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GUEST ARTICLE
Thursday
at 5:00 P.M.
The
nurse was business-like, yet nice in a "we would like
to have your money" sort of way. "Don't worry
about a thing," she said. "The baby isn't even
formed yet, and the uterus contains only some bloody material."
We
were in one of Florida's newest abortion clinics. My wife
and I had decided to look into the possibility of an abortion.
Our first pregnancy was somewhat unplanned and neither
of us felt ready to become parents. We were both engaged
in jobs which had become lifestyles. Such was our devotion
to the workaday world that we thought of children only
in the future, along with the house with the white picket
fence.
Actually
we were somewhat divided on the abortion issue. While I
personally did not like the implications, I tried to retain
an open mind concerning the procedure. My wife knew nothing
of the "right to life" movement and therefore
viewed the process as little more than contraceptive.
Now
that the abortion issue has again warranted front-page
headlines, the reality of abortion is once more thrust
into our consciousness. While one group is blasting the "legal
murder" concept, another is proclaiming the rights
of the impoverished to have tax-paid abortions. One group
has won, at least for the moment, but there will never
be a true victory on either side.
While
the battles rage, I remember the issue on a far more personal
level. Three weeks remained in which we could legally obtain
the process of "life termination" outside of
the confines of a hospital environment. As the date drew
nearer, the idea of killing an unborn child grew more and
more real to both of us. We were besieged by friends who
called the process murder. Others said it was merely a
minor operation that involved "the sucking out of
the uterus."
We
knew that we could not afford the costs a child would bring.
We realized that neither of us was emotionally capable
or fully able to take on the responsibilities of parenthood.
Reluctantly, a date was set.
Thursday
at 5:00 p.m. The
nurse routinely gave us our appointment. "Plan to
take a day or so off from work, Mrs. Morris."
The
days were long prior to our scheduled time. Few words were
spoken on any subject; the issue of abortion was almost
totally cast from our limited conversation. Talk of abortion
only prolonged the agony, and the less said about it, the
better. It was a joint decision after much soul-searching
and deliberation. We had made up our minds.
Thursday
dawned clear and began as usual. Both of us headed to work,
although we had arranged to leave early to attend to some "special
business." Almost angrily we drove ourselves, hoping
that unlimited activity would shorten the day and make
it end more quickly. It was strangely like the night before
Christmas when you're young, and can't wait for the morning
to come. Except that it was the evening we desired.
Mercifully,
our appointed hour came.
Several
years later we were to view some rather sobering photographs.
The "bloody mass" we had heard so much about
was before our eyes . . . except that something was definitely
wrong. From the red, chewed-up pile of unborn humanity
protruded arms with tiny hands. Each hand was complete
with the most perfectly formed fingers. Legs and feet were
also evident in the dismembered obscenity.
We
looked at the photographs, actually taken of recently aborted
children during perfectly legal abortions. Tears filled
our eyes. No one had ever told us the full truth . . .
least of all those who were so willing to "help out" at
our local abortion clinic.
We
just never knew . . . .
How
thankful we were when we looked up from the pictures that
were laid before our eyes and beheld our beautiful blond-haired,
blue-eyed daughter. How thankful we were that at 4:30 p.m.
on a Thursday less than three years before, we had changed
our minds.
Peter W. Morris
*
* * * * * *
Contrast
the joy of this couple's decision with the haunting guilt
of those who deliberately snuff out the life of their unborn
baby. Contemplate the Psalmist's amazement at how intimately
and intricately God forms and unifies all the delicate
parts of a baby's body from conception to birth.
"Thou hast covered
me in my mother's womb. I will praise thee; for I am fearfully
and wonderfully made . . . . My substance was not hid from
thee, when I was made in secret, and curiously wrought
. . . . Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect
. . . . How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God!
how great is the sum of them!" (Psalm
139:13-17).
How
do we explain such astonishing interest apart from God's
eternal purpose for every child?
(This tract may be reprinted by any and all publications by contacting the
author at PB&J International Missions, P.O. Box 243, Vilas, NC 28692.)
http://anabaptists.org/tracts/abortion.html
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