This week marked the 42nd anniversary of Roe v. Wade, in which abortion became legal in our country. Few social issues are capable of igniting the flames of human emotion as can the topic of abortion. Those in favor of abortion believe the matter hinges on subjects such as privacy or reproductive rights. Those who argue against abortion believe the baby in womb has a right to live. As emotional as this topic is, it is important to keep a level head and try to argue using reason and logic.
So, when those of us who are pro-life find ourselves in the midst of this controversy, what is the argument most often leveled against us? In my experience, the two arguments I hear the most often are:
- It is my body. Therefore, I have the right to choose.
- It is a fetus, not a baby, or, it is just a mass of cells.
In this post, I will attempt to provide a reasoned response to both of these objections while providing you with additional material and resources should you want to learn more about the arguments or how to get involved in the fight for life.
It is my body. Therefore, I have the right to choose.
When we engage in thoughtful discussion, we assume certain laws. The laws of logic govern our ability to have thoughtful and meaningful conversations. Although many do not know what the laws of logic are, everyone presupposes them and can often tell when one of them has been violated. If I were to hold up an apple, point to it, and say that I was holding a book, I hope everyone present would correct me. What I have done is violated the law of identity. The law of identity simply states that something is what it is. An apple is an apple, and a book is a book. Identity is rooted in existence, nature, and essence. That which exists is something, and we can tell what that something is because we identify its nature and essence. Take a book, for example; one can know what a book is because it has a front cover, back cover, and pages between the two covers. In addition, if something has identity, it has a single identity. That which exists cannot share in multiple identities, an apple cannot be anything, but an apple and a book cannot be anything but a book. We know this because everything that exists has particular attributes that make it what it is, keeping it consistence with its nature and essence.
What does any of this have to do with refuting the first argument mentioned above? Pay attention to what the argument is asserting. It assumes that the life growing within the womb shares the same identity with the one to whom the womb belongs. However, this argument is false because it violates the law of identity. The baby in the womb has a separate identity from the woman carrying the baby. The woman assumes that the baby is identical to her body simply because it is in her body, the same way her heart exists in her body or any other organ for that matter. However, anyone who has taken elementary biology can tell you that the baby growing in the womb has its own set of chromosomes and DNA, thereby making it separate and distinct from the woman carrying it. The baby may be inside her, but the baby is not her. The baby and the woman carrying the baby are two separate and distinct beings. When people say that it is their body and, for this reason, have the right to have an abortion, what they are saying is that they want to abort themselves. This argument is more an argument for suicide than it is for abortion.
It is a fetus, not a baby, or, it is just a mass of cells
The law of identity helps us in responding to this argument as well. Essence and nature are tied to the existence as mentioned above. The essence and nature of something do not change, even though a particular thing may change in its appearance as it evolves during its life cycle common to its species. Take, for example, a caterpillar and butterfly. Both belong to the insect order Lepidoptera. A caterpillar is not a butterfly, and a butterfly is not a caterpillar. Nevertheless, a caterpillar is the common name for the larvae of members belonging to the Lepidoptera order (the insect order comprising of butterflies and moths).
Human beings also go through changes during various lifecycles. The process of puberty does not change the essence or nature of a human being. No matter what changes a man or woman may go through, his or her personhood (essence) remains intact.
Scott Klusendorf, the author of The Case for Life, offers the following easy to remember argument using the acronym SLED, which works to maintain the personhood and value of the life growing inside the womb.
Size: While it is true that an embryo or fetus is small, can we say that human value is derived from size? Is the pro-abortionist willing to say that taller people are more valuable than those who may be shorter? Most men are larger than women, does this make men more valuable or entitled to more rights? Do the biggest among us deserve more rights than the smallest among us?
Level of Development: It may be true that embryos and fetuses are at the earliest stages of human development but do we want to use development as the basis by which we determine value? Should young adults have a greater right to life than those in adolescence? Does self-awareness make one valuable? If so, must you always be in a state of awareness to maintain value and rights? Does a person sleeping remain self-aware, or how about a person under general anesthesia or in a coma? Should these people have their rights stripped from them because self-awareness has been compromised, lost, or put on hold?
Environment: Where you are does change who you are. Does your value change when you leave the house in the morning, get into the car, or enter your office? If a journey across town does not rob you of value and the right to live, how then can the journey down the birth canal miraculously give the invaluable value.
Degree of Dependency: If human value comes from the degree of dependency, then there is nothing stopping us from killing newborn babies dependent on being fed and changed. We can kill at will those who require lifesaving medication to manage heart conditions, cholesterol, kidney problems, and diabetes. I know many adults who are still dependent on their parents; shall we kill them?
For additional resources from Scott Klusendorf visit his website, www.caseforlife.com
Ask Questions
Most people are quick to give an answer when they hear something to which they object. However, having a debate should never be the goal. Rather than being ready to give reasons for what you believe, ask questions. I have learned that one of the best ways to have people consider something different is to ask questions, placing the burden of argument on them. Ask questions like; is the baby the same as your body? What is it that is growing in the womb? Is human life valuable? Is the embryo human? If not, then what is it? If not, when does it become human?
Most people have not thought through these questions, and asking them is the key to helping them find the answers to them. When they begin to answer them, they will struggle and will see that they do not have a response. This is the best time to walk them through some of the arguments mentioned above. You cannot get people thinking until you first get them doubting.
Remember the Heart
As I said at the beginning of this post, this is an emotionally charged debate and as lovers of truth, we must be tactful in our apologetic, an important lesson I recently learned. Behind every argument and question, there is a person whose heart requires ministering. Many men and women who argue in favor of abortion have been involved in an abortion in some way and are struggling with the pain in the aftermath of their decision. Be sensitive to them. The wisdom of the intellectual will never satisfy the pain of the emotional. If all you do is focus on answering the question, you will miss the heart of the questioner. The head talk of our apologetic must be undergirded in heart talk.
How to get involved
If you would like to get involved in helping bring an end to abortion, I would encourage you to consider 40 Days for Life. They are the largest internationally coordinated pro-life mobilization in history, working to bring an end to abortion through prayer, fasting, community outreach and peaceful vigil. To learn more about them, visit www.40daysforlife.com