Abortion is one of the most divisive issues in our modern
world. The simplistic view is that there is a divide between pro-life and
pro-choice. This should be the only real divide, those on the right, as in the
right side of the issue are pro-life and anti-abortion, and those left on the
wrong side of the issue are those okay with snuffing out a young child’s life
in the womb. In a world where the moral poles of north, south, east and west,
actually pointed north, south, east and west, this would not only be the
correct divide, those on the pro-abortion side of the argument would be
considered deranged. But, we live in a world that has corrupted so many values
and morals in so many ways, that which ought to be believed and affirmed is
often rejected.
But this is not the only divide on this issue. There is
another divide, the accountability divide. Should women be held accountable for
their abortions? Another way to phrase this would be to ask, “Are women who
have abortions, victims as well?” I have always found this perspective
shocking, but it is actually very common, this idea that there are two victims
in most abortions, the child and the mother of the child. I have seen it often
asserted by prominent pro-life advocates that abortion is not a power women
have, but a power men have over women, and something women do because they are
helpless. The narrative on the prominent pro-life right is that generally women are
pressured into, or made to feel pressured into abortion, by bad men. To give
these people credit, they are correctly against abortion, and therefore this is
an inhouse debate, but they miss the mark widely on this issue, because the
fact of the matter is that abortion is a feminist right, advocated for and
defended strongly by feminists, to empower women. It is not a power men hold
over women, but a power women hold over the child in the womb. So, the rhetoric
that women who have abortions are just as much victims as the children being
aborted, falls short, because it does not point to the truth of the situation.
This does not mean some women are not coerced into having
abortions. There are plenty of anecdotal examples of this, and every pro-life
advocate can draw on a few accounts of this having actually happened to someone
they know, or have spoken to at least. This reality must be acknowledged. It is
evil, and must be condemned, and the men and families involved in this coercion
should face harsh sanctions. However, research, admittedly tentative research,
shows that woman are much more likely to be pressured to continue pregnancy
than to abort it.[1]
It has also been claimed that 15% of abortions are the result of coercion by some
pro-life advocates. However, this number comes out of a UK study that found
that 15% of the women surveyed had faced coercive pressure to get an abortion,
it did not actually state whether they went through with it.[2] So, this number is not
reliable. In fact, it would seem to indicate that some number less than 15% of
abortions are the result of coercion, because not every woman who was pressured
gave into that coercion. This supports the other study, that the vast majority
of abortions are not the result of partner, or other, coercion.
This appears to be the conclusion that other researchers
have found too,
“For most women in
Australia, the decision about whether or not to have a baby is a profoundly
personal one. But for some, control over this decision is taken away from them,
usually by an abusive male partner. This can happen via the use of verbal
pressure, threats, blackmail, physical violence or rape.
In 2010, researchers in the
US came up with the term “reproductive coercion” to describe these behaviours.
Since then, some work has been done, primarily in US family planning clinics,
to help understand reproductive coercion.
Despite this, it mostly
remains a hidden issue. We don’t know how common it is, and it’s very likely
(as with most forms of violence against women) it’s grossly under-reported. The
US National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey suggested around 8% of
respondents had experienced reproductive coercion in their lifetimes, although
the survey only asked about a limited range of behaviours.
In Australia, we don’t have
any reliable prevalence data. But Queensland organisation Children By Choice
reported they’re seeing it in around one in seven women presenting for
abortions.”[3]
1 in 7 equals about 14%. So, while this number is still too
high, it is far below the majority.
I sympathize strongly with women who have been coerced
into an abortion by a violent man, or by others. Women are the weaker vessel,
as the Apostle Peter tells us, and a violent man can be a terror to a fragile
and vulnerable woman. These cases obviously do exist, and should be addressed.
But every data point shows far less women are coerced into having an abortion
than those who actually choose to have one.
