There are certain things that
I hear or read that really rub me the wrong way; things that
immediately strike me as being wrong, but are, in my opinion, so
obviously wrong that it takes conscious thought to figure out why.
One of these statements is, “God is pro-life.”
It seems to me that there are
a lot of flaws with this argument even if you are a deeply religious
Christian. I'm not terribly familiar with the bible, but I do know
that a lot of people die, with God's express approval. I know there
are stories where he has demanded the death of innocent people, and
in fact the most basic claim of Christianity is that Jesus – an
innocent, godly man that we're all supposed to model our behavior
after – died for our sins.
This does not argue that God
is pro-life, not even for innocent people. He certainly isn't for
keeping sinners alive, not if you believe in the bible. It's full of
stories of people doing the wrong thing and getting killed for it.
Of course, in the pro-life
argument, they're specifically talking about unborn children, who
most people agree are innocent (though maybe not the people who
believe in original sin - I don't know about that). In many cases that innocence is used as a
reason not to “kill” them. So let's talk about innocents in terms
of living and dying, and with the concept of God as the all-powerful
creator in our minds.
Babies are stillborn or
miscarried all the time, even though, today, we have better survival rates
than ever before. And this is not limited to human beings, but
experienced by every species that gives live birth. In species that
lay eggs, some of the eggs never hatch, even when they've been
fertilized. The fact that it happens to all species indicates that it
is not some kind of punishment for the sins of humans, so that
argument is out the window. And God-the-creator is, by definition,
the one who made us the way we are. So if he was against pregnancies
being terminated prematurely, why would that happen naturally? As an
all-powerful deity, he could easily have made that impossible.
But I think the worst part is
that those same people are the ones who claim that God is
inscrutable; that it is impossible for human beings to understand why
God does what he does... and yet claim to know what he wants, without
being expressly told. Unless I am mistaken, and somewhere in the
bible it says God hates abortions, but I think it would be quoted all
over the place it that were the case.
No, I think their best chance
is to say that it should be God's decision; that we shouldn't play
God. It's a simple opinion (one which has been used to fight all
kinds of scientific developments), so it can't really be refuted –
that makes it the only tactic that has any chance of success, because
anyone who says “God is pro-life” certainly won't argue on pure
moral or logical grounds. Even if they could win.
As a final note, let me say
that I personally will never have an abortion. But that doesn't matter; it's completely beside the point... because this isn't a
pro-choice argument. It's simply a criticism of the statement “God is
pro-life”, because I don't think people should ascribe their own feelings to a deity which is (according to humans) inscrutable by nature.