Been classically trained on a world class stage, with incomparable volume, to observe more than just the surface happenings. So when I hear critics promoting inaccuracies and inconsistencies, I often feel like maybe they can’t see the forest for the trees.
My reality check is always the mirror. Ain’t in no position to judge another. None. Got so many rough edges to polish, it’ll take a lifetime.
After writing yesterday’s post, wondered if I had crossed a line by sharing statistics I can not verify as 100% accurate. Then it hit me. Truly, the statistics are irrelevant. What if only one child was aborted per day, or per hour? No one could dispute that number.
What this really comes down to is when do we get to say it’s okay to snuff out a life?
These photos and captions are the prelude to today’s post. Please read carefully.
But when the Deacon shared these statistics, I became nauseous:
39th anniversary of Roe vs Wade
22% pregnancies end in abortion (1 in 5)
47% have had more than one abortion (for real?)
each day 3,500+ abortions happen
Now, a day later, after Googling abortion statistics, I question the statistics validity. And then instantaneously think, “This isn’t about whether the statistics are accurate, it’s about whether taking away life from a living being seems morally acceptable”.
Bill Clinton (in yesterday’s headline) isn’t trying to solve all the world’s problems, just most of them. Jesus is trying to solve all the world’s problems. But He’s trying to solve them through ordinary people, not Presidents. At Church today, the Deacon talked about our role as follower.
He suggested that our laws shouldn’t drive our values, but that our values ought to drive our laws. Roe vs Wade on January 22, 1973 created a law that leaves me extraordinarily confused – a child dies for every abortion. Dies.
PS. It is January 22, 2012 as I write this. (it’s a “blog 90-days ahead experiment”), so it’s in the moment now, but on April 22 when we read this, we’ll race right on by it….and that was the Deacon’s point. A follower can not.
Are hyper-thinkers forgivable? I sure hope so. Otherwise, it’s gonna be a long day (week, month, year, life…).
PS. Bill Clinton’s good works allow us to forgive him right? What if it was a school teacher, or a bus driver, or a nurse that did what he did? Then what?