Every surgical procedure one has carries a lot of risk. Unnecessary surgical procedures, like a c-section for the sake of the doctor making his tee time on Sunday, is putting both mother and baby at unnecessary risk.
When a baby is birthed vaginally there is a sudden increase of adrenaline that surges through the baby as it passes through the birth canal. One of the things this extra adrenaline does is prepare the muscles and lungs for those first few moments of birth. It has been shown that the adrenaline levels in infants who have c-section births are much lower than those of vaginally delivered births.
Obviously, c-sections are wonderful in cases of emergency, when a woman is anatomically unable to deliver vaginally, or in cases like placenta previa. If it weren’t for c-sections I would not exist. My mother, both sisters, and husband were all c-sections. I probably should have been a c-section, but the doctors made my mother deliver vaginally.
It has nothing to do with being a woman and deserving pain. C-sections are painful. I have heard women who say their c-section scars still hurt years after they give birth. The recovery from a c-section is much harder than from a vaginal birth.
It has just been scientifically proven that vaginal birth is best for both mother and baby and is obviously how God designed things to happen ideally. So we should aim for that and depend on c-sections as a back-up plan.