deeper. It doesn’t explain
why you hold fast to these ideas. Myself, and others, continue to challenge you on these points because you have failed to provide reasons to support them.