|

Love Your Unborn Neighbour
January
22, 2006
By
John Piper
Luke
10:25-37
And behold, a lawyer stood up to put him
to the test, saying, “Teacher, what shall
I do to inherit eternal life?” 26 He said
to him, “What is written in the Law? How
do you read it?” 27 And he answered, “You
shall love the Lord your God with all your
heart and with all your soul and with all
your strength and with all your mind, and
your neighbor as yourself.” 28 And he said
to him, “You have answered correctly; do
this, and you will live.” 29 But he, desiring
to justify himself, said to Jesus, “And
who is my neighbor?” 30 Jesus replied, “A
man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho,
and he fell among robbers, who stripped
him and beat him and departed, leaving him
half dead. 31 Now by chance a priest was
going down that road, and when he saw him
he passed by on the other side. 32 So likewise
a Levite, when he came to the place and
saw him, passed by on the other side. 33
But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to
where he was, and when he saw him, he had
compassion. 34 He went to him and bound
up his wounds, pouring on oil and wine.
Then he set him on his own animal and brought
him to an inn and took care of him. 35 And
the next day he took out two Denarii and
gave them to the innkeeper, saying, ‘Take
care of him, and whatever more you spend,
I will repay you when I come back.’ 36 Which
of these three, do you think, proved to
be a neighbor to the man who fell among
the robbers?” 37 He said, “The one who showed
him mercy.” And Jesus said to him, “You
go, and do likewise.”
God
has commanded us in his word, “You shall
not murder” (Exodus 20:13). And he told
us why. He said in Genesis 9:6, “Whoever
sheds the blood of man, by man shall his
blood be shed, for God made man
in his own image.” In other words, when
you murder a human, you attack God who makes
every human in his image. This is the fundamental
mistake that Princeton professor Peter Singer
makes when he argues that (quoting Richard
John Neuhaus, who debated Singer) “the life
of an adult pig deserves protection more
than that of a new born human baby, and
. . . the parents should be free to kill
their young children already born if they
deem them unacceptably disabled.”1
The reason he is wrong is that the human
baby is created in the image of God, and
the pig isn’t.
The
psalmist describes how God is personally
and meticulously involved in the creation
of each person in the womb: “For you formed
my inward parts; you knitted me together
in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for I
am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful
are your works; my soul knows it very well”
(Psalm 139:13-14). And lest we think that
somehow the children in the womb are not
children—not human, not persons—God lets
us read the words of the angel in Luke 1:15
to Zechariah concerning John the Baptist,
“He will be filled with the Holy Spirit,
even from his mother’s womb,” so that a
few verses later his pregnant mother said
to Mary, “Behold, when the sound of your
greeting came to my ears, the baby in my
womb leaped for joy” (Luke 1:44).
And
when we have heard all these things, God
says to us in America in the 21st century
stained with the blood of millions of unborn
babies, these words from Proverbs 24:11-12,
“Rescue those who are being taken away to
death; hold back those who are stumbling
to the slaughter. If you say, ‘Behold, we
did not know this,’ does not he who weighs
the heart perceive it? Does not he who keeps
watch over your soul know it, and will he
not repay man according to his work?”
What
work? The work of mercy, the work of justice,
the work of caring for the oppressed and
defending the unborn. The good work of loving
the unborn. Why after all did Jesus Christ
come to redeem us from our sin and guilt?
Paul tells us in Titus 2:14, “He gave himself
for us to redeem us from all lawlessness
and to purify for himself a people for his
own possession who are zealous for good
works.” Among which is the glorious
work of laboring and defending our unborn
neighbor.
January
22 is the 33rd anniversary of the Supreme
Court decision called Roe vs. Wade.
That decree that made abortion legal in
our country all the way up to birth, if
the health of the mother is at stake; and
the health of the mother has been construed
to mean any discomfort that would come from
an unwanted pregnancy. So what we have had
for 33 years is virtually abortion on demand.
In that time, the lives of 46 million unborn
children have been ended by abortion in
the United States. Women’s Issues
web site estimates that worldwide that same
number of abortions happen each year.
Abortion
Closer to Home
The
parable of the Good Samaritan, among other
things, presses us from the global to the
local. So let’s take a step closer to home.
