S
simpleas
Guest
Not sure if I should have put this here or in family life, so please move if I’m wrong.
I wondered if anyone knew what the church said and did when abortion was being made legal. Here in UK I believe it was 1967 when it was made legal, but what was being said about the process? When I was on a prolife march a few years ago, a older lady told me she heard about it, but she didn’t understand the whole process, so this got me thinking, were people really informed about abortion? Enough to want to take to the streets like it is being done now? I know we are in a very different time, there was no internet, maybe information was limited, or perhaps most Catholics just didn’t think about it, because they wouldn’t at that time believe in the “right” of a woman to abort?
Another thought/question, would be on the reason. There are many sites on the net that give different reasons for women choosing abortion, and in some cases being forced into abortion. I was thinking about the shame aspect of having sex outside of marriage, or indeed an affair or possible drunken one night stand. Of course it’s right and proper to inform children of a reasonable age about intercourse which may lead to pregnacy, but if for whatever reason a young woman concieves outside of marriage, isn’t it best to have encouraged the woman to tell their parent, rather than they believe that what they did is sinful, and feeling ashamed go to a doctor, who will most likely I believe offer the morning after pill?
I know situations in life can be very complicated, and most people I know are not religious and consider abortion to be right if you are not ready for a child, or not in a comitted relationship, rather than it being shameful to have sex outside of marriage. But would the stigma attached to shame for having sex outside of marriage be one of the reasons women would have an abortion? Maybe back in the 1960’s for example?
I wondered if anyone knew what the church said and did when abortion was being made legal. Here in UK I believe it was 1967 when it was made legal, but what was being said about the process? When I was on a prolife march a few years ago, a older lady told me she heard about it, but she didn’t understand the whole process, so this got me thinking, were people really informed about abortion? Enough to want to take to the streets like it is being done now? I know we are in a very different time, there was no internet, maybe information was limited, or perhaps most Catholics just didn’t think about it, because they wouldn’t at that time believe in the “right” of a woman to abort?
Another thought/question, would be on the reason. There are many sites on the net that give different reasons for women choosing abortion, and in some cases being forced into abortion. I was thinking about the shame aspect of having sex outside of marriage, or indeed an affair or possible drunken one night stand. Of course it’s right and proper to inform children of a reasonable age about intercourse which may lead to pregnacy, but if for whatever reason a young woman concieves outside of marriage, isn’t it best to have encouraged the woman to tell their parent, rather than they believe that what they did is sinful, and feeling ashamed go to a doctor, who will most likely I believe offer the morning after pill?
I know situations in life can be very complicated, and most people I know are not religious and consider abortion to be right if you are not ready for a child, or not in a comitted relationship, rather than it being shameful to have sex outside of marriage. But would the stigma attached to shame for having sex outside of marriage be one of the reasons women would have an abortion? Maybe back in the 1960’s for example?