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Choice

Where Should We Stand?

Before the Ignorant Tightass Brigade starts running around

saying Priest Is Pro-Abortion, let me clear my throat for a couple of paragraphs. The party line I hear from many black pastors is similar to that of the Obama campaign: I am, personally, pro-life, but I do not believe in making that decision, that choice, for others. I’m a lot less comfortable with that description than I used to be, mainly because I feel like it’s a cop-out. It’s a nifty fence-sitting position that basically tells everybody what they want to hear. The biblical model is, in fact, choice. God gives us all a choice: to accept the truth of His love for us, or to reject it and go our own way. I, personally, am pro-God. Pro-God’s love. I am against anything that victimizes God’s people rather than edifies them, that separates people from God rather than draws them to Him. Abortion is one of those things that victimizes twice, that makes victims of everyone involved and destroys human potential—in both those who survive and those who do not—that it is, in my opinion, one of the worst crimes imaginable. It is a crime that begins its work before any doctor even enters the room. The emotional pain that would drive a woman to this decision has already wounded her. The selfishness that allows many young girls to view abortion as a method of birth control has already corrupted her. The waiting room full of women—with precious few men—suggests this is a terrible, unthinkably tragic decision where many women are simply on their own. No husband. No boyfriend. No pastor.

Abortion is, ultimately, an unthinkably selfish act. Like the Cain and Abel story, it is about covering up wrong. About trying to un-do things we should not have done. With rare exception, abortion is about evading the consequences of consensual acts more often than it is about medical complications or forcible victimization. Which isn’t to deny those exceptions, such as rape and incest, exist, but that there are far more elective abortions (93%) going on for selfish reasons. My guess is that the vast majority of pregnancies, welcome or not, occur mainly out of laziness. You’re all caught up in the heat of the moment, and the act becomes a selfish one, where you can’t or won’t slam on the brakes long enough to count the cost of what you're about to do. I love him. He loves me. Women and girls, particularly, roll the dice in this contraception area, which I find absolutely baffling considering the fact men can’t get pregnant. Sister: you’re the one who’ll face these consequences. It is the rare man and even rarer boy who will stand up to his responsibilities in this area. And, yet, women and girls routinely, bafflingly, take these kinds of risks in the heat of passion.

So, like Brother Cain, we are now more interested in hiding the crime. The cover-up is completely about self. About hiding our shame. From our friends, from our loved ones. From husbands. From the pastor. From the church. Many women are trying to un-do a terrible wrong. They want another chance. And, since the people they are trying to hide their sin from are often part of their support system, many of these women simply suffer alone.

Abortion is one of those things girls, in particular, think they can prepare themselves for but they really can’t. And this is perhaps the most heinous part of this business: how it destroys two lives at the same time. Selfish, silly girls, some barely in their teens, twirling their hair and popping bubble gum in the waiting room while they giggle with their friends, waiting to “get rid of it.” Many of these girls are our daughters. Many sisters, within the sound of our voices Sunday mornings, have daughters who’ve had abortions and the mothers don’t even know. Every Sunday I see these silly girls coming to church dressed like street walkers. Breasts spilling out of tight blouses, pants so tight they leave nothing to the imagination. And, when I challenge the parents about this I get the Ignorant Black Woman Head Weave and snarling accusation.

But it is these girls sitting in the clinic waiting room. Most of them are sitting there because their pastors suck at being pastors. Their pastors cannot or are afraid to pastor their mothers, their mothers—frequently but not universally single moms—are scared to parent the daughter because they’re lonely and feed on the daughter’s love and affection. So a lot of moms turn into their daughters’ pals instead of being their mothers, snapping at pastors who address the hooker outfits these little pips wear to church and defending indefensible behavior. And, often without these sisters even realizing it, the clinic waiting room is where their daughters end up. Giggling. Texting their friends. “Getting rid of it.”

Right-wing, Christian conservative parents are themselves complicit in their daughters' thinking because, as I like to point out here, it is the parents who pay for cable and satellite TV, Internet connections which are frequently left unmonitored, and cell phones. I don't advocate all Christians turning back to the Amish ways, but the fact is you folks are financing the very garbage that corrupts our youth, then getting all up in arms when your kid considers the world's views more credible than those of the bible. Even if you have certain channels blocked, by paying for cable, any cable, you are financing all of it—even the channels with the half-dressed jiggly video gals and the obscene content. And these are the values your kids are absorbing every single day, values you cannot keep up with and cannot compete with because they're in there—right into your child's bedroom—day and night. Cell phones provide unmonitored and unrestricted direct access to your child, including your child's values. It's easy to holler and run around with signs and get all Linda Tripp on everybody. But, the fact is, if you're not controlling the influences coming into your own home, if you are financing the crap on TV that is destroying our kids, your moral outrage is simple hypocrisy. Going a step farther, I am quite sure many, many of the angry moms running around with picket signs, angry dads threatening violence and blowing up clinics—I'm quite sure many of those people have daughters who have had abortions and they don't even know it. There are, undoubtedly, people reading these words who have daughters, who have granddaughters, who've had abortions and you don't even know it. She's become moody and closed, she's in the room with the door shut all the time (cable TV on constantly, of course). Whispering into her cell phone. Withdrawn. You think it's just adolescence. You think she's just going through a phase. But it might be anything. Might be drug addiction. Might be molestation. And, yes, Mom, it might very well be she's struggling with guilt over an abortion. Too many of our Mommies are simply clueless. Too many teens and young adult girls and women have had multiple abortions. You want to lower the abortion rate in this country? You want to protect your daughter from this tragedy? It's simple: either cancel the cable or demand your cable or satellite TV provider pro-rate your bill so you are not only not seeing those channels but, more importantly, not paying for those channels and not financing the very lies destroying our future.

