That wasn't the thing I was implying, rather that a faithful woman wouldn't "commit abortion", so any that did are clearly not faithful. Claim proved by circular argument -- no faithful Christian would have an abortion.
Life is universally fatal. This premise makes "Socrates is a man" look profound.
It does not. Even in the states where it is currently illegal, no one has been charged with murder for having an abortion. (Yet, give them time, I'm sure they will.)
It usually always involves a sperm.
Is your argument going to be that no faithful follower of Jesus will ever get pregnant accidentally, or at least outside a marriage? (If so, you should stop. It is a bad argument.)
"No True Scotsman" is not a fallacy about the contents of the Bible. That's just a fact.
It seems you want to go down a road of denying the value of a faith not built on extensive study of religious texts and theology. That somehow the faith of those women who haven't done so is hollow because they haven't stitched together the threads to come to the theological conclusion that abortion is a sin and against god's will.