Secundulus---
Would you be willing to discuss the morality of elective abortion with this pro-choice new Christian, please?
I have perceived that you are a religious conservative. You posts to others have earned my respect for you. I have checked into the Anglican Church in America site. You fill the bill for my personal agenda: a hard rock to bang my long-held convictions upon to see if they will fracture.
I know a little about you so let me tell you a little about me so you can better phrase your responses:
I was raised in a secular family in America that was severely dysfunctional, racked by alcohol, adultery, and father abandoning his family (though my dad did provide extravagant financial support). I needed to abandon my mother myself at age 16 fearing for my physical safety. I had the independent financial means to do so.
I was living alone in a London hotel room the summer. I needed to continue my education. With the help of an elderly London University professor, I selected a UK boarding school.
The school is a Christian school and I was an atheist. My choice was totally irrational. I think---I know---that Christ nudged me. If I was to survive in a Christian school, I had to walk the Christian walk. My time there was life transforming. I lived with Christ for a year and a half without committing. It was time for me to make an honest god of Christ so I accepted baptism on my 18th birthday, the day I came of age and indisputably independent. With submission comes true sovereignty.
I think that a childhood of trying to please an earthly father who provided but who never showed his face rather set me up to being a daughter of Christ. I live every day with the goal of having that day, my day be a source of joy for Him. Today is the most important day there ever will be. Each day. Every day.
I am Church of England communicant, high church, and liberal. It causes me distress that for a church that is trying to establish communion with the Romans, it is having difficulty remaining one church. There has been reprehensible behaviour by individuals on both sides of the divide. I have my doctrinal positions but I can not envision any resolution to what appear to be stark, naked differences. This causes me great sadness.
My views on abortion have been influenced by my personal experiences. To wit:
1) I volunteered in a nursing home from age 13 to 16. I benefited as much as they from my conversations with the wrinkles as I affectionately called them. One resident lost her ability to bear children as a result of a botched illegal abortion. She praised Roe versus Wade to this young teen.
2) My one and only friend I met in the nursing home---Maria. She was two years older than I. We shared everything to do with our life. I learned second-hand the pressure a b/f can put on a girl. When she was 16, I accompanied her to an abortion clinic. I skipped school for three days to be with her as she sobbed her heart out. She slept over in my room for five nights. Legal abortion is no easy choice but it was for the best for her. Two years later, her father drove her out of the house and cancelled her college plans when her birth control pills were discovered. Birth control pills are insignificant compared to abortion.
3) I nursed my father as he lay dying of cancer. (The skills to do so were another benefit of my time in the nursing home---yes, I got into a lot of stuff that a young teen should not do but with short staff what else can be done?) He and I achieved a closer intimacy than father/daughter, I being given a look into my parents marriage and how I came to be. He was 43, a virgin; she was 19, his secretary and rapaciously ambitious. Extremely ill-considered activity resulted in my conception which resulted in an ill-considered marriage. Two adults succeeded in utterly destroying themselves and my brother. I am left as the survivor and I will be a survivor the rest of my days. It would have been for the best for all if they had chosen abortion rather than an emergency marriage. Yes, Im talking about me---that is the depth of my conviction.
.and then .and then ..I underwent a spontaneous abortion a month ago that can be attributed to neglecting myself while on an over-ambitious overseas tour to visit the extended-extended family of my groom. Would I have aborted in any case? I simply dont know. I have to place this at Christs feet and move on with resolution not to do that again.
Im now a Christian. A recent spontaneous abortion had its emotional impact upon me. I need to re-examine convictions I acquired in my atheist days.
First question:
That human life begins at conception----does that necessarily imply that there is in fact a human being in existence momentarily after conception?
A potential human being to be sure. Potential because there are untold fertilised eggs that never implant into the uterine wall .and many that dont survive after implantation.
Why not human life beginning at intercourse? Why not when boy meets girl?
A foetus that can survive out of the womb (with or without extreme medical intervention) is assuredly a human being. But six months between conception and ability to survive outside the womb is a long time.
Second question:
Upon what foundation the doctrine that a human being exists upon conception?
Third question:
Am I correct that church doctrine of condemning elective abortion stands or falls on the question of whether a newly fertilized egg is in fact a human being?
