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Archive for the ‘Pro Life’ Category

Graphics: A Mind Changed

The following was written by our 2023 Summer Intern Taylor Breeden.

Before the summer internship, I didn’t have a solid opinion on using graphic imagery to expose abortion. I had researched abortion and seen pictures, but I always felt icky at the thought of placing those images in the public square.

Now I do have a solid opinion: I very much dislike it. Let me explain.

CBR’s activism methods can be overwhelming. It’s difficult to feel like you’re doing good by showing something so horrible. I have found that nobody likes the abortion victim images; pro-lifers, pro-aborts, CBR employees, and passersby alike. Nobody feels completely comfortable with images of a dead baby – and they shouldn’t.

The whole point of our work is to expose the truth about abortion. And the truth is, it’s disgusting, so we should all be absolutely horrified when faced with it.

In A Letter from a Birmingham Jail, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. stated that “we… are not the creators of tension. We merely bring to the surface the hidden tension that is already alive. We bring it out in the open, where it can be seen and dealt with.” This statement completely changed my mind set on abortion graphics. Before, I thought it was just as disgusting to show the horror of abortion as it was to commit an abortion. I figured it only had a negative impact on the movement, making people turn away from the topic all together.

Once I read Dr. King’s words, I understood that we weren’t making people uncomfortable; abortion was.

After releasing the burden of guilt, CBR’s methods made perfect sense to me. I’ve even come to see it as a necessity in the pro-life movement. So, while I dislike showing graphic images of abortion victims to the public, I do it, because it must be done.

Introducing Intern Caleb

Caleb has been involved in pro-life work for about 4 years. Before he was saved, his girlfriend had an abortion. “Supporting her in that decision ruined my life,” says Caleb.

After experiencing the trauma of abortion firsthand, Caleb felt called to speak out. He believes that one of his biggest roles in the pro-life field is to speak with the fathers of potential abortion victims. Caleb explains to them that, contrary to what pro-aborts say, men DO have a voice and a place in the pro-life movement. He emphasizes that these men will be just as impacted as the mother in the aftermath of abortion.

Caleb’s pro-life work started with volunteering outside of an abortion clinic. He noticed that he and the other volunteers had a low success rate. By the time a mother and father were driving to the clinic, it was almost always too late. He knew he needed to do something more proactive where he could reach people before they’d made up their minds.

When he heard about CBR’s unique activism methods, it was exactly what Caleb had been praying for. As a veteran, he appreciates that CBR plans their activities and evaluates tactics based on what’s been proven effective. Caleb volunteered with CBR before joining the internship program to help him discern his place in the pro-life movement.

We are so blessed to have Caleb with us this summer. We know he has much to contribute to the cause for life.

Introducing Intern Taylor

Taylor is a 19-year-old Knoxville native. She is entering her senior year at the University of Tennessee, pursuing a degree in journalism and electronic media. Her long-term goals include having and homeschooling many children while working part-time in the pro-life movement.

Taylor is a devout Catholic. Even though she grew up in the Church, she didn’t hear much about abortion until she was 14. By the time she was 16, Taylor felt called to defending the unborn. Taylor’s core belief is that life is precious from fertilization to natural death and should therefore be protected legally and honored morally.

One of Taylor’s proudest accomplishments is the completion of her Stars and Stripes Award, the highest level award a girl can earn in American Heritage Girls (AHG). AHG is an organization devoted to “building women of integrity through service to God, family, community, and country.” To receive this award, Taylor planned, implemented, and lead a 100-hour service project for Tennessee Right to Life, improving their prayer garden next to Planned Parenthood. She added a sign, a new statue, a literature/prayer box, lighting for the walkway, and other sources of color to the garden.

After this internship, Taylor intends to volunteer (or work part-time) with CBR while she finishes school. She hopes to continue working in communications and education in the pro-life movement, using her degree to help make abortion illegal and unthinkable.

We are tickled that Taylor has joined us this summer and look forward to seeing all she accomplishes in the future!

