On the Civil Religion blog of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Kim Wallis posts several things about her pro-choice thinking which bear analysis.

Right off the bat, though, she starts with a blanket statement about her side that is refuted by evidence:

And I just want to put this out there: nobody is pro-abortion. Regardless of when you believe that life begins, nobody is advocating or encouraging abortions.

I would like to believe that. Unfortunately we have abortion groups putting on “Screw Abstinence” parties, thus engaging in the behavior that leads to more abortions.

Wallis, a Jew, provides links that state that Jewish law doesn’t consider fetuses children until they are born, yet from her own experience she believes that she felt life in her womb sooner. That is a commendable admission.

In Uteru
Creative Commons License photo credit: miss pupik

I was reading her links on Jewish law, and they cite Exodus 21:22-23 for that view. I am curious though how that squares with Jeremiah 1:4-5, where the Lord tells Jeremiah he knew him before he was formed in the womb. But I am most disturbed with the rabbinic teaching from that article:

Rabbi Yom tov Lippman Heller, known as Tosafot Yom Tov, in his commentary on this passage in the Mishnah, explains that the fetus is not considered a nefesh until it has egressed into the air of the world and, therefore, one is permitted to destroy it to save the mother’s life. Similar reasoning is found in Rashi’s commentary on the talmudic discussion of this mishnaic passage, where Rashi states that as long as the child has not come out into the world, it is not called a living being, i.e., nefesh. Once the head of the child has come out, the child may not be harmed because it is considered as fully born, and one life may not be taken to save another.

So if the wrong body part comes out first, the child can be destroyed. Grisly.

Back to Ms. Wallis’s post. One of her notes states:

Although I am pro-choice I too am sickened by this “abortion art” in Sherry’s post. However, when we live in a country where we celebrate freedom, inevitably there are going to be those who challenge the extent of that freedom.

The revulsion is righteous. The act may even be a hoax. What she did was not “performance art” but a sick cry for attention. It should equal the horror were an exhibit released, “What I did at Columbine High School,” or “How Many Kurds Should We Gas Today?”

I hope Ms. Wallis’s continued contemplation of her experiences as a mother lend her the insight that the life in the womb deserves the protection of law.


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