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| Photo Courtesy: Hindustan Times (via Reuters) |
[In the spring of 2005, I had the joy of a lovely woman Reverend
addressing the students of my class on "Religion, Spirituality and
Feminism" at University of New Mexico, United States. In that class, she
was asked for her opinion on Abortion--a very sensitive issue which often threatened
to rip my class apart. I shuddered wondering what the response would be and how
I may need to firefight afterwards. But to my surprise and delight, she gave a
response that I hold in my heart even today--a response that stepped outside
simple binary dynamics of the issue and instead used the analogy of bone marrow
donation to give an inclusive, compassionate, loving, and yet empowering
insight into the issue.
Today, as Ireland and India gasps at the loss of our Indian sister Savita Halappanavar to a
controversial law around abortion, I recall her words again. Let me introduce
The Rev. Christine Robinson, the minister of the First Unitarian Church of Albuquerque,
USA (http://www.uuabq.org/)
to my readers and reproduce a sermon she had given on the issue in January of
2005]
(Sermon extracted from http://nmrcrc.org/clergy-for-choice/abortions-moral-value/)
Abortion’s
Moral Value
By Rev. Christine Robinson
A Sermon Preached at the First
Unitarian Church of Albuquerque, New Mexico on January 9, 2005
This morning, we are going to be
talking about a difficult subject: abortion, and the moral values which come into
play in the case of unintended pregnancy. Since nearly 60% of women experience
at least one unintended pregnancy between the ages of 14 and 44 (a percentage
that includes women who don’t have sex at all, or who don’t have sex with men,
or who can’t conceive, which means that women who are actually at risk of an
unintended pregnancy have an even higher chance of experiencing one) and 43% of
women (again, a percentage which includes those who don’t have sex, don’t have
sex with men, or who can not conceive) will have at least one abortion at some
point during their fertile years, we’re talking about an extremely common
dilemma and decision. A large percentage of those dilemmas and decisions are
shared by women and their husbands and boyfriends together, or by a girl and
her mother, and with the help and support of sisters, other family, and
friends. That means that unwelcome pregnancy and abortion are issues which are
likely to have touched most people in one way or another. It’s often a very
painful time, a very difficult decision which feels like deciding between the
lesser of two evils, and many, if not most people in this society have scars,
mixed feelings, and outright pain about this issue. If you are one, you are not
alone.
It is also important to acknowledge
that even in this room, where the majority think of themselves as feminists,
politically liberal, and pro-choice, that there are likely people here who are
not in agreement with the current law which restricts abortion to the first six
months of pregnancy unless a medical condition imperils the life of the mother,
and who would like to see Roe v. Wade overturned because of the ultimate value
they place on life. If you are in this category, I respectfully congratulate
you for your open mindedness in being here this morning to hear my take on this
difficult subject.
We’ve
all heard that abortion stops a beating heart, is a variety of murder, and that
those who value life will not only not have abortions, they will not tolerate a
society which allows them. We have heard that the presence of abortion cheapens
life in society and facilitates sexual irresponsibility. The moral values;
respect for life, and responsible action, are values that we all, liberal and
conservative alike, take very seriously and apply carefully to the world we
live in. The value of life and respect for life are extremely important values,
for instance; both liberals and conservatives claim to take them seriously,
although they tend to demonstrate their claims with different issues;
conservatives, usually naming abortion and euthanasia as their “life value”
issues, while liberals call peace, gun control, and capital punishment their
“life value” issues. But the starting point here is that we all agree that
human life is precious and to be valued.
The problem comes because life is
not our ONLY moral value. Another value we all, liberal and conservative alike,
find precious is freedom. In most cases, as a matter of fact, when these two
values clash, we opt for freedom over life. “Give Me Liberty or give me death!”
is engraved on the American psyche, and we often believe that a life that
cannot be lived freely is not worth having. We tolerate considerable loss of
life in this society because we will not impinge on the moral value of
individual human freedom. The freedom to have a gun for instance is so
important to many political conservatives that we tolerate 80 gun-deaths a day,
most of them of innocent persons, in this nation. Some liberal thinkers, on the
other hand, believe that the freedom of a person to end their life when they
want to is so fundamental that they should be allowed aid in doing so; this in
spite of considerable evidence that this would result in a cheapening of the
moral value of life in our society.
When a woman is unwillingly
pregnant, for whatever reason…the most common is failure of birth control…. the
moral values that clash are the moral value we place on the life of the fetus,
and the moral value we place on the freedom of the woman to give, or not give,
her body to another being.
I’m going to sidestep the endlessly
fascinating debate about when a fetus becomes human because it doesn’t really
matter. Person or not, the fetus is developing human life and therefore of considerable
consequence. Whether you count the fetus as a full human person with a “right
to life” or simply as an awesome being whose life deserves respect, we place a
moral value on the life of the fetus. However, the fetus does not exist
independently, it can only exist in the body of a woman. And that woman has
precious rights, one of which is a right to decline to use her body to nurture
another life. Freedom means nothing if it does not mean this. We all believe
this, liberal and conservative alike.