Introducing Intern Ilyssa

Ilyssa is a senior intern, returning to CBR for a second year. She just graduated with her bachelor’s in Anthropology from Cleveland State University (CSU) and is planning on getting a master’s degree from CSU next year.

CSU’s leftist campus made Ilyssa realize that many of her peers were misinformed about abortion. The skills she learned and the people she met while working for CBR last summer gave her the confidence and courage to start a pro-life club at her school in hopes of informing her classmates on the issue. The Club, CSU Advocates for Life, has done several events including tabling, a pro-life training academy (thank you, Fletcher!), and the Genocide Awareness Project. If you want to keep up with their activism, their Instagram handle is @csu_advocatesforlife.

“Pro-life students thanked us for being on campus, pro-aborts verbally attacked us, and those in the middle asked us questions. CBR’s display really made an impact,” Ilyssa said. She is excited to continue to bring truth to her campus next fall.

Ilyssa returned to CBR because she appreciates the effectiveness of our methods and our dedication to protecting humans and raising pro-life Christian leaders. “At our first GAP of the summer, hearing and seeing the reactions of the people we are reaching, whether pro-abortion or pro-life, really affirms the importance of what CBR does and my decision to keep working with them,” Ilyssa explained.

We are so pleased to have Ilyssa back with us!

Divine Appointments at Columbus State GAP

We believe that God always makes special appointments for specific people to see the photos and respond accordingly, so we pray that no obstacles would prevent these appointments from being kept. Here are just a few examples from our most recent visit to Columbus State University in Georgia:

No such thing as unplanned.  “Rachel” was adopted from Ukraine as a teenager and is a Christian.  CBR staffer Jane Bullington challenged her belief that abortion could be okay in some circumstances. “Because God is God, and He knows, and He is in every situation, there are no unplanned pregnancies in His mind.  He will help.” Rachel walked away pondering these truths.

Calling all overcomers. “Cathy” grew up amidst poverty and abuse, which she is overcoming. She was glad to learn that there are resources for women in need and she took our resource cards to copy and distribute, so that students would know about pregnancy resource centers and adoption agencies near campus.

They say she should be dead.  “Eva” told us that she had been conceived in rape, so it hurts her when people say a child conceived in rape should be aborted.  How could it not?

Are we the extremists?

Kennesaw State University students are always ready for a discussion. We had huge talkative crowds on both days of GAP.
The choice to kill. One student was adamant, “The mother should get to choose whether to kill her child.” He admitted abortion kills a “child.” Volunteer Brad asked if she should be able to choose whether to kill her toddler. He responded, shocking everyone, “The mother should get to choose whether to kill her one-year old!”
Brad escalated, “What if the child is 20 years old and this tall?” as he raised his hand to the student’s height. He walked away, muttering to himself.
Emboldening and Equipping. GAP often attracts pro-life students who want to be a witness. Stephen stood with us for hours talking with his classmates. Armed with undeniable truth, he was formidable. By the end of the day, he was a pro!
A history major encouraged us, “I speak up in philosophy class against abortion and the class gets quiet…But I’m not as bold as you guys are.”
A freshman said, “These pictures make me more informed.”
Many others thanked us. Some helped us. These pro-life students feel so isolated and overwhelmed by the non-stop woke evil around them. Seeing GAP on campus is a welcome change of pace.
Who are the extremists?  The Cobb County Courier called us “extremists” who make “false use of images.”  CBR-SE Director Fletcher Armstrong responded, “You called us ‘extremist.’  Maybe you’re right, but you will have to explain why it’s OK to decapitate and dismember a little human being, but ‘extreme’ to show a picture of it.”  To read Fletcher’s Letter to the Editor in full, click here.

Do you know a prolife teenager?

At CBR, we’re not only saving lives of preborn children from abortion. We’re also saving born children from the lies of the pro-abortion culture. And, that’s the theme of our 6th Annual Pro Life Leadership Youth Camp: Countercultural.

As in past years, we will be offering two separate weeks of camp, in two different cities!

Click here for Knoxville, TN camp details.
Click here for Columbus, GA camp details.