The reasons often given for abortion are, “financial
reasons (40%), timing (36%), partner related reasons (31%), and the need to
focus on other children (29%). Most women reported multiple reasons for seeking
an abortion crossing over several themes (64%).”[4] Someone might latch onto
the mention of “partner related reasons” as proof for a much higher rate of
coerced abortions, but this is further explained,
“Almost one-third (31%) of
study respondents gave reasons relating to their partner. For example, some
individuals said they did not have a good or stable relationship with their
partner or that their partner was unsupportive. Around 8% wanted to get married
before having children. Others mentioned that they had a partner who was
abusive or who did not want the baby.”[5]
Partner coercion is a subcategory of “partner related
reasons”, but not the whole of it. Again no one is denying that some women are
coerced into having an abortion, but it is not the norm.
Interestingly, 20% of women said they had an abortion
simply because it would interfere with their life goals and future
opportunities.[6]
So, in the vast array of reasons, the number of women who abort a child just
for career reasons is far higher than those who are coerced into having one.
So, as can be seen, there is simply no way that one can
say that the vast majority of abortions are not a women’s personal choice. The
Conversation appears to have hit the nail on the head when it stated, “For
most women in Australia, the decision about whether or not to have a baby is a
profoundly personal one.” It is something most women who have an abortion choose willingly.
The continued over-emphasis on coerced abortions is a
right-wing talking point, that garners lots of sympathy from men and women in
the pro-life camp, but fails to gain traction in the abortion debate, because
it is rhetoric that does not comport with most women’s experience with
abortion. Most women who have abortions are not victims.
For the vast majority of women who are pro-abortion,
abortion is a right that they intend to defend, because they believe without it
they do not have autonomy,
“Women Can’t Be Free If They
Don’t Control Their Bodies,” read a placard held by a pregnant Jennifer
Lawrence on Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C. on Saturday. The Academy
Award-winning actress was present at one of many marches held throughout the
country to support abortion access in the wake of the recent rollback of human
rights for over 50 percent of the population in Texas. By J-Law’s side was Amy
Schumer, who held a Center for Reproductive Rights sign that said: “Abortion Is
Essential.”[7]
Abortion, then, is more of an act of defiance, of women
seeking a power over nature, that God has not afforded them, but which they
take anyway. It is a way of asserting dominance in an area where God has
commanded chastity or marriage, not abortion. This is the reality of the reason
behind the majority of abortions. Some are coerced, many, many more are choices
made by the woman, so that they do not have to live with the consequences of
their sexual choices. The degree to which the men involved in these pregnancies
have a part in this decision would vary, but it is not really the main issue,
because men don’t have abortion rights. The main issue is many of the advocates
want this choice, because they believe without it they cannot be truly free.
As Michelle Williams said in her Golden Globe acceptance
speech,
“I’m grateful for the
acknowledgment of the choices I’ve made, and I’m also grateful to have lived at
a moment in our society where choice exists. Because as women and as girls,
things can happen to our bodies that are not our choice.
I’ve tried my very best to
live a life of my own making, and not just a series of events that happened to
me, but one that I could stand back and look at and recognize my handwriting
all over—sometimes messy and scrawling, sometimes careful and precise, but one
that I had carved with my own hand. And I wouldn’t have been able to do this
without employing a woman’s right to choose: to choose when to have my
children, and with whom.”[8]
These are not fringe perspectives in the abortion debate.
They are the mainstream, and the data on why women have abortions appears to
show they are also the norm, the vast majority.
Therefore, the rhetoric of much of the prominent pro-life
advocates in Australia that banning abortion is about protecting women from
being coerced into having abortions, is rhetoric that is dead on arrival,
because it does not point to the truth which encompasses the full reality of
the situation. It points to a mere sub-category of what is happening, and
therefore it cannot land successfully. I have personally seen women laugh off
the suggestion that they are victims because they have had an abortion. I am
sure there are women who genuinely feel that they are. But the vast majority of
the pro-abortion crowd do not see it that way. Not all women are going to wear
the right proudly and loudly, but nor are the majority claiming to be victims. They
would say: It is a right. A sacred woman’s right. A right men should not be
allowed to touch, that allows women to function in society like men and not be
held back by their biology. That is the dominant view for pro-abortion
advocates.
