The debate about abortion is a debate about when life begins.
The pope argues that the purpose of sex is for procreation,
not pleasure, and that it is sin to interrupt sex with any birth control that
would suppress its purpose, denying life to some new soul. In a sense (and I’m
sure he’d never say it like this), the pope teaches that life begins at the
moment of ejaculation.
Most Protestants disagree with this religious belief. Some
Protestants – essentially the religious right in the US – believe instead that life
begins at conception. Based on this belief, they have no problem with any kind
of birth control but do want to make all abortions illegal. And I think that
they share the pope’s disapproval of sex as something to be used just for
mindless pleasure.
And of course secular folks and other religious folks don't base their decision on what popes or Protestants believe.
Now it is worth pointing out that at the moment of
conception the new life doesn’t look much different from what it looks like at
the moment before; whether we’re talking about separate egg and sperm or a newly
formed zygote combining the two, we’re talking about something too small to see
with the naked eye.
I think that this belief that life begins at conception is more
defensible than the belief that it begins at ejaculation, if only because it is
less comfortable to say ejaculation during a public debate. But in both cases,
we’re talking about a life that has no viable chance outside of the womb, life
that is less conscious of its surroundings than the simplest insect, a life
that bears less resemblance to a baby than does any mammal. If we say that life begins at conception we - like those arguing it starts at ejaculation - are not arguing that it is recognizably human at that moment but instead are arguing for its potential. That is, we’re
expressing a belief, not stating a fact, when we say that this is when human life
begins.
Most people in the US – religious or otherwise – believe that
life begins sometime between conception and birth. They don’t know precisely
when but they seem to believe that at the moment before birth, life in the womb
is hardly different from the new born baby it is about to become and at the
moment after conception, life in the womb is hardly different from the sperm and
egg it recently was. Most people believe that while it is harder to pinpoint the
start of life in this nine month window, it is more reasonable to locate it
somewhere other than at its extreme end points.
This question about when life begins can be answered by
religion, philosophy, or science, but it cannot be answered definitely by any
one of these. Different scientists, different philosophers, and different
religious people will reach different conclusions about when life starts. Making
this determination requires judgment.
The argument for legal abortion rests on this fact: reasonable, conscientious people will disagree about when life begins.
What do most Americans believe? Well, about two-thirds
believe that a woman has a right to an abortion in the first trimester (which is
to say, they believe that life does not begin until at least three months after
conception). By contrast, only about a third of Americans believe that
abortions should be legal in the final trimester, roughly up to the point of
birth.
If we were going to use the democratic approach to deciding
abortion law, we’d probably have the following:
-
A federal law that gave women in any state the
right to an abortion in the first trimester
-
State laws that may or may not give women the
right to an abortion in the second trimester
-
Abortion in the third trimester made illegal except
in cases where the mother’s life is threatened.
Again, this is not a question about whether a woman has the right
to kill a baby because she wants a better life, one with the promise of more
economic prosperity and freedom. She doesn’t have that right. The issue of
abortion instead stems from a legitimate question about when life begins.
The question of whether one person can kill another in the hopes
of economic prosperity and freedom is instead one we should ask when questioning
whether to go to war to “liberate” another country, knowing that this decision
carries with it the inevitable destruction of lives that are years and decades past the point
of conception. Individuals don't have that right; apparently states do.
Oh and as a footnote? Even if a person wants to base her
decision about abortion on the Bible (obviously not a basis for modern law), she’ll have little guidance. There is at
least one verse that mentions God knowing us even in the womb, implying that a fetus has the rights of a person. But it also states in Exodus 21:22 that if a man injures a woman so she miscarries, he
should be fined. In a kingdom that meted out the death penalty for fornication,
though, this punishment is fairly mild. Miscarry through violence is not an
abortion chosen by the woman, by the way; this is an abortion performed against
her will. Obviously, in the Old Testament they did not consider life in the womb
to have the same rights as a newborn baby.
Finally, Jesus never touches on abortion or when life begins. Even if you want to base your personal decision on the Bible, you are
left to your own judgment. And it is the exercise of that judgment, apparently, that so offends those who would make abortion illegal.
Oh, and lest you think that this simple clarification should be dated and irrelevant - as I once did - I'd like to point out that the good people of Mississippi will vote on a (state) constitutional amendment that rules that life begins at the moment of conception - opinion become law.
1 comment:
Father Guido Sarducci said that if sex is only for procreation, then eating should only be for nutrition.
Hindus believe that when the baby kicks, that's the reincarnated soul entering a body and pitching a fit; "Oh, no, not again!"
Personally, I think different people get their souls at different times. I think I got mine around age five, one sister got hers around age 40, and the other is still waiting on hers. (Donald Trump got his quite young, but then he sold it.)
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