Both camps are $100 per person, but additional campers from the same family will be discounted to $50 each. Please pass this information to your church leadership, youth ministries, and like-minded Christian parents and friends. Seats are limited! 

We offer this life-saving training far below cost, thanks to our generous venue hosts and partners.

Help keep camp affordable for all with a special gift here!
(designation: SE-YLC Youth Leadership Camp)

Welcome Cody & Amanda Levi!

We are thrilled to welcome Cody and Amanda Levi of Knoxville, Tenn. to the CBR family! A newly married couple, they will both be serving as Student Outreach Coordinators, helping college students be more effective pro-life advocates.

Amanda just graduated from Liberty University with a Bachelor’s degree in Law and  Policy. Cody is a graduate of The University of Tennessee with Bachelor’s degree in Neuroscience and Psychology.

Cody & Amanda on their wedding day

Amanda was raised pro-life and has always been passionate about the cause ever since finding out what abortion is and does to little human beings. Cody grew up in Dayton, Tenn., in a family where abortion was never really discussed or even mentioned.

After meeting at the speech and debate club at the University of Tennessee, Cody and Amanda had many conversations centering around the underpinnings of the Christian worldview, which included abortion.  When he understood that abortion violently and intentionally kills an innocent, preborn child, Cody knew that nothing could justify that act of murder.

While at UT, they noticed that there was no pro-life voice on campus, so Amanda and Cody co-founded the Vols for Life to teach students the scientific and philosophical arguments against abortion, so that they could defend the pro-life position more effectively.

Cody’s and Amanda’s goals at CBR are to (1) expose abortion for what it is, and (2) motivate, train, and equip college students to work with CBR to change public opinion in society, because we can never change public policy until we change public opinion.

We are so excited to have Amanda & Cody on our CBR team!

Meet CBR’s Pro-Life Summer Interns 2022

Our Summer Internship Program is well underway (actually it’s already half over!) but it’s been so jam-packed already, we’ve barely had time to introduce you to our 2022 Summer Interns! Here they are!

Bonnie is a sophomore at Roane State Community College, majoring in communications.  Born and raised in Clinton, Tennessee, she is the second of 11 children.  Her parents have homeschooled all of them.

Bonnie heard about CBR through an uncle who supports our work.  She has always been pro-life and wanted to do something about it. Painfully, she realized that just as German Christians had, through their silence, allowed Nazis to operate death camps, she too was allowing abortion through her silence.

She joined CBR because she believes abortion must be exposed in order to turn public opinion against it.  “CBR has a plan to win the fight against abortion, and I want to be part of it.”  Currently, Bonnie helps with our social media.  Check it out her awesome work!  Our handle on all platforms is @centerforbioethicalreform. 

Bonnie is also great in the field: “Doing GAP is surprisingly freeing.  I’ve gotten used to people yelling obscenities; that just makes me more bold and more determined.  It’s almost funny when someone is screaming and flipping us off.  I mentally respond, ‘Is that all you got?’  They can’t argue with the pictures.”

Noah is studying business administration at Columbus State University in Georgia.  He believes action is his moral obligation.

He first learned about CBR when we brought GAP to his campus in April.  For two days, he stood with CBR and debated pro-aborts. Within a week, he applied for the internship.

During his first outing with CBR, Noah found it generally amusing that pro-aborts think heckling will slow down the pro-life movement. 

Isaiah is a lover of Jesus, 4Runners, tacos, and quesadillas.  A returning intern from last year’s class, he has been studying life and working on a major in Jesus Christ.  Perhaps you are wondering, “How did someone like Isaiah get started in pro-life work?”  Never doubt the power of a pretty girl saying, “I’ll go next year if you do.”

This year Isaiah is setting out to do all things for Christ.  This has included cleaning bathrooms in a church, holding signs downtown, and witnessing to confused and calloused people.

One of his favorite Bible verses is Ezekiel 33:11: “Say to them, ‘As surely as I live, declares the Sovereign Lord, I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from their ways and live.  Turn!  Turn from your evil ways!  Why will you die, People of Israel?’”

