Why Pro-Life?/What Do the Pictures Tell Us?

From Gospel Translations

Revision as of 20:06, 14 February 2011 by Kathyyee (Talk | contribs)
Jump to:navigation, search

Related resources
More By Randy Alcorn
Author Index
More About Abortion
Topic Index
About this resource

© Eternal Perspective Ministries

Share this
Our Mission
This resource is published by Gospel Translations, an online ministry that exists to make gospel-centered books and articles available for free in every nation and language.

Learn more (English).

By Randy Alcorn About Abortion
Chapter 4 of the book Why Pro-Life?

The biggest disadvantage to the preborn child has always been that there’s no window to the womb. His fate is in the hands of those who cannot see him. But in recent years this has radically changed.

Time in 2002 and Newsweek in 2003 devoted cover stories to the breathtaking ultrasound images of preborn children.[1] Newsweek asked on its cover, “Should a Fetus Have Rights? How Science Is Changing the Debate.”

All arguments vaporize in the face of the unborn child.

THE POWER OF ULTRASOUND

Rebekah Nancarrow received an $80 ultrasound at Planned Parenthood, but wasn’t allowed to see the results because “that will only make it harder on you.” Unsettled, she went to a Pregnancy Resource Center, where she was given a free ultrasound and allowed to view it. She said, “Had I not had the sonogram, I would have had the abortion. But that sonogram just confirmed 100 percent to me that this was a life within me, not a tissue or a glob.”[2]

What Do the Pictures Tell Us?

According to Thomas Glessner, “Prior to ultrasound technology, pregnancy centers reported that of the ‘abortion-minded’ women who came in for testing and advice, about 20 percent to 30 percent decided to remain pregnant. With pregnancy centers using ultrasound machines, that proportion has jumped to 80 percent or 90 percent.”[3]

Audrey Stout, a nurse, told me of an ultrasound she performed. This particular time the baby “opened and closed her mouth, had the hiccups, laid back as if in a beach chair, stretching her little legs. She even held up hands so Mom could count her fingers. The mother was visibly touched.”

When Audrey finished the scan she asked the woman what her plans were. “She replied, ‘I am going to have my baby.’ I asked if the scan had made a difference; she said, ‘Big-time. I just came in here to get a pregnancy verification so I could go have an abortion.’”[4]

Thousands of stories like this have emerged from pregnancy centers that now use ultrasounds. Internet sites display astounding ultrasound images—some clearly show the unborn smiling, yawning, stretching, and sleeping.[5]

Still, denial remains surprisingly strong. When I showed an intrauterine photograph of an eight-week unborn child to a pro-choice advocate—an intelligent college graduate—she asked me, “Do you really think you’re going to fool anyone with this trick photography?”

I told her she could go to Harvard University Medical School textbooks, Life magazine,[6] or Nilsson’s A Child Is Born[7] and find exactly the same pictures. She didn’t want to hear it. Why? Because she was really saying, “That’s obviously a child in this photograph, and because I don’t want to believe abortion kills a child, I refuse to believe that’s a real photograph.”

WHAT THE REMAINS INDICATE

A film called “The Gift of Choice” claims that the unborn is “a probability of a future person.”But what’s left after an abortion are small but perfectly formed body parts—arms and legs, hands and feet, torso and head. The physical remains indicate the end not of a potential life but of an actual life. If you don’t believe this, examine the remains of an abortion.[8] If you cannot bear to look, ask yourself why. If this were only tissue, rather than a dismembered child, it wouldn’t be hard to look at, would it?

In his how-to manual, Abortion Practice, Dr. Warren Hern states, “A long curved Mayo scissors may be necessary to decapitate and dismember the fetus.”[9] One must have a head in order to be decapitated and body parts in order to be dismembered. Lumps of flesh and blobs of tissue aren’t decapitated or dismembered.

Why are the same people who watch bloody killings and gruesome autopsies in prime-time dramas disturbed by abortion photographs? Pro-choice feminist Naomi Wolf, speaking of pictures of aborted babies, acknowledges,

To many pro-choice advocates, the imagery is revolting propaganda. There is a sense among us, let us be frank, that the gruesomeness of the imagery belongs to the pro-lifers…that it represents the violence of imaginations that would, given half a chance, turn our world into a scary, repressive place.“People like us” see such material as the pornography of the pro-life movement. But feminism at its best is based on what is simply true….While images of violent fetal death work magnificently for pro-lifers as political polemic, the pictures are not polemical in themselves: they are biological facts.We know this.”[10]

THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IGNORANT

When a pro-life candidate ran television ads showing aborted babies, people were outraged. A CBS Evening News reporter declared the abortion debate had reached a “new low in tastelessness.” Strangely, there was no outrage that babies were being killed…only that someone had the audacity to show they were being killed.

