Gems at Middle Tennessee State University
Here are just a sampling of encouraging encounters at our Genocide Awareness Project (GAP) at Middle Tennessee State.
Genocide close to home. Vanessa’s uncle was a Tutsi victim of the Hutu genocide. She was deeply moved by the comparison between abortion and Rwandan genocide.
Grace from God. Jami was quite emotional. “Thank you for this. When I was 17, I got pregnant and the doctor wouldn’t give me prenatal vitamins because ‘I should not have this baby.’ I married the dad and we have a 26-year old named Grace. She was the Grace we needed. God’s plan is always best, even when it is hard.”
Changed minds and grateful hearts. We got reactions from many passersby at MTSU:
- This really changes my perspective.
- That is so great! Can I pray with you?
- I’ve changed my mind.
- I didn’t know they had body parts this early. Thank you.
- I once stopped a friend from aborting.
- Students need to see this. Life has adult consequences. This is murder and I am glad you are here.
More grateful hearts. We are grateful for you. You make our work possible through your sacrificial giving. May God bless you as he has blessed us in this work.
Tags: abortion debate, abortion pictures, GAP, Genocide Awareness Project, Middle Tennessee State University, MTSU
This entry was posted on Tuesday, March 28th, 2017 at 2:24 pm and is filed under Campus Debate (GAP). You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.