The question is not whether abortion should be illegal. The question is what gives the State the right to make abortion legal?
The State only has jurisdiction over that which is appropriate for the State to regulate. It is not justifiable for the State to have jurisdiction over natural law.
In natural law conception leads to the birth of a child. To legalize the termination of a pregnancy is to claim the right to intervene in the natural development of human life.
Among everything that God created, human life is the most sacred and the one creation that is in his image and likeness. Therefore the State has no authority over the progress of human life, as it is the image and likeness of the Creator and the State has no authority over the Creator.
Whether or not we live in democratic society where people have freedom of religion has nothing to do with the right to life. The right to life is not Catholic. The right to life is given to man at the moment that he enters history and it is given by the Creator.
Whether a society subscribes to a particular religious belief system or not is irrelevant. The right to life is a Divine right. Divine rights continue to exist even if there is no one to believe them, because God continues to exist even if no one knew Him. God’s existence and God’s will is independent of human belief and human knowledge. God existed long before man knew him.
If we were to say that our laws should reflect the beliefs of our citizens, our legal system would be chaotic and undisciplined. There is no way that a legal system can accommodate to every citizen’s beliefs.
The law does not exist to grant rights, but to protect rights. When the law grants rights that man has not been given by his Creator, the law is invalid. You cannot protect a right that someone does not have. And you cannot claim that someone has a right, because of popular vote. Rights are proper to the subject, not to law. the law protects them and penalizes those who violate them.
The right to an abortion is an invalid law. It grants parents and the physician the right to decide who may be born and who may not.
The question is, do human beings have the right to make these kinds of decisions?
From a purely philosophical perspective, the law defies logic. One must first prove that human beings have the right to decide who is born and who is not. This has never been proven. If it cannot be proven, it cannot be legalized.
As to the other question regarding Numbers 5: 13 - 31. The text is not speaking about abortion, but about infidelity in marriage. The custom of the time was that one who was unfaithful was cursed. Such a curse could bring about a tragedy in the person’s life.
The Jewish primative understanding of punishment for sin was that the sinner was cursed and that evil things would happen to the sinner in this life.
We know that all sin has consequences, natural and supernatual. We know that repentance implies some form of penance and retribution. This is what this passage is alluding to. It is foreshadowing the the Sacrament of Reconciliation. If one is truly guilty of sin, because one committed the sin and one remains unrepentant, there is no way that even the holy water of Baptism can save one. The water used in this ritual was holy water that was blessed in the temple, which foreshadowed the Holy Water that we bless at the Easter Vigil for Baptism. The grain foreshadows the Eucharist, which is made of grain.
In no way was this a ritual to stimulate a miscarriage. There is nothing in the Scriptures that justifies provoking an abortion. On the contrary, there are many passages in which the dignity of human life is protected. The first is the book of Genesis. Adam and Eve were expelled from Paradise, not killed. Cain is made an outcast with a seal that warns others not to kill him, despite the fact that he is a murderer.
If we tie this back into abortion, God does not wish evil or harm on the person guilty of the abortion. He will deal with this in his time and in his manner. That being said, God gives man authority over everything in the garden, except over human life.
JR