There are perhaps two points in a woman’s life she’s never quite prepared for, no matter how much she thinks she is. One is ending her virginity. The overwhelming majority of our girls end their virginity involuntarily, as either a result of peer pressure, fear of losing their clueless idiot boyfriend, or, worse, rape or incest. A girl losing her virginity is a moment she can never do over. It is a moment she will remember for the rest of her life. And many, many girls endure that moment, take that step, at the wrong time and for the wrong reason. The other thing I’m quite sure a girl or woman cannot prepare themselves for is aborting a pregnancy. Not the procedure itself, which can be an emotionally scarring business of inducing labor and evacuating fetal parts, but the ravages of self that result. Many girls go into the clinic giggling, fewer emerge that way. They may put on a brave front for their friends, but I am quite certain that first night is a sleepless one. Alone with their thoughts, the enormity of their decision crashes down on them. And, with only their equally-clueless girlfriends to turn to, this is weight she must now carry on her own. Can’t tell mom. Can’t turn to pastor—whom she barely knows beyond a kind of head-pat on Sunday mornings.

Many of our sisters have daughters suffering just like this. Down the hall. Up the stairs. Just a few feet away, mom has no clue what she’s going through because mom as learned to stay in her lane. Mom is selfishly relying on her daughter for Mom’s own emotional needs, and many, many times Mommy will sacrifice what is best for their child out of fear of rejection and, therefore, having to deal with their own loneliness. So, many moms will see what they choose to see, respecting their kids’ “privacy” at the expense of the child’s humanity. Mom knows something’s wrong. She’s just writing it off to a schoolyard heartbreak or normal teen angst.

Mom: she had an abortion. And she can’t tell you.

This is the crime the church should be up in arms about.

The holocaust, not only of the unborn, but of those who survived. Those who went in one door giggling and texting, and came out the other broken and wounded. Over times the wounds do not heal, rather they calcify and harden, destroying enormous potential. Ruining God’s plan for us. You wanna get mad about something, get mad about that.

If I had my way, I’d certainly outlaw abortion. But I’d outlaw ignorant tightasses first. Then I’d outlaw pastors who are just selfish, lazy bastards who like being called “pastor.” For, it is those two demographics that are, in many ways, the proximate cause of a great number of these abortions. Banning would only make abortion less-safe, as it would now go underground, into back alleys and basements.

If I could outlaw something, I’d outlaw Lazy Pastors. I’d pass a Lazy Pastor law that strips pastors of their pastorate when they do not invest themselves in their flock. When they don’t know Mommy and daughter enough to know, intuitively, when something’s wrong. When they are so high and lifted up that these fatherless daughters cannot trust them or turn to them. When the needs of these husband-less mothers are not being seen to to the point where these mommies are using their children as emotional crutches. Pastors: this stuff happens before your very eyes. This is the recipe for disaster, and this is where many of these abortions get their start: lonely women, and children who have pals instead of parents. Far too many of our pastors are simply tone deaf. And, rather than do what Jesus actually asked us to do—become involved with our brothers and sisters—we look to the government to legislate behavior. Which is a cop-out and a lie.

It’s not what Jesus did. Its not what He asked us to do. He asked us to be better pastors. Better fathers. Better mothers. Mom: she had an abortion., or, she’s on her way to having one. Get up. Take a risk. Get involved. Don’t worry about her getting mad at you—that’s what teens are supposed to do, they’re supposed to be little pains in the butt. Stop trying to be popular. Stop tip-toeing around your own house. Get in her face. Get in your son’s face.

The church is trying to fight this holocaust of the unborn by electing liars who use this critically important issue to sucker you into voting for them. If you’re really concerned about the crisis of abortion, the battleground is right there—right in front of you. In your church. In your community. In your home. The very two-facedness of

the church on this issue is simply staggering. First, you preach abstinence only, second you tell kids nothing about birth control, third, you’re not involved in their lives or in their parents’ lives. The effective work of the church is one-to-one: in the lives of those we serve. That’s the real battleground: recognizing and dealing with the conditions that bring those girls to the clinic waiting room in the first place. And that’s where far too many of us are asleep at the switch. All this hollering and complaining, but the underlying cause of abortion is us. Our failure as parents, as teachers, as ministers, as pastors. But I've never seen the placard STOP ABORTION: BE A BETTER PASTOR. In the African American tradition, we tend to treat pastors like kings. They’re not kings. They are servants. They are shepherds. Shepherds cannot do their job without getting their hands dirty. If your pastor is not accessible, is not involved in your family’s life, in the lives of your children, he hardly deserve to be called a pastor.

You really want to end abortion? Start there. Be a better pastor. Be a better parent. Picketing, protesting, and voting for lying bastards who are just using you is a cop-out, an abdication of our true responsibility. As Christians, why not try and do what Jesus asked us to do? Why not give that a shot for once. For, maybe if we all were doing our jobs better, there’d be no need for abortions in the first place.

Christopher J. Priest
28 September 2008 (Pages 2-4)
14 April 2013 (Page 1)
editor@praisenet.org
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