The Bible's Teaching Against Abortion
By Fr. Frank A. Pavone
The Bible clearly teaches that abortion is wrong. This teaching
comes across in many ways and for many reasons. Some people point
out that the word "abortion" is not in the Bible, and
that is true. Nevertheless, the teaching about abortion is there.
This is the case with many teachings. The word "Trinity"
is not in the Bible, but the teaching about the Trinity is there.
In any case, a person who wants to deny the teaching about abortion
would deny it even if the word were there.
Let's look at some of the Biblical reasons why abortion, the deliberate
destruction of a child in the womb, is very wrong.
1. The Bible teaches that human life is different from other types
of life, because human beings are made in the very image of God.
The accounts of the creation of man and woman in Genesis (Gen.
1:26-31; 2:4-25) tell us this. "God created man in His image;
in the divine image He created him; male and female He created them"
(Gen. 1:27).
The word "create" is used three times here, emphasizing
a special crowning moment in the whole process of God's making the
world and everything in it. The man and woman are given "dominion"
over everything else in the visible world.
Not even the original sin takes away the image of God in human
beings. St. James refers to this image and says that because of
it we should not even speak ill of one another. "With (the
tongue) we bless the Lord and Father, and with it we curse human
beings who are made in the image of God . . . This ought not be
so, brothers" (James 3:9-10).
The image of God! This is what it means to be human! We are not
just a bunch of cells randomly thrown together by some impersonal
forces. Rather, we really reflect an eternal God who knew us from
before we were made, and purposely called us into being.
At the heart of the abortion tragedy is the question raised in
the Psalms: "Lord, what is man that You care for him, mortal
man that You keep him in mind? . . . With glory and honor You crowned
him, giving him power over the works of Your hands" (Ps. 8:5-7).
There is the key. Not only did God make us, but He values us. The
Bible tells us of a God who is madly in love with us, so much so
that He became one of us and even died for us while we were still
offending Him (see Rom 5:6-8). In the face of all this, can we say
that human beings are disposable, like a car that is more trouble
that it's worth? "God don't make junk." He doesn't die
for junk, either. If you believe the Bible, you have to believe
that human life is sacred, more sacred that we have ever imagined!
2. The Bible teaches that children are a blessing.
God commanded our first parents to "Be fertile and multiply"
(Gen.1:28). Why? God Himself is fertile. Love always overflows into
life. When the first mother brought forth the first child, she exclaimed,
"I have brought forth a man with the help of the Lord"
(Gen 4:1). The help of the Lord is essential, for He has dominion
over human life and is its origin. Parents cooperate with God in
bringing forth life. Because this whole process is under God's dominion,
it is sinful to interrupt it. The prophet Amos condemns the Ammonites
"because they ripped open expectant mothers in Gilead"
(Amos 1:13).
"Truly children are a gift from the Lord; the fruit of the
womb is a reward" (Psalm 127:3).
3. The Bible teaches that the child in the womb is truly a human
child, who even has a relationship with the Lord.
The phrase "conceived and bore" is used repeatedly (see
Gen. 4:1, 17) and the individual has the same identity before as
after birth. "In sin my mother conceived me," the repentant
psalmist says in Ps. 51:7. The same word is used for the child before
and after birth ("Brephos", that is, "infant"
is used in Lk. 1:41 and Lk. 18:15.)
God knows the pre-born child. "You knit me in my mother's
womb . . . nor was my frame unknown to you when I was made in secret"
(Ps. 139: 13,15). God also helps and calls the pre-born child. "You
have been my guide since I was first formed . . . from my mother's
womb you are my God" (Ps.22:11-12). "God . . . from my
mother's womb had set me apart and called me through his grace"
(St. Paul to the Galatians 1:15).
4. Scripture repeatedly condemns the killing of the innocent.
This flows from everything that has been seen so far. God's own
finger writes in stone the commandment, "Thou shalt not kill,"
(Ex.20:13, Deut. 5:17) and Christ re-affirms it (Mt. 19:18 - notice
that He mentions this commandment first.) The Book of Revelation
affirms that murderers cannot enter the Kingdom of heaven (Rev.
22:15).
The killing of children is especially condemned by God through
the prophets. In the land God gave his people to occupy, foreign
nations had the custom of sacrificing some of their children in
fire. God told His people that they were not to share in this sin.
They did, however, as Psalm 106 relates: "They mingled with
the nations and learned their works . . . They sacrificed their
sons and their daughters to demons, and they shed innocent blood,
the blood of their sons and their daughters, whom they sacrificed
to the idols of Canaan, desecrating the land with bloodshed"
(Ps. 106: 35, 37-38).
