The Moment We’ve Been Praying For

Many of us have been praying for decades that Roe v. Wade would be overturned and that America and the world will stop killing innocent babies.

That moment has arrived–and we must rise to it.

It’s time to lead the abortion debate with grace and truth.

The Moment We’ve Been Praying For

I will let others lay out the playing field–then conclude with some thoughts.

Newt Gingrich –

The current uproar over the leaked draft from the U.S. Supreme Court deliberations over abortion – and the rage of the pro-abortion Left over the likelihood that the conservative justices (three of whom were nominated by President Donald Trump) will now repeal Roe v. Wade – is in some ways a lot of noise about the inevitable.

Roe v. Wade was a 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion across the whole country and made America one of the most extreme abortion systems in the entire world. Importantly, it was a court decision by appointed judges – not legislation made by elected legislators.

It was inevitably going to be overturned sooner or later.

As the leaked draft asserted, “Roe was egregiously wrong from the start. Its reasoning was exceptionally weak, and the decision has had damaging consequences. And far from bringing about a national settlement of the abortion issue, Roe and Casey have enflamed debate and deepened division.”

Furthermore, critique of the Roe decision has come from the Left as well. Prior to joining the court, the late liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, in a 1992 lecture at New York University, suggested Roe went too far and caused more trouble than necessary. She said, “Measured motions seem to me right, in the main, for constitutional as well as common law adjudication. Doctrinal limbs too swiftly shaped, experience teaches, may prove unstable. The most prominent example in recent decades is Roe v. Wade.”

Roe has also been undermined by the progress of science and medicine. Today, we see evidence in nearly every pregnancy that at six weeks a baby has a heart that is beating, and by 15 weeks the baby is completely human. At 15 weeks, babies typically have fully formed noses, lips, eyelids, and eyebrows, and can suck their thumbs. They can clearly feel pain.

The clinical use of the ultrasound in prenatal medicine (which started being widely used in the U.S. in the 1970s) and the fascination parents have with the development of their prenatal children was a major factor in beginning to undermine support for Roe.

At the same time, the development of better medical technology to keep premature babies alive has undermined the “viability” arguments in Roe. The medical arguments of 1973 have simply been made moot by five decades of scientific and technological advances.

Further, the American people are not in clear agreement on abortion. According to Gallup, a plurality of Americans (48 percent) think abortion should only be legal in certain circumstances. Only 32 percent say it should be legal in all circumstances.

A large majority of Americans reject the Democratic position favoring abortions even on the last day of pregnancy (which is clearly infanticide) as in New York and California’s current laws. A 2019 YouGov Poll found that 79 percent of American adults do not approve of late-term abortion (80 percent oppose day-before-birth abortions). These trends are true even for those who consider themselves pro-choice, with 66 percent opposing third trimester abortions and 68 percent opposing infanticide. According to a recent Scott Rasmussen national poll, four out of five Americans believe third trimester abortions should be illegal. Only 17 percent support abortion at any point.

Modifying Roe will move America into the mainstream. In Europe, 47 of the 50 countries have limits on abortion that go into effect before the 15th week of pregnancy.

Democrats who think a big fight over Roe will be to their political advantage may be in for a shock. Another Scott Rasmussen national poll found that by a more than 2:1 margin, voters favor a candidate who supports abortion only in first trimester over one who supports abortion at any time. 

However, this is not an issue of cold politics – or a callous victory lap for those who oppose abortion. If Republicans approach the issue of Roe with compassion for the difficult choices women can face – and a deep concern for having a dialogue that can lead to unifying most Americans – they will find they have nothing to fear from the debate over Roe.

In 1857, the U.S. Supreme Court voted 7-2 that Dred Scott, a slave who had been living in a free state, could not sue for his freedom in federal court as a citizen because no one of African descent could claim citizenship. President Abraham Lincoln was deeply opposed to this decision. He called it the law of the case, not the law of the land. As president, Lincoln refused to enforce the Scott decision. It was effectively overturned by the Emancipation Proclamation, and the 13th and 14th amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

In 1893, the U.S. Supreme Court voted 7-1 in Plessy v. Ferguson that states could adopt “separate but equal” requirements to segregate white and black Americans. That case legitimized racist southern laws and was the law of the land until it was partially overturned by Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. Congress later completely rejected it in a series of civil rights laws.

Would anyone seriously suggest that the Court’s decisions on slavery or segregation should not have been overturned?

Similarly, if most Americans believe Roe’s support for abortion under any circumstance is wrong, it is entirely legitimate for the current Court to reverse a 49-year-old, erred decision that has been made obsolete by modern science and medicine.

We do not have to fear this debate. The pro-abortion extremists are wrong and a distinct minority.

Tony Perkins –

“If the Lord answers our prayers and the Supreme Court strikes down the 1973 ruling, it will be the starting gun — not the finish line. The battle will shift to the states, where the legislative infrastructure that pro-lifers have spent the last several decades building will click into place. Each state will decide for themselves “whether and when” abortion would be legal. Some will allow it; others won’t. But what matters, as the justices themselves pointed out, is that the question would be left ‘for the people,’ not courts wielding ‘raw judicial power'”

Ben Shapiro

“For the left, abortion represents the power to deny the objective value of human life; it represents willingness to engage in the highest form of self-serving moral relativism. Absence of abortion presents the possibility that actions have moral consequence, that the value of life is not an arbitrary and subjective one, that women and men have duties to their children…To have that logic subjected to the voters is an indignity the left cannot bear. And it will use every tool in its arsenal to prevent that possibility.”

Slavery and abortion are similar–a denial of basic human rights. They share the same deception–that the victims aren’t fully human–thus people can choose to mistreat them.

That’s a lie. In 1850, that lie enslaved three million people until nullified. In 2022, the same lie has killed sixty-three million people–disproportionately African Americans.

The truth: Every human being, from the moment of conception, has a God-given right to life. The grace we must offer: Non-lethal birth control, pregnancy care, abundant adoption options (there are no unwanted babies), exceptions for self defense, and forgiveness of past wrongs.

And most importantly, repent before God for killing our precious children.

3 Comments

  1. Doug Burleigh on May 11, 2022 at 7:31 pm

    Great message Ron. Living here in the nation’s capital, I am astounded by the tone deafness of our liberal legislators to the sanctity of life. It is an indicator of the godlessness that has invaded many of our national leaders. When the vast majority of liberal European nations have more regard for human life than we do we are in trouble.

  2. Sharon Kay Gakin on May 11, 2022 at 6:42 pm

    Ron, I’d like to hear your thoughts on the part of the leak that no one seems to care about: the UNPRECEDENTED FELONY the shook the foundation of the court-privacy and freedom from pressure the threats. Already, judges’ homes are being picketed. The rule of threat may sway judges, not the rule of law or the intent of our founding fathers as written in the Constitution. As heinous as abortion is, period, the assault on the highest court in America is even more chilling.

    • Ron Boehme on May 17, 2022 at 7:33 pm

      The leak at SCOTUS is a horrendous betrayal of trust and invasion of privacy. It should be prosecuted to the max to discourage more bad behavior.

      But it’s an individual act that only indirectly impacts a branch of our government. It will probably lead to no change in position by the justices.

      Abortion has KILLED 63 million Americans.

      That’s the difference.

      Ron

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