Ilyssa is a rising college senior studying anthropology at Cleveland State University.  After the past few years of living on a very leftist campus and having no conservative community, she needed to find an internship that “brings me closer to God, surrounds me with sane people, and helps end the atrocity of abortion.”  CBR was the perfect opportunity! (OK, she’s beginning to wonder about that “sane people” part.)

Growing up as a Christian, she has always been pro-life. But at Cleveland State, Ilyssa encountered the dangerously unhinged views of the left.  She knew they were wrong, but she couldn’t articulate why.  “CBR is perfect because I get to learn how to defend the pro-life position, do research, partake in activism, and interact with real people.  I hope to take what I learn back to Cleveland State and apply it.”

Her first GAP was enlightening.  It was like watching those demonic pro-abortion Tik Toks, but in real life.  Ilyssa also found it crazy how many people simply avoided looking at the signs.  “Standing outside holding those signs felt amazing. I could’ve stayed out there longer because, finally, I was doing something concrete about my pro-life beliefs.”  Ilyssa is so glad that she is a part of CBR and she is excited for the rest of the summer!

 

Thank you for supporting CBR and these outstanding young people. You have made this all possible. Please pray that God will bring them back to us and also send many more.

What does a college education get you?

By Karl Gessler

People often say, “You get what you pay for.” I don’t doubt that they are right. But I am still surprised at what people pay for.

I recently joined a volunteer group that entered a college campus to offer free education. We provided a large display of pictures of the subject matter, complete with verified, historical, and scientific data and documents. We offered this educational service at no cost to the students. What did they learn from this free service? I don’t know. But I can tell you I learned from their university campus.

Across from our free display stood a group of 30-50 college students at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, whose tuitions I can only guess amount to tens of thousands of dollars per year. It is not for me to tell other people if their investments are sound. I can only tell you the exemplary counter-arguments these high-paying students articulated to us volunteer educators.

The free education we provided, courtesy of the Center For Bio-Ethical Reform, consisted of the history of genocides with the corresponding arguments for justification. The list of genocides committed throughout history included: Rwanda, Nazi Germany, African-Americans in the Southern United States, among others. We added to the list: the pre-born child. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines genocide as: “the deliberate killing of people who belong to a particular racial, political, or cultural group.”  And the UN General Assembly Resolution 96 states that the crime of genocide occurs “when racial, religious, political and other groups have been destroyed, entirely or in part.” (emphasis added) We argue that the targeted group is the pre-born child. In my estimation, this is a pretty high-level, intellectual argument against the practice of abortion. This kind of thought-provoking argument is what I would expect to receive through a college education.

What kind of intellectually stimulating rebuff did we receive from the paying education customers who opposed our position? I will tell you some of the fascinating arguments that we heard for a literal four hours without pause. Combined with various forms of “booty-shaking,” distributing condoms, and lewd gestures, we heard these chants: “More Gay Sex! More Gay Sex!” and “Pre-martial sex! Pre-marital sex!”. Some of the protestors wrote essays against our arguments, including the following: “Keep your hands off my pussy!” “Pro-lifers have a shrimp dick!” and “Jesus was a gay liberal.” What precisely these arguments had to do with the issue of genocide went over my head. But what do I know? I was only educated at home by my parents for twelve years without any higher learning. I never had the benefit of professional education.

I have to say, as an outsider to the halls of higher learning; I do have difficulty dealing with these arguments. And as my time on the university campus progressed, I felt more and more out of sorts. The counter-arguments took an even greater form of intensity when the students offered the stimulating rebuffs: “F*** the Kids!”, “Kill the Babies!” and “Kill the parents!” I truly stand in awe of their university education.