This sin of child-sacrifice, in fact, is mentioned as one of the
major reasons that the Kingdom of Israel was destroyed by the Assyrians
and the people were taken into exile. "They mutilated their
sons and daughters by fire . . . till the Lord, in his great anger
against Israel, put them away out of his sight" (2 Kg. 17:
17-18).
Not even for "religious freedom" can the killing of children
be tolerated.
5. The Bible teaches that God is a God of justice.
An act of justice is an act of intervention for the helpless, an
act of defense for those who are too weak to defend themselves.
In foretelling the Messiah, Psalm 72 says, "Justice shall flower
in his days . . . for he shall rescue the poor man when he cries
out and the afflicted when He has no one to help him" (Ps 72:7,
12). Jesus Christ is our justice (1 Cor. 1:30) because He rescued
us from sin and death when we had none to help (See Rm 5:6, Eph.
2:4-5).
If God does justice for His people, He expects His people to do
justice for one another. "Be merciful as your heavenly Father
is merciful" (Lk. 6:36). "Go and do likewise" (Lk.
10:37). "Do unto others as you would have them do to you"
(Mt. 7:12). "Love one another" (Jn. 15:17).
Abortion is the opposite of these teachings. It is a reversal of
justice. It is a destruction of the helpless rather than a rescue
of them. If God's people do not intervene to save those whose lives
are attacked, then the people are not pleasing or worshipping Him.
God says through Isaiah, "Trample my courts no more! Bring
no more worthless offerings . . . Your festivals I detest . . .
When you spread out your hands, I close my eyes to you; though you
pray the more, I will not listen. Your hands are full of blood!
Wash yourselves clean . . . learn to do good. Make justice your
aim: redress the wronged, hear the orphan's plea, defend the widow"
(Isaiah 1: 13-17).
Indeed, those who worship God but support abortion are falling
into the same contradiction as God's people of old, and need to
hear the same message.
6. Jesus Christ paid special attention to the poor, the despised,
and those whom the rest of society considered insignificant.
He broke down the false barriers that people set up between each
other, and instead acknowledged the equal human dignity of every
individual, despite what common opinion might say. Hence we see
Him reach out to children despite the efforts of the apostles to
keep them away (Mt. 19:13-15); to tax-collectors and sinners despite
the objections of the Scribes (Mk. 2:16); to the blind despite the
warnings of the crowd (Mt. 20:29-34); to a foreign woman despite
the utter surprise of the disciples and of the woman herself (Jn
4:9, 27); to Gentiles despite the anger of the Jews (Mt. 21:41-46);
and to the lepers, despite their isolation from the rest of society
(Lk. 17:11-19).
When it comes to human dignity, Christ erases distinctions. St
Paul declares, "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither
slave or free person, there is not male and female; for you are
all one in Christ Jesus" (Gal. 3:28).
We can likewise say, "There is neither born nor unborn."
Using this distinction as a basis for the value of life or the protection
one deserves is meaningless and offensive to all that Scripture
teaches. The unborn are the segment of our society which is most
neglected and discriminated against. Christ Himself surely has a
special love for them.
7. Scripture teaches us to love.
St. John says, "This is the message you have heard from the
beginning: we should love one another, unlike Cain who belonged
to the evil one and slaughtered his brother" (1 Jn. 3:11-12).
Love is directly contrasted with slaughter. To take the life of
another is to break the command of love. To fail to help those in
need and danger is also to fail to love.
Christ teaches this clearly in the Parable of the Good Samaritan
(Lk. 10:25-37), in the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus (Lk. 16:19-31),
and in many other places.
No group of people is in more serious danger than the boys and
girls in the womb. "If someone . . . sees a brother in need
and refuses him compassion, how can the love of God remain in Him?"
(1 Jn 3:17).
8. Life is victorious over death.
This is one of Scripture's most basic themes. The victory of life
is foretold in the promise that the head of the serpent, through
whom death entered the world, would be crushed (see Gen. 3:15).
Isaiah promised, "He will destroy death forever" (Is.
25:8). At the scene of the first murder, the soil "opened its
mouth" to swallow Abel's blood. At the scene of the final victory
of life, it is death itself that "will be swallowed up in victory.
Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?
. . . Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord
Jesus Christ" (1 Cor 15:54-57).
Abortion is death. Christ came to conquer death, and therefore
abortion. "I have come that they may have life, and have it
to the full" (Jn.10:10).
The final outcome of the battle for life has already been decided
by the Resurrection of Christ. It is up to us to spread that victory
to every person. The pro-life movement is moving from the victory
Christ won to the fullness of that victory on the last day. "There
shall be no more death" (Rev. 21:4). "Amen. Come, Lord
Jesus!" (Rev. 22:20).
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