Volume 3, Number 4Abortion by Ian Rees, Bath, England 'I don’t think that infanticide (the killing of infants) is always
unjustifiable. I don’t think it is plausible to think that there is
any moral change that occurs during the journey down the
birth canal’.Are you troubled when you read something like that? You
ought to be, especially when you realize that this is the
opinion of a member of the British Medical Association’s
ethics committee which was printed in the press recently. In
what circumstances would infanticide be justifiable? And
why are we even asking
the question? Why does
the professor talk of ‘any
moral change that occurs
during the journey down
the birth canal’?
The moral debate
surrounding abortion
has focussed on the
point at which a ‘foetus’
(a fertilized egg in a
woman’s womb) becomes
a human being. A
number of positions
have been taken. Some
say it is from the moment
of conception, some say it is at fourteen days, when the
‘primitive streak’ has appeared. Others go later and say it
changes with each foetus, and is to be taken at the moment
of ‘quickening’ when a mother can feel the child move or kick
within the womb. The most widely accepted view is that it is
only when the foetus is viable, that is to say when that foetus,
were it to be born prematurely,would be able to survive.This
point has been settled at twenty-four weeks. In other words,
a foetus in the womb can be legally aborted in the UK before
the age of twenty-four weeks. The moral justification for this,
if one is needed and many don’t need one, is that before that
time, the foetus is not a human being with potential but a
foetus with the potential to become a human being. The
professor quoted above is evidently of the opinion that even a new-born infant is not given
automatic protection from the law of
murder, as he does not believe any
moral change has occurred in the
passage from dependant life in the
womb to self dependence outside.
Now God has expressly forbidden the
murder, or unjustifiable killing, of
human beings when, in His seventh
commandment, He said,‘Thou shalt not
kill’, Exod. 20. 13; Rom.13. 9-10.The force
of the word ‘kill’ here is ‘murder’, which
is unlawful killing. There are instances
where God recognizes some killing of
humans as lawful: capital punishment,
which is state-execution of a murderer,
is one instance, Gen. 9. 6; Exod. 21. 12;
Num 35. 31; Rom. 13. 4, as was war
where God commanded it, a ‘just war’
in those circumstances. However,
unlawful killing is prohibited by God.
The killing of animals is not included in
this commandment. God has never
prohibited the killing of animals. In fact,
He expects and commands it in cases
of sacrificial offering and for food, Exod.
12. 3-8; Gen 9. 3.
Human life, however,
is different for the
following reasons:
Its Dignity
Mankind is made ‘in
the image of God’.This
was true of Adam and
Eve, God’s direct creations
in the beginning,
Gen. 1. 26-28,
and of human beings
created subsequently
by the natural, yet
divinely overseen,
process of conception
and birth,Gen. 9. 5-6. It
is this creation in the
image of God that
sets mankind apart
from all other living
creatures, giving a moral and a spiritual
capacity that animals do not have. It
also reflects the fact that mankind as a
whole is placed on the earth as God’s
representatives, to ‘rule’ His creation.
Man is, therefore, the visible representative
of God on the earth. As such,
human beings have great dignity in
God’s creation.
Its Eternity
The human soul will not come to an
end, unlike other living creatures. A
human soul lasts forever, and will, after
this life, either take its place in heaven
or in hell, Heb. 9. 12; Luke 16. 19-31.
There is, for every human being, the
prospect of everlasting life or of
everlasting death, the latter being
everlasting separation from the
presence of God.
 Its Sanctity
Because of this dignity and eternity, the
unlawful killing of a human being was
prohibited by God, with capital
punishment being the sentence,
‘Whoso sheddeth man’s blood, by man
shall his blood be shed’, Gen. 9. 6. and,
‘He that killeth any man shall surely be
put to death’, Lev. 24. 17-21.
The question therefore is, at what point
does a foetus become ‘human’? What
does the Bible say?
God sees human life even before
its conception in the womb
Some scriptures indicate that God
knew and recognized human beings
before conception. ‘Before I formed
thee in the belly I knew thee; and
before thou camest forth out of the
womb I sanctified thee; and I ordained
thee a prophet unto the nations’, Jer. 1.
5.‘Thine eyes did see my substance yet
being unperfect; and in thy book all my members were written . . . when as yet
there was none of them’, Ps. 139. 16.
God sees and blesses human life
in the womb
Several scriptures indicate that God
sees the foetus as human even in the
womb. ‘Thou hast covered me in my
mother's womb’, Ps. 139. 13; ‘Did not he
that made me in the womb make him?
and did not one fashion us in the
womb?’, Job 31. 15; ‘I formed you in the
womb’, Jer. 1. 5; ‘Thus saith the Lord thy
redeemer, and he that formed thee
from the womb’, Isa. 44. 24. This would
evidently undermine the argument
that human life does not begin until
birth.
