Friday, October 30, 2009

Christian citizenship

For Christians are not distinguished from the rest of mankind either in locality or in speech or in customs. . . . But while they dwell in cities of Greeks and barbarians as the lot of each is cast, and follow the native customs in dress and food and the other arrangements of life, yet the constitution of their own citizenship, which they set forth, is marvellous, and confessedly contradicts expectation. They dwell in their own countries, but only as sojourners; they bear their share in all things as citizens, and they endure all hardships as strangers. Every foreign country is a fatherland to them, and every fatherland is foreign. They marry like all other men and they beget children; but they do not cast away their offspring. They have their meals in common, but not their wives. They find themselves in the flesh, and yet they live not after the flesh. Their existence is on earth, but their citizenship is in heaven. They obey the established laws, and they surpass the laws in their own lives. They love all men, and they are persecuted by all. The Epistle to Diognetus, 130-200 C.E.

Conservatives Maintain Edge as Top Ideological Group

Independents have become more conservative on a number of specific policy issues, including government and union power, the role of government relative to promoting values, gun laws, immigration, global warming, and abortion. The percentage of Americans who consider themselves "pro-life" on abortion rose from 44% in May 2008 to 51% in May 2009, and remained at a slightly elevated 47% in July 2009. Gallup

Did Feminism Benefit Men more than Women?

In an Op Ed in the New York Times, Maureen Dowd has expressed her surprise that recent research continues to find that women, who may have been economically "emancipated" by the feminist revolution, are more unhappy now, forty years later, than men. Calling it a "paradox" that women may have thrown off the aprons, Dowd wrote, "But the more women have achieved, the more they seem aggrieved. Did the feminist revolution end up benefiting men more than women?" LifeSiteNews

Thursday, October 29, 2009

No men OR women needed

Human eggs and sperm have been grown in the laboratory in research which could change the face of parenthood. It paves the way for a cure for infertility and could help those left sterile by cancer treatment to have children who are biologically their own. But it raises a number of moral and ethical concerns. These include the possibility of children being born through entirely artificial means, and men and women being sidelined from the process of making babies. Daily Mail

Anthony Ozimic of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children commented: "This research is unethical, because human embryos - innocent, equal members of the human family - were killed to extract the embryonic stem cells used in the research. Even if the research hadn't involved embryo-killing, the creation of artificial gametes would enable even more human embryos to be created outside the human body, to be killed and abused. As with IVF, artificial insemination and the use of donor gametes, the use of artificial gametes in reproduction would distort and damage relations between family members."

Three babies aborted every day due to Down syndrome

A study shows the number of terminations has more than trebled in the last 20 years. An increasing number of pregnant women are being told their babies have the condition because of a growing number of women putting off having children until their 30s and 40s and improvements in screening, doctors say. And around nine in ten women who are told they are going to have a baby with the problem opt for a termination.

The figures showed that diagnoses of Down syndrome increased from 1,075 in 1989/90 to 1,843 in 2007/8. Yet the numbers of babies born with the condition fell by one per cent from 752 to 743. If women were not screened for the condition the number of babies born with Down syndrome would have increased by half and would now have reached 1,422 in a year in England and Wales.

Frank Buckley, chief executive of Down Syndrome Education International said: "People with Down syndrome are living longer and achieving more than ever before and it is reassuring to know that they will be continuing to make valued contributions to our communities for years to come. "These figures should be a wake-up call to policy-makers to focus more effort on improving education, healthcare and adult support for the rapidly growing population of citizens who have Down syndrome."

Peter Elliott, Chairman of The Down Syndrome Research Foundation, who has a 24-year-old son David with Down Syndrome, said: "Why are the abortions at such a high rate unless they have been given the impression the situation was terrible and it warranted an abortion? I don't think the choice is presented to the parents in the light of the true situation where the children have a good life and are in fact viewed as a blessing to the parents, not a curse, and I don't think these parents getting the abortions know much about Down syndrome at all." Telegraph

Why what we wear impacts who we are

"Modesty" is such an archaic and quaint notion, right? Actually, clothing DOES make the woman. Interesting audio commentary from Jewish Wisdom.