While on campus, I did spend some time talking to the “Progressive Student Alliance,” who assured me that I was part of the “working-class” oppressed by the landowners. I can’t help but think he is right. After all, I could never afford to be living on that sprawling, shiny, multi-billion-dollar campus as he was. I have lived comfortably in poverty all my life, and I could only ever afford free education. I have never even been a tenant on the properties of university land barons, much less the leader of a “student alliance” in the mighty halls of education. Yet, I do wonder why he was on the campus instead of me. I also wonder why these young progressive students couldn’t see that the baby in the womb appears to be in the position of powerlessness against adults who already have an excess wealth of life in comparison. Oh, the things I fail to understand due to my lack of professional education!

As we cleaned up our unimpressive free education display, one university student told me, “I will see you in Hell!” I guess Hell is more of a progressive institution that welcomes people of all classes? Either way, I told her that I wasn’t going. I may be ignorant and poor, but at least I am free to make my own choices. And there’s that word again: “Free.” They say that ignorance is bliss. Judging by my free education, I think it is true.

Karl Gessler is a long-time CBR supporter and volunteer. He lives with his wife and children in western North Carolina. 

Doing Hard Things for God

by Brad Martel

I first learned of the Center for Bio-Ethical Reform on Valentine’s Day 2011. Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee was the keynote speaker at their benefit dinner, and I went to hear him. “The sanctity of human life,” Huckabee said, “transcends all other political issues.” I agreed with him, and I was glad to discover this organization that works to end the killing of unborn children.  CBR does this work not just with words, but with pictures that undeniably expose abortion for the evil that it truly is.

However, this event got me examining myself. Did I treat abortion like it transcends all other issues? In all the time that I had been pro-life, what had I ever done about it?  Beyond voting for pro-life politicians every year or two, I had to admit I’d done nothing.  But here was an opportunity to make a difference! So, I became a CBR supporter.  I chose to make a monthly donation that, while small, would be significant over time.

Then the newsletters started to arrive. Each time, I wanted to prepare myself to see the graphic pictures, so I soon learned to procrastinate instead of opening them right away. How awful to see the abortion victims again!  How awful that this even happens!  But I did open the newsletters.  I did see the pictures, and I read the stories.  Stories of young people responding to CBR’s campus projects, some with shock, some with sadness, and some with denial or worse. I appreciated the courage and persistence of the CBR team, and their willingness to spend whole days with the awful pictures that I could only promptly return to the envelope after reading the stories.

After a few years I learned to manage my aversion to the photos and looked forward to the newsletters.  I remained impressed with CBR’s encounters on college campuses and the reactions of the passersby, ranging from sympathetic to hostile to sometimes positively loopy.  I began to wonder what it would be like to serve alongside this group, to see what it’s like, and maybe even have some of these conversations myself.

In 2018 I reached out to CBR with a simple email.  Volunteer coordinator Jane Bullington invited me to a Genocide Awareness Project (GAP) in April of that year and promised me: “You will never be the same!”  Then came the hard part; I had to prepare.  I looked up CBR’s website, AbortionNo.org, and as the abortion video played on the home page, I found myself leaning back in my chair as if to shield myself from the real-life horror story.  I looked over the abortion victim photos.  I read Gregg Cunningham’s “Why Abortion is Genocide,” and learned how to compare abortion to slavery and other genocides.

I did not know what to expect on my first day of GAP at the University of Tennessee.  I had never met any of the staff before. I thought that perhaps, with the graphic photos and such a sobering message, I would be meeting a somber, melancholy group of people.  I was relieved to find that, though quite serious about the mission, these people have joy!  I came to understand this attitude in part as a sense of satisfaction in supporting the important work.  “There’s something special,” staffer Mik’aela Raymond said one day, “about doing something hard for God.”

CBR paired me with staff members and experienced volunteers so that I could learn on-the-job how to talk to students about abortion.  They taught me with both their example and with useful tips that they would share after our conversations.  I learned over time that I could do this, even by myself! Having gained some confidence, I wanted to learn more.  I read Stephanie Gray’s book, “Love Unleashes Life,” which urges us to focus first on the person standing before us, their background, and their needs.  I also read “Healing the Hurt that Won’t Heal,” Karen Ellison’s thoughtful book about the grief that abortion brings and how God can heal those wounds.