The question we should ask is not “Why are pro-life people showing these pictures?” but “Why would anyone defend what’s shown in these pictures?” The real concern about pictures of unborn babies isn’t that they’re gory, but that they prove the accuracy of the pro-life position.

Intrauterine photos and ultrasounds aren’t hideous, but beautiful and fascinating. So do pro-choice advocates welcome these pictures? No.Abortion rights organizations have referred to ultrasound images as a “weapon” in the hand of the pro-life movement.[11] Sometimes clinics and businesses now offer Real-Time 3D (sometimes called 4D) ultrasound photographs of unborn children smiling, sneezing, and yawning. (See the ultrasound image of an unborn child on the back cover of this book.) In a PBS discussion, one panelist claimed that such pictures reflected “an unhealthy preoccupation with the baby.”[12]Notice the terminology: “the baby.” Ultrasound technologies are dismantling the age-old pro-choice argument,“It isn’t a baby.” People are saying, “What are you talking about? Of course it’s a baby—just look!”

OVERCOMING DENIAL

The Holocaust was so evil that words alone couldn’t describe it. Descriptions of Nazi death camps had long been published in American newspapers, but when these papers started printing the pictures of slaughtered people, the American public finally woke up. If not for the pictures, even today most of us wouldn’t understand or believe the Holocaust.

I visited a college campus where a pro-life group had set up displays of aborted babies alongside the victims of the Nazi death camps, the killing fields, American slavery, and other historical atrocities. Signs with warnings about the graphic photographs were posted clearly, so all those who looked did so by choice. I witnessed the profound effect on students and faculty, including those who didn’t want to believe what they were seeing.

Animal rights advocates argue that in order to make their case they must show terrible photographs, such as baby seals being clubbed to death. If there’s a place to look at such pictures, isn’t there a place to look at pictures of abortions? And if abortion isn’t killing babies…then why are these pictures so disturbing?

Was the solution to the Holocaust to ban the disgusting pictures? Or was the solution to end the killing?

Is the solution to abortion getting rid of pictures of dead babies? Or is it getting rid of what’s making the babies dead?


  1. Madeline Nash, “Inside the Womb,” Time, November 11, 2002,fckLR68–77; Debra Rosenberg, “The War Over Fetal Rights,” Newsweek,fckLRJune 9, 2003,40–51.
  2. Mark O’Keefe, “Activists Tout Ultrasound Images to DiscouragefckLRAbortion,” Newhouse News Service, www.new-house.com/fckLRarchive/okeefe021903.html, © 2003
  3. Jennifer Kabbany, “Abortion vs. Ultrasound,” Washington Times,fckLROctober 29, 2003.
  4. Audrey Stout, Marietta, GA, e-mail to Randy Alcorn, FebruaryfckLR12, 2000.
  5. See www.logiqlibrary.com/browseAction.cfm?productID=20;fckLRwww.geddeskeepsake.com/showcase.html; www.clearviewultrasound.fckLRcom/gallery.asp;firstsightultra¬sound.com/4d_liveSA.htm;fckLRwww.gemedicalsystems.com/rad/us/4d/virtual.html; to find otherfckLRimages, enter the words ultrasound, images, and unborn into afckLRsearch engine.
  6. Life, August 1990
  7. Lennart Nilsson, A Child Is Born (New York: Delacorte Press,fckLR1977).
  8. See www.abortiontv.com/AbortionPictures1.htm.
  9. Warren Hern, “Operative Procedures and Technique,” AbortionfckLRPractice (Boulder, CO: Alpenglo Graphics, Inc., 1990), 154
  10. Naomi Wolf, “Our Bodies, Our Souls,” The New Republic,fckLROctober 16, 1995; www.epm.org/articles/naomiwolf.html.
  11. Care Net Report, vol. 4, no. 5, November 2003, Sterling, VA.
  12. Oregon Public Broadcasting, “To the Contrary,” former ClintonfckLRadministration staffer Maria Echaveste, et al., January 4, 2004
Navigation
Volunteer Tools
Other Wikis
Toolbox