Fatherless Childhood May Injure Brain Development

Recent animal research backs previous sociological research by indicating that children raised by single mothers may experience reduced brain development, leading to an increase in aggressive behavior. The findings come from research on degus, which are small rodents related to guinea pigs. Degu parents usually raise their pups together. When deprived of their father, however, degu pups exhibited developmental changes in the amygdala, the part of the brain related to emotional responses and to fear, and in the orbitofrontal cortex, or OFC, the brain's decision-making center. According to one of the researchers, the balance between these two parts of the brain is critical to normal emotional and cognitive functioning: if the OFC isn't active, the amygdala "goes crazy, like a horse without a rider." Wall Street Journal, LifeSiteNews

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

New video: Those People

Abortion Recovery International has produced a 2-minute video called "Those People" focusing attention on how abortion affects women and the people around them.

Highly recommended post-abortion Bible study: Living in His Forgiveness. You can read excerpts on the site before you order.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Religion Practice in America: What the Research Says

"Religious Practice in America: What the Research Says" is an annual conference series dedicated to sharing high-quality social science data and analysis addressing these questions and to exploring next steps for research that will inform American public discussion, hosted by The Heritage Foundation, with research partners the Baylor Institute for the Studies of Religion, and Child Trends. Heritage Foundation

Monday, October 26, 2009

Identifying Safe Stem Cells To Repair Spinal Cords

Adult stem cells tested for defects before being implanted in the injured spinal cords of mice helped the animals recover with no cancerous side effects, according to new research. In recent years, scientists found that some experimental stem cell therapies can cause cancerous tumors. Pre-screened cells could result in potentially life- saving treatments without such side effects. Science Daily

Other stem cell news: Reprogramming a patient's eye cells may herald new treatments against degenerative disease

UVic Debate a Powerful Example of Pro-Life Apologetics and Academic Freedom

The video of Wednesday's debate on abortion at the University of Victoria is now available on Youtube, showcasing a brilliant example of pro-life apologetics and civil, academic debate. The debate, hosted by UVic's pro-life club, Youth Protecting Youth, featured Stephanie Gray of the Canadian Centre for Bioethical Reform and Dr. Eike-Henner Kluge, UVic philosophy professor and bioethicist. LifeSiteNews, YouTube


Friday, October 23, 2009

Proposal 2 Not Creating Jobs or Advancing Research

The University of Michigan today released details of the $6.8 million in federal stimulus-fund grants given to scientists for stem cell research. While economically-depressed Michigan needs the boost, Right to Life of Michigan president Barb Listing has questions about the direction of the funding. "Ten out of the 11 grants awarded to the U of M scientists do not involve human embryonic stem cells as material for the research. That is the good news, however, one grant does require human embryo stem cells to be used." LifeNews

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Liberals unhappy with Obama

Increasingly, noisy factions on the [Democratic] party's most liberal flank - among them gay rights proponents, pro-choice activists and immigration reformers who Obama courted last year - are incensed that their causes have taken a backseat to the White House's all-out push on health care reform. Case in point? Pro-choice activists, who right now are livid that the leading health care bills winding through Congress don't include federal funding for poor women to get abortions. NY Daily News

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

British scientists develop test that trebles chance of baby and removes Down's risk

British scientists have made a dramatic IVF breakthrough which could bring hope to thousands of women. They have developed an embryo screening technique which makes it far more likely a woman will give birth. The new screening tecnique, called comparative genomic hybridisation, allows doctors to remove cells from an embryo when it is a few days old. The cells are analysed to see if they are genetically normal and the best embryos are selected for implantation into the mother's womb. The technique offers particular hope to older women because they have a naturally higher chance of producing eggs with genetic defects that can block implantation or cause miscarriages. But for mothers of any age, the screening also virtually eliminates the risk of genetic conditions like Down's. Daily Mail

Editor: Mind you, they're not curing anything; they're just eliminating the "worst" embryos.

IVF websites often mum on embryo gene test risks

Fertility clinic websites aren't doing a great job of explaining the risks of testing an embryo for genetic disorders before it's implanted in the womb. Pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), can be used to test for 5,000 different genetic disorders and, more controversially, choose the sex of an infant. But it's not 100-percent reliable, and could, in rare cases, cause harm to the embryo or even destroy it. Researchers looked at the websites of 83 clinics offering PGD to investigate how fully they explained these risks. Just 35 percent of the websites Klitzman and his team surveyed mentioned the possibility that the test could miss the target diagnosis, while only 18 percent mentioned the risk that the procedure could destroy the embryo. Fourteen percent described PGD as "new" or "controversial." Reuters