I volunteer with CBR a few times a year now, and though I have plenty more to learn, I am comfortable now defending the pro-life position to strangers.  I have met dozens of students at these events; some supportive, some against, and some who just don’t know where they stand.  I have had thoughtful conversations and some not so thoughtful.  I have been ridiculed and yelled at with cursing and swearing.  Not often, but it happens.  But none of the negative feedback matters.  What matters are the times that I have led a student to set aside the slogans and really think about the unborn child as a human being.

And even when those conversations are lacking, I remind myself that it’s the abortion victim photos and not our conversations that carry the bulk of our pro-life message.  The images affect all who see them, whether they stop to talk or not.  Each day that I leave GAP it is with a sense of satisfaction that my contribution helps others to choose life.

I cannot identify a specific moment when I felt a calling or experienced a revelation that told me I should volunteer with CBR.  I agree with what Lincoln Brandenburg said recently during his interview on The Pro-Life Guys Podcast: “Don’t wait for feelings of passion… step out in obedience.” Although I had no previous experience with pro-life activism, and I have a full-time job that affords me only occasional availability, I can make a difference for the unborn children of America.  I would encourage anyone with a heart for the unborn to volunteer with CBR.  “You will never be the same.”

 

Brad Martel is an engineer and lives in Knoxville, Tennessee with his wife.  They have three grown children. 

CBR Volunteer Leads “Worship Blitz” at Planned Parenthood

By Karl Gessler

Worship is warfare. We live in a world with an active war waged for our souls. Every time we worship in spirit and truth, the world’s dark forces tremble because they know they are the losers in the war. Our worship helps make the victory of Jesus a tangible reality wherever it takes place. This is the theology of worship warfare.

Jesus has already won the war on the cross and in His resurrection, but many battles are left to be fought by God’s people. Jesus warned us, saying, “Apart from Me, you can do nothing” (John 15:5). We will never win the culture war for life without the power of Jesus’ presence. So, how can we bring the presence of Jesus into the dark world of abortion mills?

In all my life, the most powerful encounters with Jesus have been connected to worship through song. While considering this truth, the Lord gave me a vision of gathering our community together for a “worship blitz” at “the gates of Hell,” as some describe it (Planned Parenthood). Half a dozen times in the last year, my friends and I gathered in large numbers to sing worship songs outside our local Planned Parenthood for two hours straight. The effect is powerful for everyone involved. The regular faithful witnesses for life are encouraged, the worshipers are encouraged by one another, and the voice of truth is multiplied in power. It is amazing to see the escort’s agitation at our singing. We aren’t pointing the finger at them. We aren’t yelling at them. We are simply singing about and to the Giver of Life at a place of death. The contrast is stark.

It is nearly impossible to measure the precise effectiveness of standing outside an abortion clinic in protest, but the signs of effectiveness are there. Many of the regular pro-life witnesses tell us that their experience is so much better when we come to worship. We also know from insider’s testimony that the presence of God’s people praying outside Planned Parenthood is a statistical effect on their business. THEY know prayer makes a difference. Worship is prayer with a soundtrack and a megaphone.

Karl Gessler is a long-time CBR volunteer and supporter. He lives with his wife and children in western North Carolina. 

2021 Summer Interns!

Triniti Patterson

We are blessed again to have four outstanding young people joining us for our Summer Intern Program. Triniti Patterson, Rebekah Warren, Isaiah Abney, and Klayton Wasson come from all over the country and bring many different interests and talents to our merry band of pro-life missionaries here at CBR.

Triniti grew up in Southern California, and was aware of abortion as a child because her dad was a street preacher and activist.  However, it wasn’t until the New York Reproductive Healthcare Act was passed in January 2019 that she realized the extreme horror of abortion and decided to become active in the fight to end it.

Triniti is a rising junior at Cedarville University, studying political science and Biblical counseling. When asked what her most noteworthy experience of the internship has been so far, she said:

I really used to think that anyone could be persuaded by facts and logic, because we are created as logical beings.  But people who are being controlled by demons and dark spirits cannot be convinced of goodness by facts and logic alone.  Working for CBR has made that clear to me.

