Posts Tagged ‘MTSU’
Rape victim shares her story
Kelly Hicks was discussing the question of rape with two female students at Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU), when another young woman overheard and interrupted. She wanted to talk. Normally, Kelly would ask her to wait her turn, but something moved Kelly to give the young woman the floor.
She cried as she told everyone that she was raped in 8th grade. It was very traumatic. Then she described going through with the pregnancy and choosing adoption for her child. Already bold, GAP strengthened and inspired her to do a school project on abortion. She wanted to reach out to victims like herself.
As you might imagine, everyone within earshot was speechless.
Mixed nuts at Middle Tennessee State University
A few of our more disturbing encounters at Middle Tennessee State.
A slave to sodomy. A very polite young man made a shocking admission. Because of his sexual encounters with multiple men, he said, “I go to Planned Parenthood 2 or 3 times per month for STD testing.” To speak with us, he skipped class and endured not a small amount of hazing from, we assume, some of his sexual enslavers. Rejecting their manipulation, he stayed with us for an hour. Please pray for this young man. Very sad.
Science jumps the shark. He said the preborn is not human because it doesn’t have a soul. “I have researched this extensively and written papers on it; I know for a fact when the fetus gets a soul.” Jane told him, very nicely, as only Jane can do, that he was full of baloney.
Better off in the human chop shop. A young woman became more and more belligerent as she talked. She was sure that
- late term abortions are done because the mother is going to die,
- women are making thoughtful, deliberate decisions when they abort,
- the 8-week skeleton does not show differentiated cells, and
- no one wants to adopt, and if these babies are not aborted, millions will be in the broken system.
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.
Pro-Life on Campus at Middle Tennessee State University
The 2016 Fall tour brought GAP to Middle Tennessee State University. With its rating of 1.5 out of 10 moonbats, MTSU was a quiet school, allowing us to focus on the many students with thoughtful questions.
There was a small protest group with a few signs with the typical slogans. Only one protester turned to strange antics to get their point across. He wore an ape mask and held a sign that read, “Stop the genocide of Harambe.”
Abortion photos at Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU)
We would love to display our huge Genocide Awareness Project (GAP) at every major university ever year. But when funding or timing prevents GAP, we can still win hearts, change minds, and save lives by invading campus with a few “Choice” signs! Here we are at Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU).
This was an excellent target because MTSU is one of many schools where we can reserve a good space without a student invitation.
At upper-right is long-time CBR volunteer Kathy Hardin. She and her whole family have been a huge blessing to CBR and to many babies and moms. Below is Kathy’s daughter Karine, who first graced the cyberpages of FAB in 2011. She’s come a long way since Armenia! At MTSU, Karine was a force to be reckoned with. She asked anyone and everyone to take a pro-life pamphlet (bearing abortion photos, of course) and almost nobody refused.