Stem cell news

Monday, October 19, 2009

New Report Suggests Over 1 Billion Abortions Committed

A new report by the pro-abortion Guttmacher Institute, entitled "Abortion Worldwide: A Decade of Uneven Progress," points to the fact that over a billion abortions have been committed, say pro-life activists. The report found that the annual number of abortions have declined over the period from 1995 to 2003. Nevertheless, the Guttmacher Institute said that in 2003 approximately 41.6 million abortions were committed worldwide. On average, this works out to more than one death by abortion for each second of the year. Since abortion has been available since before 1970 and very widely available since 1980, pro-life activists are saying that, even by a conservative estimate, the total number of preborn children to have been killed by abortion is likely in excess of one billion. If 40 million children per year were aborted since 1980 that would already make for 1.12 billion preborn babies killed. LifeSiteNews

Friday, October 16, 2009

Ever Wonder Who Took Those Aborted Baby Pictures?

"Maybe 50 percent of the graphic images of abortion victims that you'll find online are probably my photography." So says Monica Migliorino Miller, associate professor of theology at Madonna University in Orchard Lake, Mich., in a recent front-page interview with The New York Times. The interview has made waves in the pro-life world, due in large part to the fact that, along with the interview, the Times ran a selection of Miller's graphic abortion photos in the online version of the story, becoming one of the only mainstream newspapers in the world to do so. The story, written by Times journalist Damien Cave, came about after Cave encountered Miller while covering the murder of pro-life activist James Pouillon, who used to protest abortion by holding signs depicting photos of aborted babies. "Like many others," wrote Cave in the article, "I often wondered about the source of these images. Who took the pictures? Where did the fetuses come from?" LifeSiteNews

A Child is Born: Photographs of the fetus developing in the womb

The stunning images by Lennart Nilsson, first published in 1965, have now been remastered with the help of the latest photographic technology; A Child is Born has been republished in a fifth and final edition. Telegraph, LifeSiteNews, more images on Nilsson's web site, interview

Lawsuit Filed to Stop Federal Funding of Embryo-Destructive Research

A suit filed in federal court by a broad coalition of plaintiffs, including scientists, pro-life advocates, and parents who wish to adopt embryos, seeks to protect human embryos from destruction for research. The complaint seeks to reverse the recently-adopted NIH guidelines that outline steps to take when destroying embryos to qualify for federal research funds. In essence, the guidelines create an incentive in the form of taxpayer dollars to cannibalize so-called ‘leftover embryos’ from fertility clinics. FRC Blog

Missing “Manly” Fish and Population Control

A report from the U.S. Geological Survey is giving birth to concerns about the decline in the fish population because of the feminizing of fish. Experts say this is a widespread problem in which certain species of male fish are growing egg cells. What’s behind this feminization of male fish? Birth control pills. Women’s birth control pills and other hormone treatments have made their way into the nation’s rivers through the sewer systems. Ironically, the population control message is most often promoted by the global warming crowd and others who view people as negatively impacting the environment and consuming limited resources. In reality, it’s their efforts to reduce the population (people) that are actually destroying the environment (fish). FRC Blog

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Latest Biblical Bioethics Advisor: The Pro-Life Stake in Healthcare Reform

This latest edition of BFL's Biblical Bioethics Advisor addresses some of the major moral issues related to healthcare in America and urges the pro-life community to correct its understanding of the sanctity of human life in a manner that is vital to that ongoing cause in the 21st Century. A misreading and misapplication of that ethic has contributed to an overuse of expensive medical care. Author Mark B. Blocher calls on churches to assume a more prominent role in promoting the health and wellbeing of their members.

Editor: Access past issues of the Advisor from the BFL web site.

The dark side of being green

Being good stewards of the environment is a noble idea. However, not everyone is on the same page as to how that can effectively be done, including the reality of global warming. But we should all agree the intentional killing of innocent unborn babies cannot ever be an acceptable strategy for a better world. If abortion is part of the environmental equation, we won’t be “green,” we’ll be stained red from the blood of our children. Life Issues Connector