To make this crystal clear, let’s
leave the issue of fetuses, with their ambiguous status, and women, whose right
to freedom is still a matter of debate in some places, and think about an
extremely clear clash between the rights of two grown men, one of whom is dying
because he needs a donation of matching bone marrow, and he needs it from his
uncle. His uncle, sorry to say, refuses to consider this, and the desperately
ill man takes the matter to court. His attorney argues that no other matches
are possible for his client, and that the sick man’s right to life is more
important than the reluctant uncle’s freedom which would only be briefly and
safely breached. It was as clear a case of the clash between the moral value of
life and the moral value of freedom as one could imagine, and freedom won. The
judge ruled that there was simply no way a free man could be compelled to give
up so much as an ounce of bone marrow against his will, even if it meant his
brother would die. Philosophers would say this: that the right to life does not
extend to a claim on the bodies of others. Philosophers would further say that
Human freedom begins with the freedom to decide how to use one’s own body.
Now some people would say that when
the conflict of rights between a woman and a fetus is different because the
woman chose to involve herself in activity…having sex…that resulted in calling
that fetus into life, and that, therefore, she has a responsibility to continue
to nurture that life. This reasoning is behind the widely approved-of exception
that abortion is to be allowed in the case of rape…where the woman didn’t
choose to have sex. But if calling life into being entails the responsibility
to give of one’s body to support that being’s right to life before birth, what
about after birth? If mandatory pregnancy is the law of the land, what about
mandatory parental organ donations to their sick children?
Now of course, the real life fact
of the matter is that most parents will gladly donate blood or an organ to save
the life of their children. But the courts have weighed in on this matter. Some
years ago, a child was dying and her father, who was divorced from her mother,
was the only likely tissue match for the kidney she needed. The father refused
to be considered for the donation and the mother sued. There was no question
that this man was the father; that his choice to have sex 10 years previous had
resulted in this child whose right to life was indisputable. But did her right
to life mean that she had a claim on her father’s body, as the desperate mother
pled? The court ruled that it did not. The father had to be left free to make
his own determination about how to use his body. The tone of the ruling, as the
tone of the media commentary at the time was incredulous…who did that woman
think she was to demand such a sacrifice…a part of his body, surgery, recovery
time? Really! The man has things to do!
Actually, I can understand not only
the woman’s desperation in the face of her daughter’s impending death, and I
can understand how a person who has undertaken the sacrifice of pregnancy can
imagine that somebody else might be asked to sacrifice, too.
In pregnancy, the fetus, the
developing child, is using the woman’s body, making increasing and considerable
demands on it. Even if she has chosen to be pregnant and wants that baby with
all her heart, she is going to find those demands irksome; at times perhaps
nearly intolerable. If she has not chosen to be pregnant, if sharing her very
body with another life is not her choice or her desire, she will feel enslaved.
And, matter of fact, she would be…conscripted by fate, birth control failure,
or carelessness to bodily servitude to another. It would be cruel and terrible
enough to suffer this intrusion on her bodily integrity if she could tough out
the pregnancy, which is no small matter in itself, and go through childbirth,
which is a spiritual and medical crisis from which few, even the observers,
walk away unchanged. But it’s even more than that!
Sometime during that pregnancy,
evolution decreed that a bonding should take place between mother and infant; a
bonding of such depth that the new infant would be cared for even after it had
caused intolerable pain and had become an intolerable pain in the neck. This
bonding is no small matter, and it is something which is society’s best
interest to encourage as a moral value in every way it can so that children are
not just kept alive but truly cared for by their parents. Those who believe
that the problem of unwanted pregnancies would be solved if women would bring
their babies to term and then let them be adopted don’t reckon with this
incredible gift of Mother Nature. The fact of the matter is, that most women
become too bonded to their babies, even before they are born, that they can’t
give them up even if they know the child will be better off raised elsewhere. 4
million years of evolution created that bonding; we owe the success of our race
to the fact that our foremothers didn’t crawl off like turtles and leave their
babies to die. So an unwanted pregnancy, carried to term transmutes, for most
women, to motherhood, with all that means of emotional, physical, and financial
labor over years. Most women who choose abortion choose it because they know
they wouldn’t be able to do it well enough by that bond; their poverty, the
amount of attention their other children need, their own need, for the sake of
those children, to finish school, to take responsibility for supporting themselves
and their families…all of which are profoundly moral values of responsibility
at odds with the value of having and raising a baby, or another baby.
