The Number One Human Rights Issue Of Our Day

Sometimes it takes something shocking to wake people up. That happened and is hopefully happening more and more each day as people see the despicable and callous video involving planned parenthood about selling the body parts of aborted unborn human babies.

In a chilling image senior director of medical research for planned parenthood, Deborah Nucatola, swirls her wine, crunches on a salad and discusses crushing babies in a way that preserves profitable body parts intact. USA Today columnist Kirsten Powers’ comments are spot on:

“This is stomach-turning stuff. But the problem here is not one of tone. It’s the crushing. It’s the organ harvesting of fetuses that abortion-rights activists want us to believe have no more moral value than a fingernail. It’s the lie that these are not human beings worthy of protection. There is no nice way to talk about this. As my friend and former Obama White House staffer Michael Wear tweeted, “It should bother us as a society that we have use for aborted human organs, but not the baby that provides them.”

Read Powers full article here.

Over a million unborn human beings are crushed and dismembered each year in America. Something is very wrong. My prayer is that people would be awakened to the number one human rights issue of our day. The systematic extermination of unborn human beings is bad enough. But to commodify their body parts? To profit from their pain?

Have the Courage to Respectfully and Courageously Stand for the Unborn

Where should you start? Watch this video by Scott Klusendorf on how to make the case for the unborn with science and philosophy (not the Bible says so) in our post-Christian culture. Then share this post and video with others.

How to Make the Case for Life in a Post-Christian Culture with Scott Klusendorf (Impact 360 Institute) from Impact360 on Vimeo.

This isn’t a political issue…this is a human rights issue. 

Stand for human life. Stop planned parenthood. Prepare yourself to engage.

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A quick response to the “who are you to judge” objection.

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We Don’t Just Help Special Needs Children…They Help Us (Video)

Please take 3 minutes and watch this inspirational and sweet reminder of this precious little image bearer…

“So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.” – Genesis 1:27

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If Saudi Arabia Wants to Monitor Their Women Who Are We to Judge?

Yes, you read the title correctly. Recently there’s been quite the uproar over the electronic monitoring of women situation that is occurring in Saudi Arabia. Apparently men are alerted if their women arrive at the airport to leave the country. CNN reports:

When word started spreading last week that Saudi women — already some of the most oppressed and restricted in the world — were being monitored electronically as they left the country, activists were quick to express their outrage.

But what’s wrong with that? If cultural relativism is true. If Saudi Arabia wants to suppress women’s rights, then who are we to judge? You will remember that Ethical Relativism is:

…the doctrine that the moral rightness and wrongness of actions varies from society to society and that there are no absolute moral standards binding on all men at all times. Accordingly, it holds that whether or not it is right for an individual to act in a certain way depends on or is relative to the society to which he belongs.—John Ladd

Now the problem many expressing outrage in the “civilized west” face is this: Who are we to judge what Saudi Arabia does? On what basis? Their society has decided. And it follows from cultural relativism that this or any other issue for that matter is not a question of better or worse…just different. So on this view, we in the west aren’t better when we treat women with respect and dignity, just different.

But I think the absurdity of this situation in Saudi Arabia reveals at least two things. First, the bankruptcy of the idea that morality is relative to a particular cultural moment. And second, that moral relativists become moral objectivists really quickly when an issue they disagree with is promoted. In other words, people are moral relativists until someone else’s morality deeply affects them.

There are many powerful reasons to reject moral relativism (and I’ve written on them here). But the Reformer’s Dilemma is one of the most compelling. Who doesn’t admire someone who stands up for what’s right—even in the midst of passionate opposition? Figures like Jesus, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King come to mind. They were all countercultural. And most of us would agree that they affected change for the better. However, if moral relativism is true, then what is “right” is determined by whatever the majority of the culture believes. But this leads to the absurd consequence that those seeking to reform the immoral practices of society (e.g., eliminating racism or ending the oppression of women) are the immoral ones because they are acting against the cultural majority. This is a powerful reason to reject moral relativism.

So who are we to judge? Well, we are people made in the image of God who are rational and compassionate and therefore have all of the necessary capacities to make moral judgments. And when we see other human beings being mistreated and denied the dignity and respect that is theirs simply in virtue of being a special creation of God, we are right to react with moral outrage.

*You can read the whole article on CNN here.