Protecting Black Life goes to the United Kingdom

Arnold M. Culbreath, Urban Outreach Director for Life Issues Institute, spells out three dangers of the Obama presidency: "One—too many church-going African Americans seem to be more Afro-Centric than Christo-Centric. Having a black president appears to be serving as an opiate in that regard. Two—a temptation for pro-lifers to give in to despair or allow themselves to become overwhelmed by roadblocks that this unique presidency has placed in our paths relative to reaching the Black community with the pro-life message. Three—there is the danger of many pro-lifers slipping into hatred toward our President because of his pro-abortion position. When one slips down this slope of disdain toward President Obama, it has the strong potential of keeping you from regularly praying for him." Life Issues Connector

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

A second-trimester abortionist's "testimony"

In "Second Trimester Abortion Provision: Breaking the Silence and Changing the Discourse," LH writes:

How do doctors come to provide second trimester surgical abortion services (or how do they decide not to). . . . We do not know as no study has specifically explored these questions. . . . [O]nly 20% of abortion providers offer services at 20 weeks of pregnancy, and only 8% of providers offer services at 24 weeks. Why do most clinicians not provide services to the extent permitted?

When I was a little over 18 weeks pregnant with my now pre-school child, I did a second trimester abortion for a patient who was also a little over 18 weeks pregnant. As I reviewed her chart I realised that I was more interested than usual in seeing the fetal parts when I was done, since they would so closely resemble those of my own fetus. . . . I used electrical suction to remove the amniotic fluid, picked up my forceps and began to remove the fetus in parts, as I always did. I felt lucky that this one was already in the breech position – it would make grasping small parts (legs and arms) a little easier. With my first pass of the forceps, I grasped an extremity and began to pull it down. I could see a small foot hanging from the teeth of my forceps. With a quick tug, I separated the leg. Precisely at that moment, I felt a kick – a fluttery “thump, thump” in my own uterus. It was one of the first times I felt fetal movement. There was a leg and foot in my forceps, and a “thump, thump” in my abdomen. Instantly, tears were streaming from my eyes – without me – meaning my conscious brain - even being aware of what was going on. I felt as if my response had come entirely from my body, bypassing my usual cognitive processing completely. A message seemed to travel from my hand and my uterus to my tear ducts. It was an overwhelming feeling – a brutally visceral response – heartfelt and unmediated by my training or my feminist pro-choice politics.

Providers of second trimester abortions see things that most people don't. What kind of dissociative process inside us allows us to do this routinely? What normal person does this kind of work? . . . [T]here is always violence involved in a second trimester abortion, which becomes acutely apparent at certain moments. . . . I must add, however, that I consider declining a woman's request for abortion also to be an act of unspeakable violence.

Currently, the violence and, frankly, the gruesomeness of abortion is owned only by those who would like to see abortion (at any time in pregnancy) disappear, by those who stand outside clinics and in front of sports arenas holding placards with pictures of fetal parts and partially dismembered fetal bodies. The pro-choice movement has not owned or owned up to the reality of the fetus, or the reality of fetal parts. . . . [F]rank talk like this is threatening to abortion rights. Science Direct (original article), Abortioneers blog

Get to Know: In Our Midst

Although the evangelical Church has worked diligently over the past three decades to save the lives of the unborn, we have yet to establish ourselves as a safe place for those that have been hurt by abortion to find hope and healing in Jesus Christ. Generally speaking, we have yet to compassionately embrace the men and women - the mothers, fathers, family members, friends, and medical personnel - whose lives have been devastated by abortion.

Sadly, most pastors and ministry leaders are unaware of how abortion affects the lives of those that have survived it and how many of them are filling our pews on Sunday morning, suffering in silence under a shroud of guilt and shame. They see the high divorce rate, the troubled marriages, depression, eating disorders, substance abuse, pornography addiction and other self-destructive behaviors plaguing their congregants, but few have recognized the deeper issue that often lies at the root of these problems: the life-altering wound left in the wake of an unresolved abortion experience.

In Our Midst Ministries is dedicated to bringing this awareness to the Church and equipping her to minister to the needs of those in our midst that carry the wounds created by abortion.

Resources: Newsletter; Secret Sin: When God's People Choose Abortion

Get to Know: Overpopulation is a Myth

Founded in 1989, the Population Research Institute is a non-profit research and educational organization dedicated to objectively presenting the truth about population-related issues, and to reversing the trends brought about by the myth of overpopulation. Our growing, global network of pro-life groups spans over 30 countries. Overpopulation is a Myth is a project of PRI, offers videos, FAQs, and presentations for download.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Slavery and abortion video

Personal observations about a slave owning ancestor, and the "legal" institutions of slavery and abortion. You Tube


Reflection on Ephesians 6:12-13

"For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places. Therefore, take up the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day and having done all, to stand." The battle over the issue of life is perceived more often in churches today as political rather than spiritual. Ironically, the enemy has used this twisted perception to silence many in the body of Christ. We must see the battle for what it is and if we are to be prepared to face the spiritual enemy on the issue of abortion, we must daily "put on" the armor God has given us. 40 Days for Life

Science and God? Friend or foes?