God bless,
Would you be willing to discuss the morality of elective abortion with this pro-choice new Christian, please?
I have perceived that you are a religious conservative. You posts to others have earned my respect for you. I have checked into the Anglican Church in America site. You fill the bill for my personal agenda: a hard rock to bang my long-held convictions upon to see if they will fracture.
I know a little about you so let me tell you a little about me so you can better phrase your responses:
I was raised in a secular family in America that was severely dysfunctional, racked by alcohol, adultery, and father abandoning his family (though my dad did provide extravagant financial support). I needed to abandon my mother myself at age 16 fearing for my physical safety. I had the independent financial means to do so.
I was living alone in a London hotel room the summer. I needed to continue my education. With the help of an elderly London University professor, I selected a UK boarding school.
The school is a Christian school and I was an atheist. My choice was totally irrational. I think---I know---that Christ nudged me. If I was to survive in a Christian school, I had to walk the Christian walk. My time there was life transforming. I lived with Christ for a year and a half without committing. It was time for me to make an honest god of Christ so I accepted baptism on my 18th birthday, the day I came of age and indisputably independent. With submission comes true sovereignty.
I think that a childhood of trying to please an earthly father who provided but who never showed his face rather set me up to being a daughter of Christ. I live every day with the goal of having that day, my day be a source of joy for Him. Today is the most important day there ever will be. Each day. Every day.
I am Church of England communicant, high church, and liberal. It causes me distress that for a church that is trying to establish communion with the Romans, it is having difficulty remaining one church. There has been reprehensible behaviour by individuals on both sides of the divide. I have my doctrinal positions but I can not envision any resolution to what appear to be stark, naked differences. This causes me great sadness.
My views on abortion have been influenced by my personal experiences. To wit:
1) I volunteered in a nursing home from age 13 to 16. I benefited as much as they from my conversations with the wrinkles as I affectionately called them. One resident lost her ability to bear children as a result of a botched illegal abortion. She praised Roe versus Wade to this young teen.
2) My one and only friend I met in the nursing home---Maria. She was two years older than I. We shared everything to do with our life. I learned second-hand the pressure a b/f can put on a girl. When she was 16, I accompanied her to an abortion clinic. I skipped school for three days to be with her as she sobbed her heart out. She slept over in my room for five nights. Legal abortion is no easy choice but it was for the best for her. Two years later, her father drove her out of the house and cancelled her college plans when her birth control pills were discovered. Birth control pills are insignificant compared to abortion.
3) I nursed my father as he lay dying of cancer. (The skills to do so were another benefit of my time in the nursing home---yes, I got into a lot of stuff that a young teen should not do but with short staff what else can be done?) He and I achieved a closer intimacy than father/daughter, I being given a look into my parents marriage and how I came to be. He was 43, a virgin; she was 19, his secretary and rapaciously ambitious. Extremely ill-considered activity resulted in my conception which resulted in an ill-considered marriage. Two adults succeeded in utterly destroying themselves and my brother. I am left as the survivor and I will be a survivor the rest of my days. It would have been for the best for all if they had chosen abortion rather than an emergency marriage. Yes, Im talking about me---that is the depth of my conviction.
.and then .and then ..I underwent a spontaneous abortion a month ago that can be attributed to neglecting myself while on an over-ambitious overseas tour to visit the extended-extended family of my groom. Would I have aborted in any case? I simply dont know. I have to place this at Christs feet and move on with resolution not to do that again.
Im now a Christian. A recent spontaneous abortion had its emotional impact upon me. I need to re-examine convictions I acquired in my atheist days.
First question:
That human life begins at conception----does that necessarily imply that there is in fact a human being in existence momentarily after conception?
A potential human being to be sure. Potential because there are untold fertilised eggs that never implant into the uterine wall .and many that dont survive after implantation.
Why not human life beginning at intercourse? Why not when boy meets girl?
A foetus that can survive out of the womb (with or without extreme medical intervention) is assuredly a human being. But six months between conception and ability to survive outside the womb is a long time.
Second question:
Upon what foundation the doctrine that a human being exists upon conception?
Third question:
Am I correct that church doctrine of condemning elective abortion stands or falls on the question of whether a newly fertilized egg is in fact a human being?
God bless,