Natman, you have an interesting view on things. Would it be fair to call it the "pro-authority" position? For you seem to have no objection to wiping out an entire group of people--including the babies--provided you have the proper authority commanding the killing. It appears from your writing that it is not the killing of innocent people that you object to. It is the disobedience to authority--God's authority--that you object to.
And so you have tried to present the case that abortion is wrong because it goes against God's authority. But your case seems very weak.
First, you suggest that humans must have souls, based on what the Bible says. But we have already shown that the Bible is sometimes mistaken. For instance, you apparently agree with me that the writer of the Psalms was wrong when he said it is blessed to kill babies. So the writer of the Psalms goofed. If the writer of the Psalms goofed, how do you know that the writer who told you that people have souls was not mistaken? Besides, as we have shown in another thread, the evidence indicates that it is the brain, not an immaterial soul, that thinks.
Next, you suggest that embryos possibly have souls at that early stage of developmnet. You have presented no real evidence for this. You have merely stated that it is possible.
Finally, you suggest that the Bible is generally against killing of hmans with a soul unless God authorizes it. But it seems that the biblical position on killing is so vague, it is difficult to know exactly what it says.
Nevertheless, folks somehow insist that this scanty evidence is enough to force people to stop terminating a young fetus, even though those people think that fetus is not yet human life.
It seems to me that it is good to preserve human life. It also seems that the early fetus is not yet human life. Perhaps you could call this the "Pro-life/choice" position. I think this is better than the "pro-authority" position.
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Okay, now to your latest post. Let's begin with the unsuported statement you made about fetal development:
Natman said:
Actually, measurable brain cells can be detected withing 26 days of development, controlling a beating heart, and brain waves are detectable with in six weeks.
Which goes against most of what is known about fetal devalopment. When I asked for a source, you responded:
Natman said:
They are many.
Vera L. Bailey, Ph.D.
Executive Director, Pregnancy Center & Clinic of the Low County
from a workshop given June 28, 2001
www.aclife.org/education/development.html Medline Plus
www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002398.htm ...
Well, that is a nice list of links. But I could not find one that supported your claim. Not one!
For instance, the Medline Plus site you quote says:
Weeks 25 to 28
- the fetus reaches a length of 15 inches
- the fetus weighs about 2 lbs. 11 oz.
- rapid brain development
- nervous system developed enough to control some body functions
Okay? Your source says the nervous system develops to the point it can control some body functions
at 25-28 weeks. But you claim it happens
at 26 days. Your own sources disagree with you!
So you do not think abortion is inherently evil? It all depends on what God wants? You would willingly and unashamedly abort babies with no sense of guilt if God told you to? So it is not the act of abortion in and of itself that is immoral? Is this what you are saying?
No. I am saying that the unathorized and willful destruction of human life is inherently evil.
I see. So you seem to be going by the "pro-authority" view of abortion.
I respect and fear the wrath of the Lord and know that He has commanded the utter destruction of certain societies by His people, and when they have not completely complied, He has punished them (ie. Saul's defeat of the Amalekites 1 Sam 28). However I know that God does not do things out of character.
I see. You "respect and fear the wrath of the Lord." Once again, this sounds more like pro-authority than pro-life.
When Saul was told to kill the Amalekites in I Samuel, he was told to kill all the babies. And your words seem to indicate he was right to kill all of the babies. So, in this case, you were not pro-life were you? You appear to be in favor of the deaths of Amalekite babies, as commnaded in I Samuel. So it appears that sometimes you are pro-death for babies, and sometimes pro-life, whichever is consistent with the pro-authority position at the time.
However, in the absense of undeniable word from God or His prophets, knowing that God cherishes human life and has commaned us not to wantonly destroy it, as well as knowing that a substantial portion of humanity stronly believe that human life begins at conception, I would not even consider aborting a child at any time after conception.
And what would you consider to be an undeniable word from God or His prophets? Please give me an example of how you would know that something was an undeniable word from God.
If you cannot do that, how do you know the Bible is the undeniable word of God?
That was David's cries, not God's.
David's lament is not very different than what you might call out about the guy that cut you off on the freeway. You might scream at the top of you lungs that you wish he were dead and that the world would be better off (blessed) without such idiots.
"Such idiots"? We are talking about helpless babies. The psalmist is saying it is blessed to kill babies. How does "such idiots" apply to babies? How can one look at babies and say the world would be better off without "such idiots"? That is an odd view of babies.
So it appears that you think the psalmist goofed. He said it was blessed to kill babies, but he was wrong.
It seems that the Bible writers sometimes goof.
The poeple that study ancient languages are very capable of discovering the precices definition of ancient words by studying their common usage. I believe Strongs has done their homework and have presented an adequate definition ot the Hebrew "ratsach".
The study of ancient languages can be quite controversial. And the definition of the hebrew
ratsach--translated
kill or
murder in the ten commandments--is disputed. Not even
Strong's Concrodance supports your position.
Strong's does not say ratsach is equivalent to murder. Besides, if you will check out the link I gave to
Strong's, you will see that
ratsach is used several times in the Bible where it applies to killing that is not murder.
And if
ratsach does mean murder, what does the commandment then mean? For murder refers to unlawful killng. Then the commandment becomes "Thou shalt not do unlawful killing." Well duhhh. That is obvious! But what killing is unlawful? The Bible is not clear.
But many places the Bible authorizes killing that we would consider to be unlawful. So it seems that the Bible is not clear about what killing is evil.
.
Nowhere does the bible say that it is wrong to willfully abort one's own fetus
It merely says "
Thou shalt not murder."
That should be enough.
No, it does not say
murder. It says
ratsach. And there is considerable controversy about what
ratsach actually means.
If we assume the command forbids the unlawful killing of human life, than we must ask if the embryo is human life yet. So we are back where we started: When does human life begin?
Furthermore, the Bible authorizes the creation of governemts to care for the common good of the people and to carry out punishment, even unto the sword, if necessary.
You just keep digging your hole deeper. The verses you refer to say it is wrong to rebel against government. So it was wrong for the American colonists to rebel against England, the Russians to rebel against the Kremlin, the Northern Alliance to rebel against the Taliban, and the people of Iraq to rebel against Saddam? Once again, it appears the Bible--the apparent source for your anti-abortion views--is mistaken.