Are science and faith at war? Does science undermine or corroborate belief in God? Does faith suppress or inspire scientific research? Explore these questions and more at a two-day conference to be held October 23-24, 2009 at the Riley Conference Center on the campus of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Sessions will explore a Biblical theology of nature; the role of Christianity in the founding of modern science; the impact of Darwinian Evolution on ethics, society, Biblical studies and theology; and the scientific evidence for intelligent design and its implications for theism. This conference will be of special interest to seminary students, college students, and pastors and other church leaders. The cost to attend is only $75 for full conference admission; $40 for half conference admission; and FREE to university students with valid student ID. Space is limited, so register soon at www.ScienceandGod.org or by calling the Riley Center at 817-923-1921 ext. 2440. The deadline to register is Monday, October 19th at 5:00 p.m. CST.

Monday, October 12, 2009

NY Times article on pro-life activists

Street activists make up an assertive minority of a few thousand people within the larger anti-abortion movement. Neither the best financed nor largest element in the mix, they are nonetheless the only face of anti-abortion that many Americans see. Indeed, persistent provocation is their defining attribute: day after day on street corners from California to Massachusetts, they stand like town criers, calling to women walking into abortion clinics, or waving graphic signs as disturbing as they are impossible to ignore. NY Times

The Making of Pro-life Activists: How Social Movement Mobilization Works

How do people become activists for causes they care deeply about? Many people with similar backgrounds, for instance, fervently believe that abortion should be illegal, but only some of them join the pro-life movement. By delving into the lives and beliefs of activists and nonactivists alike, Ziad W. Munson is able to lucidly examine the differences between them. Through extensive interviews and detailed studies of pro-life organizations across the nation, Munson makes the startling discovery that many activists join up before they develop strong beliefs about abortion—in fact, some are even pro-choice prior to their mobilization. Therefore, Munson concludes, commitment to an issue is often a consequence rather than a cause of activism. University of Chicago Press

South Korean Women Fight Stigma Against Single Mothers

A small group of South Korean women is working to establish the country's first association to defend the rights of unmarried pregnant women to give birth and raise their own children. Social pressures against single motherhood in South Korea lead thousands of unmarried pregnant women to either seek an abortion or place their children for adoption each year. Although abortion is illegal in South Korea, nearly 96% of unwed pregnant women obtain abortions. Of those who give birth, 70% place the infants for adoption. The country's health ministry estimates that nearly 90% of the 1,250 South Korean children adopted abroad in 2008 were born to single women. Unmarried women who choose to keep their children are often socially ostracized, facing poverty, eviction, job discrimination and condemnation from their partner's family. Medical News Today, NY Times

The latest in adult stem cell research

Friday, October 9, 2009

Do Faith Communities Somehow Breed Teen Pregnancy?

A new study that was posted in Christianity Today and elsewhere suggested a correlation between teen pregnancy and conservative religious beliefs. Here are a couple of the ultimate questions that this study raises: Is a good approach to prevention of unplanned pregnancy the teaching of condom use? Is abstinence education a failed approach just because many who teach abstinence education are from faith-based organizations? Inspire Life

For more information on the effectiveness of abstinence education in our nation, read the latest information from the Institute for Research and Evaluation.

Belief in God = dementia?

He drives a Harley-Davidson, wears a black leather jacket on his back and his religion on his sleeve, and plays a custom guitar with big-name rock stars. All that would seem to have nothing to do with Dr. Francis S. Collins’s day job as the new director of the National Institutes of Health. Except that at the institutes, such things do matter. Dr. Collins, 59, is settling in after nearly two months on the job but still contends with controversies that follow him like the exhaust from his hog. First, there is the God issue. Dr. Collins believes in him. Passionately. And he preaches about his belief in churches and a best-selling book. For some presidential appointees, that might not be a problem, but many scientists view such outspoken religious commitment as a sign of mild dementia. NY Times