Now, you could say to the unmarried
teenager, “Just say no!” Don’t have sex, and you’ll never be unwillingly
pregnant! Your responsibility at this stage of your life is to grow up, develop
your independence, your talents, your maturity, your employability!” All well
and good. But are you going to say it to the married 19 year old (and her
husband?) “Folks, if you are not yet ready to drop everything you are doing to
have a baby, (or a second baby,) just don’t have sex until you are!”
Speaking of moral values, most
people believe that the bond between a married couple is deeply important to
them and to society, to their children present and future, and that deepening
that bond is a moral activity. There’s no doubt about it, Mother Nature or
father god, take your pick, wired human beings to deepen their bonding through
sex. Once upon a time, the human race needed all the babies that resulted from
all that bonding, but this is no longer the case. But our human race still
needs that bond, and we need all the help we can get to nurture that bond. Very
few people live their lives having sex only when they are open to having a
baby, not even the people whose religion teaches that as an official position.
It’s not, as the young say, “real”
When two extremely important moral
values clash, there can be no completely moral solution, and we are thrust into
the world of making the best of bad choices. If the pregnancy is unwanted,
either the life is ended or the woman’s precious freedom is abridged. Both of
these results are tragedies. And that’s why the decision must be left to each
unwillingly pregnant woman and the people she asks to help her. It’s not that
the law can’t legislate morality; it is that there is no moral solution to
legislate. Only love can balance the equation, and many initially unwillingly
pregnant women find within themselves and their support systems, enough love to
mitigate the tragedy. But you certainly can’t legislate love. Therefore, each
woman and family must thread her way through competing values, pros and cons,
rights and responsibilities, and make her own decision.
There is a lot about that “and make
her own decision” that is profoundly threatening to all of us at some deep
levels. We’re all reduced to uneasiness when confronted with how profoundly
dependant we were on our mother’s love. Many people who hold traditional values
about men and women are profoundly uneasy when they realize how much more power
women have than men do in this area. And many people believe that removing the
ultimate consequence of pregnancy from the equation of sexual ethics will only
cheapen sexuality and make it a more disruptive force in our society.
Traditional families, which include early marriage and women remaining in the
home sphere have much less difficulty rolling with the punches of unplanned
pregnancy than the late-marrying, employed women, small, egalitarian families.
Many things divide us. One thing that unites us, however, is that when faced
with an unwanted pregnancy, ourselves, regardless of what our churches or
communities teach about the value of life, the place of women, or the meaning
of sexuality, about half of the people, liberals and conservatives alike,
choose abortion. With all due respect for life, we have many other moral
values. Freedom. Responsibility. Love. Bonding,
As to our respect for life; we have
that, too. Respect for life is something we want to inculcate in our children,
to practice ourselves, and to encourage in society. And there is no question in
my mind that almost every abortion performed, however justly chosen, tears just
a little bit at those values and desensitizes us just a little bit to what we
hold dear. Mandatory Motherhood would tear at other values, just as much,
perhaps more, but still, pro-choice respect for life must do whatever we can to
minimize the need for abortion. That includes encouraging teens to postpone sexual
activity, including putting ourselves out to keep them occupied in other
activities, and to give them a good sex education which includes answering all
their questions with the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
That is the only way to earn their respect and therefore the best way to help
them postpone sexual activity as well as teach them what they will need to know
when they do become active as they virtually will 2 or 5 or 10 years hence. I
must say that after last week’s flack about misleading and missing information
in public school sex education courses, I was surely glad that my child has
had, as yours have or will have, as a part of his religious education a “whole
truth” sex education course. We offer it at considerable expense and trouble
because we reverence life and want our kids to, too. And our kids are much less
likely to experience an unwanted pregnancy or to have an abortion, and one
important reason is the extensive education they get. Now, that’s real!
In the best of all possible worlds
there would be very few, tragic abortions, arising because of complications of
health in mother or fetus. There would be no unwanted pregnancies, because
birth control methods would be safe, foolproof, and easy to use, and because
teenagers would know enough and feel good enough about themselves to postpone
their sexual activity until they were old enough and wise enough to use them,
because media glorification of sex would be as little seen as media
glorification of alcohol, and because there would be no rape or incest. In such
a world, almost every pregnancy would be a wanted pregnancy, and the conflict
between the moral value of freedom and the moral value of life would be rare,
arising from unforeseen tragedies and unavoidable medical circumstances. But we
don’t live in such a world; it is not even in sight. Until it is, those faced
with unwelcome pregnancies will have to consider all of their moral values; the
value they place on life, on fulfilling responsibilities to self and others, to
love, and their responsibilities to themselves and others and make a painful
decision when there is no good decision to make.

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ReplyDeleteYou have put some good points , but still end of the day its upto the two adults what they want , its harsh to abort but what life will the child have unwanted and not looked after ..
this is a big topic and lots of pro's and con's involved .. bringing religion into it will not help at all
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