The election cycle brought out the consistently clamorous controversy on abortion – as it should – and yet other pro-life positions often go unmentioned. American Christians who oppose abortion are sometimes accused of having a pro-life “credibility gap”. Ronald J. Sider notes, “It is a farce for the church to ask Washington to legislate what Christians refuse to live.” (Completely Pro-Life: Building a Consistent Stance, p. 25). Abortion is a clear moral wrong, one that denies the most basic human right – the very right to life itself. Any opposition to abortion is good and right, regardless of whether the person who opposes abortion has a “credibility gap”. Nevertheless, as Bible-believing Christians we should seek to close the “credibility gap” – but not for “PC” reasons. We ought not be pro-life on only one-issue. We ought to stand in support of life in all biblical aspects.
There are various calls to a consistently pro-life position, but not all mean the same thing when they say that. Some say that you can't be pro-life and support the death penalty – that is an inconsistent position. Others oppose abortion and support the death penalty, seeing no inconsistency. Perhaps part of the problem is that we approach it from the standpoint of logic rather than the Bible itself. What is a consistent pro-life position? Not one that appears logical and internally consistent in every facet (and no one will ever agree to that anyway) – but one that bows to the Bible as to consistent biblical truth and biblical support of life.
A full view of “pro-life” considers many issues beyond what we believe about abortion. It begins with the biblical worldview of life itself – that God created man in his image and according to his purpose. Life comes from him and goes to him. By his own word he has forbid man taking the life of man as murder and contrary to his law and ethics. Taking the life of others exalts man into the place of God and proudly asserts one’s own being above that of others.
Pro-life issues can be roughly divided into two categories – primarily, life and death issues (i.e., immediate threats to life); and secondarily, quality of life issues. What are your thoughts on the topic in general and/or any of the following.
Life and death issues
Abortion/“Choice”
Capital punishment/death penalty
Euthanasia/Assisted suicide
Murder
Suicide
Quality of life issues
Gun rights/Gun control
Health care/Universal health care
Immigration
Poverty (e.g. feeding the poor)
Self defense
Some of the above and a few others seem to kind of split the categories:
Contraception
Genetic engineering
Pacifism/Just war
I have tried to create a poll that might incite some further thoughts on the issue. It fails to cover all issues, plus I ran out of possible response options. But it allows you to mark some with which you agree.
There are various calls to a consistently pro-life position, but not all mean the same thing when they say that. Some say that you can't be pro-life and support the death penalty – that is an inconsistent position. Others oppose abortion and support the death penalty, seeing no inconsistency. Perhaps part of the problem is that we approach it from the standpoint of logic rather than the Bible itself. What is a consistent pro-life position? Not one that appears logical and internally consistent in every facet (and no one will ever agree to that anyway) – but one that bows to the Bible as to consistent biblical truth and biblical support of life.
A full view of “pro-life” considers many issues beyond what we believe about abortion. It begins with the biblical worldview of life itself – that God created man in his image and according to his purpose. Life comes from him and goes to him. By his own word he has forbid man taking the life of man as murder and contrary to his law and ethics. Taking the life of others exalts man into the place of God and proudly asserts one’s own being above that of others.
Pro-life issues can be roughly divided into two categories – primarily, life and death issues (i.e., immediate threats to life); and secondarily, quality of life issues. What are your thoughts on the topic in general and/or any of the following.
Life and death issues
Abortion/“Choice”
Capital punishment/death penalty
Euthanasia/Assisted suicide
Murder
Suicide
Quality of life issues
Gun rights/Gun control
Health care/Universal health care
Immigration
Poverty (e.g. feeding the poor)
Self defense
Some of the above and a few others seem to kind of split the categories:
Contraception
Genetic engineering
Pacifism/Just war
I have tried to create a poll that might incite some further thoughts on the issue. It fails to cover all issues, plus I ran out of possible response options. But it allows you to mark some with which you agree.