Rebekah Warren

In the future, Triniti hopes to continue working in the pro-life movement, potentially with CBR or as a crisis therapist.  We won’t beat around the bush: we hope she sticks with us!

Rebekah, a St. Louis native, also comes from a pro-life family.  In fact, her parents have supported CBR for many years and have obviously raised their children to be serious pro-life Christians.  Now a rising senior majoring in Accounting & Entrepreneurship at Baylor University, we have great hopes that she will bring her many talents to CBR and work with us to end legalized child-killing.

Interning with CBR was not even initially Rebekah’s plan for this summer.  She had applied last fall and then forgot about it and began pursuing accounting internships through Baylor.  When we contacted her to interview this winter, she had just been presented with a fantastic business internship offer.  After the interview, Rebekah says she was “both convicted and encouraged.”  She had to decide if she should take the “next right step” for her career, or spend the summer serving the Lord with CBR.  We are incredibly glad she chose CBR!

Isaiah Abney

We first met Isaiah last year at our Pro-Life Leadership Youth Camp in Columbus, Georgia.  Isaiah just graduated from high school, so we were both surprised and delighted that he wanted to spend his summer with us!  When we found out that he plans to join the military, we realized how serious and committed Isaiah is to the cause. “I wanted to do something tangible for God before I leave to the military, and He led me here, so I followed,” Isaiah reflected.

A driving force behind Isaiah’s pro-life convictions is his family.  He was raised in a very pro-life home in Georgia, but like many young kids, didn’t give it too much serious thought.  Then, his mother told him that she had had an abortion.  That made the bigger issue of abortion real and personal to Isaiah, and it inspired him to action.  We are blessed to have Isaiah with us this summer!

Klayton comes to us all the way from Oregon, where he was studying for his Associates degree and considering transferring to a Bible college.  Like the others, Klayton was raised pro-life, but only as he got older did he really begin to consider the gravity of abortion.  He was spurred to action when several friends and relatives got abortions, and he knew he had to do something.  Klayton explains:

I wanted professional training to learn how to stand up for the preborn and to learn how to do activism in the most effective way.  I came to CBR with the intention of making a difference saving lives back home.

Klayton Wasson

Klayton says that being outside an abortion clinic has been the most noteworthy experience of the internship so far.  It makes the otherwise abstract mothers and children a visual reality, and therefore harder to forget.

When asked what he plans to do after graduation, Klayton replied “Serve Jesus.”  Amen!  As to where he might serve, we have a place to recommend!

Thank you for supporting CBR and these outstanding young people.  Please pray that God will bring them back to us next year and also send many more.

 

Criminalizing Abortion: Why CBR Opposes Punishment for Post-Abortive Women

By Gregg Cunningham

Nearly every woman who aborts knows in her heart that what she is doing is wrong:
Romans 1:18-20, “since what may be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them. For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.”

BibleRef.com: This verse (Romans 2:15) concludes an idea begun in the previous verse. Paul wrote that Gentiles, though not given God’s law or required to follow it, may end up keeping parts of the law ‘by nature’ just by listening to their own conscience. This is similar to his point from the prior chapter that God makes certain ideas obvious to all people (Romans 1:18–20). Now Paul makes it clear that this doesn’t mean Gentiles with this awareness always do the right thing. What it does mean, apparently, is that the same God who gave the Israelites the law also built into the heart of all people a sense of what is right and wrong. It is the human conscience that condemns us when we do wrong and defends us when we do right. The conscience, though, is not a perfect standard. It is flexible. It can be hardened or softened. That’s why Paul refers to our ‘conflicting thoughts,’ as the conscience talks to us about the morality of our choices.

