Should TEC be
a member of a Religious Coalition? by
Georgette Forney
In January of 2006, the Episcopal Church’s Executive Council
affirmed its membership of a pro-abortion organization called the Religious Coalition
for Reproductive Choice (RCRC). Since then, five dioceses (Albany,
Mississippi
,
Pittsburgh
,
Quincy
, and
Springfield
) have passed resolutions objecting to the decision. In addition, two resolutions
were introduced at General Convention seeking to rescind the RCRC affiliation, but
were rejected and two dioceses (San Diegoand
Virginia
) considered resolutions expressing concern with the EC’s choice. Also, conferences
representing United Methodists in eastern
Tennessee
, South Indiana, and
Northwest Texas
passed resolutions calling on their denomination to withdraw its membership of RCRC.
What is it about the RCRC that creates this response?
Could it be one of the following reasons?
1.
The RCRC opposes
legislation designed to protect women. This includes Parental Consent laws that
require a parent’s approval before their minor-aged daughter can have an abortion
and Informed Consent laws that provide women with information about the physical
and emotional consequences of abortion. They are also working against laws being
introduced in various states that establish health care regulations at abortion
clinics.
2.
The RCRC refers
women facing unplanned pregnancies and those who have experienced abortion that
are seeking reconciliation and forgiveness from Jesus Christ to secular counseling
resources such as Planned Parenthood, ignoring the 4000 Christian pregnancy resource
centers.
3.
The RCRC supports
Partial-Birth Abortion (PBA). The following is a PBA procedure as described by a
nurse at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing: “Dr. Haskell went in with forceps
and grabbed the baby’s legs and pulled them down into the birth canal. Then he delivered
the baby’s body and the arms – everything but the head. The doctor kept the head
right inside the uterus… The baby’s little fingers were clasping and un-clasping,
and his little feel were kicking. Then the doctor stuck the scissors in the back
of his head and the baby’s arms jerked out, like a startle reaction, like a flinch,
like a baby does when he thinks he is going to fall. The doctor opened up the scissors,
stuck a high-powered suction tube into the opening, and sucked the baby’s brains
out. Now the baby went completely limp… He cut the umbilical cord and delivered
the placenta. He threw the baby in a pan, along with the placenta and the instruments
he had just used.” This description is included in the recent Supreme Court opinion
that upheld the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act, a law signed by President Bush in
2003. The Coalition filed an amici curiae
brief urging the Supreme Court to strike down the law. (Note: the Supreme Court
decision affects one procedure. It’s still legal to perform abortions with the standard
“dilation and evacuation” process that uses forceps to grab the unborn baby and
pull it apart limb by limb while in the uterus all nine months of pregnancy.)
4.
Various RCRC
statements contradict the Book of Common Prayer and General Convention resolutions.
In the book Holy Abortion? A Theological Critique
of the RCRC, author Michael J. Gorman, Dean of the Ecumenical Institute
of Theology at St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore, Maryland documents
six published statements by the RCRC that directly contradict the BCP and General
Convention resolutions. One example is the
RCRC’s publication Considering
Abortion? Clarifying What You Believe. It states
“You are to claim your godlike, God-given role in creation by saying yes or no,
secure in the knowledge that whatever you decide, after having honestly sought what
is right, God will bless.” However, TEC’s Resolution
A054 passed at the 71st General Convention doesn’t bless all decisions
regarding abortion, it states: “We emphatically oppose abortion as a means of birth
control, family planning, sex selection, or any reason of mere convenience.”
These are four important reasons why TEC’s affiliation
with the RCRC is a concern. However, it’s the RCRC’s biblical justification for
supporting abortion that best exemplifies why the Executive Council should withdraw
its affiliation.
Under the heading “What does the Bible say about Abortion?”
their website states: “At the time the Bible was written, abortion was widely practiced
in spite of heavy penalties. Even so, the Hebrew scriptures had no laws forbidding
abortion and there is no condemnation or prohibition of abortion anywhere in the
Bible. This was chiefly because the Hebrews placed a higher value on women than
their neighbors did. Abortion is not mentioned in the Old or New Testaments. There
are some references to the termination of pregnancy. The most well-known, Exodus
21:22-25, says that if a pregnancy woman has a miscarriage as a result of injuries
she receives during a fight between two men, the penalty for the loss of the fetus
is a fine. If the woman is killed, the penalty is life for life. It is obvious from
this passage that men whose fighting has caused a woman to miscarry were not regarded
as murderers because they had not killed the woman. The woman had greater moral
and religious worth than the fetus.”
The RCRC ignores the stories in 2 Kings 8 and 15 describing
King Ben-Hadad and King Shallum’s armies ripping open pregnant women, along with the punishment that was prophesied
in Hosea and Amos. These stories are more applicable as they relate to purposely
terminating a pregnancy versus the story in Exodus that refers to miscarriage.
Furthermore, the RCRC overlooks three valid examples of
God discussing unborn children in their mother’s womb which speaks to their personhood
acknowledged by their Creator in Genesis 16:11, 25:21, and Luke 1:15, while completely
dismissing the reference to John leaping in his mother’s womb when Mary visits in
Luke 1:41. In their publication Personhood, the
Bible, and the Abortion Debate the RCRC states that they don’t consider
Psalm 139 to be about the sanctity/creation of life. They claim the psalmist is
not addressing abortion and is free to use poetry and metaphor without need for
precision or definition. The RCRC similarly states that Jeremiah 1:5 is really about
the prophet’s calling, not his creation. The references to the prophets’ formation
by the Lord in Isaiah 44 and Job 10 and 31 are also not acknowledged.
After carefully analyzing the Religious Coalition for
Reproductive Choice’s publications and website, it becomes clear that it is an organization
that talks about ‘religion’ but has no foundation in Judeo-Christian principles
or a worldview based on the Scriptures.
In contrast, the Episcopal Church is a Christian Communion
that is supposed to be faithful to Biblical teaching. Affiliating with the RCRC,
which is a ‘religious’ organization that promotes philosophies contrary to authorized
Church teachings invalidates the mission of the Church. That is why the Episcopal
Church’s membership in the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice should be
terminated. As Christians, we proclaim the Gospel of Life. We don’t justify the
shedding of innocent blood nor do we encourage people to make choices that lead
to death. Christianity is about LIFE,
eternal.
Mrs. Forney is the President of Anglicans for Life (formerly
the National Organization of Episcopalians for Life). She worships at St. Stephen’s
Church,
Sewickley, Pennsylvania
. Visit www.AnglicansforLife.org to voice your opinion about membership in RCRC.