Church must address culture of death, writers urge
By MICHAEL FOUST
Baptist Press
Published January 26, 2003
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)-The 30th anniversary of Roe v. Wade
underscores the need for the Christian church to shine light in a
culture of death, writers in the latest issue of Southern
Seminary Magazine conclude.
The magazine tackles such life-and-death issues as abortion,
euthanasia and cloning in view of the Jan. 22 anniversary of the
controversial 1973 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion in
all 50 states.
A publication of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in
Louisville, Ky., the magazine includes feature articles by R.
Albert Mohler Jr., president of the seminary; Richard Land,
president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics &
Religious Liberty Commission; and William Cutrer, a Southern
Seminary professor who is also a practicing medical doctor.
Sadly, abortion has become an accepted part of the American
culture, Mohler writes.
"The nation's conscience is no longer seared by the
scandal of abortion, and abortion on demand has become a routine
part of everyday life," he writes. "... Thirty years
later, can we rebuild and recover? The signs are not hopeful.
Three decades of post-Roe v. Wade experience reveal a
downward spiral from abortion to euthanasia, from embryo research
to human cloning, from assisted suicide to advocated infanticide."
The church, he asserts, must promote a pro-life message.
"The believing church is now perhaps the last outpost of
moral sanity in the culture of death," Mohler writes. "If
recovery is to come, it must arise in a new generation who sees
through the moral insanity and possesses the courage to reverse
course before all moral knowledge is lost. Let us pray that God
will give us that generation - before it is too late."
Land agrees.
"Christians, in particular, have an obligation to
confront these critical moral and ethical issues with a
scriptural response," he writes. "These are hard
questions, but God's Word gives the simple but indisputable
answer: Human life from conception onward should be protected,
not endangered."
Cutrer, professor of Christian ministry and a practicing
obstetrician/gynecologist, serves as medical director of a pro-life
crisis pregnancy center in Louisville. He notes that while the
unborn child is an obvious victim of abortion, others also
suffer, including the mother.
He describes "post abortion syndrome" (PAS), which
affects women with symptoms of anxiety, depression, sleep
disorders and even suicide.
"For those like me who have invested our lives as
caregivers into the broken realities of these women and their
partners, we see PAS as a dangerous, sometimes subtle and
confusing collection of problems," he writes. "PAS may
remain repressed with women in denial for years or even decades
as they cope with apparent ease. Then, for perhaps 20 percent or
more of abortion survivors, various symptoms appear."
The church, Cutrer argues, should reach out to such women.
"[T]here is hope in Christ," he writes.
(Southern Seminary Magazine can be read online at www.sbts.edu/magazine.
For more information call 800-626-5525 ext. 4141.)
For related coverage, see Sanctity of Human Life Archive