The kind of rhetoric we use should be based on that
truth. When the sinner tells you why they love their sin, you have to hit them
with the truth of the word of God on that issue. Someone sent me this tweet, and it is what prompted me to write this article, because the author is on the money:
“Perhaps the most
controversial position abortion abolitionists hold is that mothers who have
abortions should be penalized. But the witness of church history affirms this
stance:
"She who has
deliberately destroyed a fetus must bear the penalty for murder. Moreover those
who aid her, who give abortifacients for the destruction of a child conceived
in the womb, are murderers themselves, along with those receiving the poisons."
— Basil of Caesarea (Canons 118.2)
"We say that women who
induce abortions are murderers, and will have to give account of it to God. The
fetus in the womb is a living being and therefore the object of God's
care."
— Athenagoras (A Plea for the Christians 35.6)
"Those who use
abortifacients to hide their fornication cause not only the outright murder of
the fetus but of the whole human race."
— Clement of Alexandria (Paedagogus 2.10.96)
"They deny in their
very womb their own progeny. By use of parricidal mixtures they snuff out the
fruit of their wombs. In this way life is taken before it is given. Who except
man himself has taught us ways of repudiating our own children?"
— Ambrose (Hexameron 5.16.58)
"They who drink potions
to ensure sterility are guilty of rebuffing God's own blessings. Some, when
they learn that the potions have failed and thus are with child through sin,
practice abortion by use of still other potions. They are then guilty of three
crimes: self-mutilation, adultery, and the murder of an unborn child."
— Jerome (Letter to Eustochium 22.13)
"They provoke women to
such extravagant methods as to use poisonous drugs to secure barrenness; or
else, if unsuccessful in this, to murder the unborn child."
— Augustine (On Marriage 1.17.15)
In other words, those who
insist that women are second victims of abortion are undeniably outside of
Christian orthodoxy on this matter.[9]
Rather than excuse women who have had abortions as
victims, they should be shown why they are murderers. Of course, those who were
coerced by abusive boyfriends or husbands should be extended extra grace. And
even those who chose to have abortions of their own freewill can be forgiven;
Paul the Apostle, was a murderer and repented and became a great leader in the early
Church. But we do no one a service by not assigning accountability where it
should be assigned. There is a strange tendency in conservative circles to not
want to ascribe full responsibility to the vast majority of women who have
chosen to have abortions. I won’t get into why I think this is, because it
leads into speculation, but we can say for certain that those who do this are in
error.
One thing we know from the Scriptures is that a correct preaching
of the law of God as applied to the sinner to bring contrition for sin is the
most successful way of bearing the fruit of repentance in that same sinner. In
other words, how can we seek to turn around a great sin, if we don’t use the
right rhetoric, based in solid realities, that creates the right response in
the person to which it is directed? The answer is we can’t. Just as you can’t
get a genuine response to the gospel, with a false message of salvation
preached, no matter how real the emotion is. You cannot create the right godly
sorrow without the right application of biblical truth. Hence, much modern
pro-life advocacy fails to land.
The ancient church understood this, obviously better than
we do.
List of References
[1] Karen
Trister Grace and Jocelyn C. Anderson, 2016, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5577387/
[3] The
Conversation, 2018, https://theconversation.com/how-forced-pregnancies-and-abortions-deny-women-control-over-their-own-bodies-96982
[4] M.
Antonia Biggs et. al., 2013, https://bmcwomenshealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1472-6874-13-29
[5] Hannah
Nichols, 2022, https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/reasons-for-abortions#reasons-for-abortion
[6]
Ibid.
[7] Jordan
Hoffman, 2021, https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2021/10/jennifer-lawrence-amy-schumer-and-more-celebs-speak-out-for-abortion-rights
[8]
Christina Cauterucci, 2020, https://slate.com/culture/2020/01/michelle-williams-golden-globes-speech-video-abortion-choice.html
[9] Ben
Zeisloft, 2024, https://twitter.com/BenZeisloft/status/1768614113175806130
I hadn't heard that pro-life argument before but it reminds me of how in the same-sex marriage debate the ACL chose the weakest argument against same sex marriage.
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