Physician's Ordeal Leads to a Realization

For years I've heard friends describe experiences of being caught in a web of excessive and unnecessary medical testing. Their doctors ordered test Z to investigate a seemingly incidental finding on test Y, which had come about because of a borderline abnormality on test X. I often wondered why test X was done in the first place. As a primary care physician, I would have treated them for the likely diagnosis and done diagnostic tests -- especially a series of diagnostic tests -- only if they didn't respond as expected. Washington Post

Life and death: Hospital ethics panels help families decide

An infant is born with no functioning brain. A teen is ravaged in a car wreck. A 90-year-old with dementia and pneumonia lies unconscious in intensive care. Medical and moral decisions must be made. But there's no written directive for guidance. Family and physicians disagree. What now? Every day, in a hospital somewhere in the USA, a group of strangers — the hospital ethics committee — is called in to help people make the choices of a lifetime. USA Today

Tufts' stem cell breakthrough

Tufts researcher Jonathan Garlick and his team of scientists generated multi-dimensional tissue with human embryonic stem cells. School of Dental Medicine Professor Jonathan Garlick succeeded earlier this year in growing three-dimensional tissues from human embryonic stem cells, making him and his team of scientists the first to achieve the pioneering research for the field. Tufts Daily

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Reflection on Galatians 6:1-2

Restoring those who are broken from sexual sin and who desire to live life differently -- a life focused on Christ -- is a burden the church must share. What an awesome opportunity for a spiritually mature woman to come alongside a single mom as a mentor and friend: a regular time together praying and studying God's Word will help her mature in her walk with the Lord; allowing her opportunity to observe life as you live it; introducing her to a small group or class in the church where she and her baby are welcomed . . . these are just a few examples of things the body of Christ can do. 40 Days for Life

What parents need to know about sex education

If you think sex education is still about the birds and the bees, you're wrong. And it's not about science either. If you're a parent with children in the public school system, you need to know what's really going on. In You're Teaching My Child What? Dr. Miriam Grossman rips back the curtain on sex education today, exposing a sordid truth. Instead of teaching our children the facts of life, sex educators are lying to them, ignoring medical fact in favor of politicized, and dangerous, propaganda that could ruin your child's life forever. eBookstore

Twice-Born Macie

Technology has no morals. Things are not evil in and of themselves (Col. 2:20–23). What people do with the things of this creation is the determining factor. This is certainly true with power (Matt. 10:25; 2 Cor. 1:24) and wealth (1 Tim. 3:3; 6:10; Heb. 13:5). Technological devices do not come with morality tags attached specifying how they should be used. Two men trained as physicians can use their skills to save a life or end a life. The American Vision

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Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Chinese Parents Allege Government Officials Coerced, Forced Adoptions

Some Chinese parents are coming forward with claims that their infant daughters were forcibly taken for foreign adoption. About 80,000 Chinese children have been adopted abroad since the early 1990s, with the majority going to U.S. families. The "conventional wisdom" is that the infants, mostly girls, were abandoned by their parents because of China's one-child policy and a cultural preference for boys. Although this is likely true for tens of thousands of the adoptions, some Chinese say that government officials took their children by coercion, fraud or kidnapping to collect money from orphanages. Some have said they were beaten, threatened or tricked into relinquishing their parental rights. Medical News Today

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Order now for Sanctity of Human Life Sunday

You'll be getting a sample of our 2010 Sanctity of Human Life Sunday bulletin insert soon (see picture at right) -- presuming we have your church's mailing address -- but you can download the order form from our web site now.

October is National Down Syndrome Awareness Month!

It's a great time to raise awareness, acceptance, and understanding about people who live with this disability. Read about one family's "unexpected blessings" with their precious daughter Ava (longer version here).

Monday, October 5, 2009

Adopt a Liberal

Liberty Counsel invites you to participate in a vital new prayer program solidly built upon St. Paul's admonition to pray for our national leaders from 1 Timothy 2:1-3. Here's how it works: Pick one or more of the liberals from the list posted online, or choose your own liberal(s) to adopt. Pray earnestly and intensely for them! Pray that the Lord would move upon them and cause them to be the kind of leaders who will encourage others to lead "a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and reverence." We encourage you to seek the Lord's guidance on how to pray for your liberal(s), always allowing Him to temper your prayer with His love and mercy.