Infants (foetuses) can be
sensitive to spiritual things
whilst still in the womb
Life and spiritual experiences seem to
begin in the womb before birth ever
takes place. ‘He (John the Baptist) will
be filled with the Holy Spirit while yet
in his mother’s womb’, Luke 1. 15;
‘When Elisabeth heard the salutation
of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb’,
Luke, 1. 41.
God calls a born child and an
unborn child the same thing
In Hebrew,we are given to understand,
there is no word for ‘foetus’. The same
word, yeleth, is used of both children in
the womb and for children just born.
So in Isaiah 9. 6 the word for ‘child’ in
‘unto us a child is born’ is the word
yeleth. In the complicated passage on
injury to a pregnant woman and its
resultant premature birth in Exodus 21
we read, ‘If men strive and hurt a
woman with child so that her fruit
depart from her and yet no mischief
follow: he shall be surely punished’, vv.
22-25. A closer
translation of the
phrase ‘so that her
fruit depart from
her’ is ‘if her
children come out’
and the word for
children here is the
plural of yeleth. In
Luke chapter 2 and
verse 12 the baby
Jesus is called a
brephos or infant,
‘Ye shall find the
babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes and lying in a
manger’. Yet the same word, brephos,
infant, is used of John the Baptist in his
mother’s womb in Luke 1. 41. Surely
this implies that God sees no difference
between an unborn infant and a newborn
one; each, in His eyes, is a human
being. Even still-born children are
called infants in God’s eyes, Job 3. 16. In
fact the terms ‘child’, ‘children’, ‘son’,
‘infant’ are all used of foetuses whilst
still in the womb, Job 3. 16; Gen. 25. 21-
22; Luke 1. 36; Acts 7. 19. There is no
moral change during passage down
the birth canal because the Bible sees
the unborn child as as much human as
the born one.
Returning to the verses in Exodus
chapter 21, BRIAN EDWARDS has
pointed out that the passage refers to
the penalties for murder. However, the
focus here is not on the woman – the
same penalty for murder would apply
to her killing whether she were
pregnant or not. ‘The focus of
attention must be the child in her
womb. If as a result of violence to her,
the baby ‘comes out’ but there is no
serious injury to it, then a fine will be
levied, but if the child is dead or
injured then the punishment is life for
life. What this instructive passage
teaches us is that a deliberate act that causes the death of an unborn child is
considered to be murder’, The Ten
Commandments for Today, p193.
Are there any circumstances
when abortion could be
acceptable in the eyes of God?
It seems clear that the Bible teaches
that a child in the womb is a human
being in itself. To abort that pregnancy
is , therefore unlawful killing, or murder,
in the eyes of God. Is this so in every
case? Are there any circumstances in
which an abortion is acceptable to
God? What of situations where the
child in the womb is severely disabled
and will have no quality of life? What
about a situation where a woman is
pregnant through rape and the birth of
the child will bring major psychological
distress to the mother? What about
where the choice is either the life of the
mother or the life of the child?
It needs to be stressed that man has no
right to decide what is an acceptable
quality of life and what is not. To go
down this route is to open the floodgates
to all sorts of
problems.What about
‘quality of life’ for the
elderly, the infirm, the
terminally ill? Have we
the right to terminate
the life of an adult just
because we feel they
do not have the right
quality of life? If we
cannot do so for a
born human why
should we arrogate
the right to decide the
same for an unborn
human? Parents are
often put under
intense pressure to
have an abortion
where tests indicate
the baby is Downs Syndrome. Yet many
Downs Syndrome sufferers are
delightful people. And does not God
Himself say, ‘Who hath made man's
mouth? or who maketh the dumb, or
deaf, or the seeing, or the blind? have
not I the Lord?’, Exod. 4. 11. And did not
the Lord Jesus say that the man blind
from his birth was born this way ‘that
the works of God should be made
manifest in him?’, John 9. 3.This does not
lesson the sorrow and distress for the
parents of such children, but their
sorrow and distress do not legitimize
abortion. The case of a child born of
rape is more emotive, and the mother
needs tremendous prayer and support
in order to go through with the
pregnancy, but believers have often
done so for conscience sake. Many
would feel that where the life of a
mother is threatened and the choice is
between the mother’s existence and
that of the child abortion is the ‘lesser
of two evils’ and may, in those
circumstances, not be deemed unlawful
killing. Such is the moral maze.
What about those who have inadvisedly
engaged in abortion? As with any sin,
‘there is forgiveness with God, that he
my be feared’. But let it be clearly stated
that God sees human life as beginning
in the womb, and that any unlawful
termination of that young human life is
unacceptable to Him. ‘The value of
human life,and God’s refusal to concede
that the child in the womb is anything
other than truly human, should settle
the principle of whether or not it can be
right to terminate the life of a child in
the womb’, EDWARDS, p193.
It needs to be stressed that
man has no right to decide
what is an acceptable quality
of life and what is not. Do you agree or disagree with this article do you have any questions? If so then please click here and fill out the comments form as we would love to hear from you. |