But there are different levels of “knowing.” Few women who contemplate abortion actually understand the full extent of abortion’s evil. Nearly every influential institution in society tells women that the human embryo and fetus are mere “blobs of tissue” and that abortion is the most common surgical procedure in medicine and not a morally consequentially act. Then in the face of this relentless campaign of lies and propaganda, most churches do little or nothing to properly educate believers about the indescribable miracle of prenatal development or the inexpressible horror of abortion. A lack of information combines with an abundance of bullying and women grudgingly yield to temptation. Then some pro-lifers argue we should pile-on with still more punishment for these already victimized women.

Surveys reveal that most women who abort felt coerced to do so. They are frequently pressured by boyfriends who threaten to abandon them, husbands who threaten to divorce them, parents who threaten to kick them out of the house. They fear they will have to withdraw from school or lose their jobs. Then a certain element of the prolife movement tells them if they abort, we will work to throw them in jail. They therefore see us as their uncaring enemies, not their supportive friends.

A crisis pregnancy support group recently noted that “According to a study recently published in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, nearly 75 percent of the 987 American women who participated in an after-abortion survey admitted that they experienced ‘at least subtle forms of pressure to terminate their pregnancies.’ Two other findings are significant: (1) nearly 60 percent of the women indicated that they decided to abort “in order to make others happy” and (2) almost 30% of those surveyed admitted that they were “afraid that they would lose their partner” if they didn’t abort their pregnancies. http://www.jpands.org/vol22no4/coleman.pdf

The most fundamental element of American criminal law is defined in the Latin term “mens rea.” It means that before an accused person can be convicted of a crime, it must be established that they possessed sufficient “guilty knowledge and willfulness,” which is another way of saying they must have a “guilty mind; a guilty or wrongful purpose; a criminal intent.” Women who abort are usually not without fault, but that fault seldom if ever rises to the level necessary to convict someone of a crime. People providing abortions know the facts which are carefully concealed from aborting mothers, and it is therefore they who should be held to a criminal standard of culpability.

Nor does it make sense to attempt pass legislation which would charge post-abortive women with murder when even pro-life lawmakers will rightly refuse to vote for it. Such a provision would unquestionably doom any bill containing it and the pro-aborts would chortle at the strategic stupidity of such cruelty. Most pro-life legislators understand that supporting such a hard-hearted measure would be political suicide. Who wants to campaign against an opponent who is hammering them for a belief that post-abortive women should be locked up with murderers, rapists, and the like?

Neither does it make sense to pass such legislation when the police won’t arrest women who abort, prosecutors won’t charge them, juries won’t convict them, and no judge will ever punish them. Pro-lifers must stop parroting the Planned Parenthood line that pro-lifers are women-hating misogynists who want to hurt post-abortive mothers.

Pro-lifers who pursue this doomed strategy apparently have little or no awareness of the history of failure which has accompanied it over the centuries. Even when abortion was widely unlawful in this country, women were seldom if ever convicted of violating these prohibitions. Attorney Clark Forsythe’s excellent article on this subject forcefully makes that point:
https://aul.org/2010/04/23/why-the-states-did-not-prosecute-women-for-abortion-before-roe-v-wade/

It is somewhere between moronic and imbecilic to make our already difficult task (outlawing elective abortion) virtually impossible.

 

Gregg Cunningham is the Founder and Executive Director of the Center for Bio-Ethical Reform. 

CBR’s Lincoln Brandenburg appears on CCBR’s The Pro-Life Guys Podcast

“It never occurred to me to be against using the pictures. It was just the most natural intuitive thing. Of course, this is happening, this is real, and this is something we’re outraged by, why wouldn’t we want to shout it from the rooftops? Why wouldn’t we want everyone to see what goes on behind closed doors?”

That’s just a snippet of what you’ll hear from our very own Lincoln Brandenburg on The Pro-Life Guys Podcast. Lincoln was recently interviewed by Cameron Côté, Western Outreach Director of the Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform and co-host of The Pro-Life Guys Podcast. Lincoln talks about how he first was convicted to action, some encounters he’s had during activism, and finally encourages men to step up and defend life without shame.

Check it out on your favorite podcast app, or through the link here: HPLM 16: Lincoln Brandenburg – The Pro-Life Guys Podcast (prolifeguys.com)





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