Christians at the clinic

Melissa in Charlotte, North Carolina, found out that abortion can even tempt people of faith. At the 40 Days for Life vigil, she met a woman who was at the clinic to schedule an abortion. "She broke down crying and revealed that she was a Christian, who had fallen into sin," Melissa said. The child's father, a married leader in her church, was pressuring her to have an abortion. "She knew it was wrong, but she didn't know what to do." She had spoken to her pastor, but had not received any definitive counsel. Still, it was obvious the woman knew the truth; her car had a "let God have his way" sticker and the bible was sitting on the passenger seat. "We hugged her and listened to her as she poured her heart out and wept on our shoulder. After baring her soul," Melissa said, "she chose life!" 40 Days for Life

Editor: For additional perspective on the phenomenon of Christians at abortion clinics, read this edition of Life Matters from Baptists for Life.

Mislabeled and unaccounted for embryos prompt lawsuit against US fertility clinic

A US fertility clinic faces legal action following the results of an independent audit which showed that some embryos stored there had been mislabelled and others were destroyed or unaccounted for. Ochsner Hospital, New Orleans, has admitted mishandling frozen embryos and that some embryos were wrongly destroyed, although deliberate mishandling has been denied. Other embryos are simply 'missing' and the hospital said that its fertility department cannot determine their whereabouts. BioNews

Update on health care reform

On Wednesday, the Senate Finance Committee voted 10-13 to defeat the Hatch Amendment. It would have explicitly prohibited federal funding and coverage of abortions. The AUL legal team has documented for you the facts behind their myth that the Hyde Amendment would adequately prevent federal funding and coverage of abortion in health care reform. At this crucial stage, the Congressional leadership is going to be negotiating backroom deals with your legislators. Please tell your congressman and senator you will only accept health care reform that includes an explicit prohibition on federal funding and coverage of abortion, much like the pro-life Stupak-Pitts and Hatch amendments that were defeated in Committees. AUL

Get to Know: The National Embryo Donation Center

The National Embryo Donation Center is a non-profit organization whose mission is to protect the lives and dignity of human embryos by promoting, facilitating and educating about embryo donation and adoption.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Churches Ask Senate for Abortion Funds

A coalition of mainline Protestant churches have authored a letter to members of Congress asking them to make certain the health care bills they are considering contain taxpayer funding for abortions. Under the umbrella of the Religious Institute, the church denominations and more than 1,100 pastors and church staff from the denominations endorsed the letter. The denominations endorsing the letter include the American Baptist Churches, Church of the Brethren, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist Church, the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation, Unitarian Universalist Association, and United Synagogue for Conservative Judaism, and others. LifeNews

Thursday, October 1, 2009

A Day in the Life of a Pregnancy Care Center

What's it like inside a PCC? What goes on behind the scenes? Read Baptists for Life's most recent issue of Life Matters and find out how each day carries potential for great joy and great loss, and every encounter with a client brings a unique challenge. Then download it, copy it, and distribute in your church bulletin.

Cooling Down the Cassandras

Warnings about cataclysmic warming increase in stridency as evidence of warming becomes more elusive. JWR

Post-human Earth: How the planet will recover from us

Whether our species would survive is hard to predict, but what of the fate of the Earth itself? It is often said that when we talk about "saving the planet" we are really talking about saving ourselves: the planet will be just fine without us. But would it? New Scientist

Events in Congress reveal abortion funding is in health care plans

The Senate Finance Committee Wednesday continued a series of meetings to amend the "America's Healthy Future Act," a health care restructuring bill proposed by Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT). The bill has a number of major abortion-related problems. Most of today's abortion-related debate in the committee focused on a proposed new program that would use tax money to help purchase private health insurance for about 19 million Americans. The bill specifically authorizes the use of these federal funds to pay premiums on private plans that cover elective abortions -- a departure from longstanding federal policy. NRLC

Hope for the sanctity of human life

“Planned Parenthood had financial resources to deal with every legal and political challenge imaginable,” says Care Net President Melinda Delahoyde. “But the irony is that their electoral victory last November pushed Care Net pregnancy centers to the front lines of the fight for life. Now, they have to compete for women’s hearts on our terms. To stop abortion, we offer grace, compassion, and unconditional support — reaching one woman at a time, saving one life at a time. When your empire is built on the slaughter of innocent life, you cannot compete in those arenas. Planned Parenthood can only hope our message doesn’t reach too many of their clients.” Care Net