Since 1973 in our state, Minnesota, the
lives of 490,000 unborn children have been
ended by abortion. In 2004 there were 13,788
abortions in this state. (As tragic and
as horrifying as that is, there is an encouraging
side because this is the lowest number since
1975.)
But
the parable of the Good Samaritan would
press us still closer to home. Almost all
the abortions in Minnesota are done here
in the Twin Cities in five local clinics.
I want to give you a glimpse into these
clinics and then turn to the parable of
the Good Samaritan and then come back to
them at the end with a dream.
1.
Midwest Health Center for Women
is located downtown Minneapolis at 33 South
Fifth Street, 4th Floor, Minneapolis, Minn.,
55402. On their web site they state openly
that they provide about 3,000 of those abortions
each year and advocate for the sexual freedom
that makes many of them feel so necessary.
Midwest
Health Center for Women provides quality
health care and advocates and promotes
reproductive freedom and healthy sexuality.
. . . Annually, Midwest provides abortion
services for 3,000 patients. . . . We
also seek to expand public awareness and
gather support for reproductive rights
and health care.
As
an abortion provider we are prepared for
a long political battle over reproductive
rights. Continued attacks from the anti-choice
minority threaten access to this legal
and safe procedure through legislative
action and regulatory burdens. For example,
the so-called “Women’s Right to Know”
which became Minnesota law in 2003 added
$80,000 annually to the clinic’s operating
budget.
2.
Meadowbrook Women’s Clinic
is located four blocks from our downtown
campus at 825 South 8th Street, Suite 1018,
Minneapolis, Minn., 55404. Here are a couple
glimpses into their work. Question from
their FAQ section: “Q: How long will the
abortion take? A: If you are less than 14
weeks, the abortion will take approximately
5 to 10 minutes. If you are 14 to 21.6 weeks,
the length of time will be somewhat longer
(20 to 30 minutes).”
Twenty-one
and a half weeks? Do you know what that
baby looks like and experiences? He or she
is about 11 inches long and weighs about
a pound and is within two or three weeks
of being able to live outside the womb.
Steve Calvin, who works in the neonatal
unit at Abbott hospital wrote in the Minneapolis
StarTribune
Recently,
I performed an amniocentesis on a patient
at 21 weeks gestation because of a possible
infection. On ultrasound, the fetus pulled
away from the needle when it grazed her
arm. It is clear to me that this fetus
felt discomfort, and that she would feel
horrible pain if she were dismembered
in the exercise of an unjust constitutional
right.2
The
dismembering of a human being routinely
in 30 minutes on an outpatient bases—or
any other way—is barbaric. Four blocks from
our church all year long—like churches within
smelling distance of Auschwitz or Dachau
or Buchenwald.
3.
Robbinsdale Clinic, 3819
West Broadway, Robbinsdale, Minn., 55422.
They strike a defensive political posture
at their web site:
It
is the responsibility of all American
women and their families to work to keep
abortion safe and legal by voting for
Pro-Choice officials, and working with
various organizations to ensure this basic
fundamental right of reproductive freedom.
Please remember, while over 70% of Americans
believe in the right to choose, a small
but vocal minority of narrow-minded anti-abortion
forces, could make a major impact on the
threat to women’s rights.
4.
Mildred S. Hanson, M.D,
710 East 24th Street, Suite 403, Minneapolis,
Minn., 55404. The web site calls her a “Late
Abortion Specialist” and then boasts in
this distinction: “First and second trimester
abortions by a woman gynecologist, the first
physician in Minnesota to perform the second
trimester D&E procedure.” The business
side is clear and simple at her site:
Fees
for Office Abortions Through 20 Weeks
| 5-6 weeks |
$475 |
| 7-10.5 weeks |
$420 |
| 11-12 weeks |
$515 |
| 13-14 weeks |
$615 |
| 15th week |
$820 |
| 16th week |
$920 |
| 17-18 weeks |
$1,070 |
| 18-19.4 weeks |
$1,320 |
| 19-20 weeks |
$1,520 |
5.
Planned Parenthood, Highland Park
Clinic, 1965 Ford Parkway, St.
Paul, Minn., 55116. Out of the 13,000+ abortions
done in Minnesota each year about 23% are
done at Planned Parenthood. Their web site
describes how caring this is: “With many
years of experience, our physicians and
staff provide caring, confidential, and
affordable abortion services.”
That’s the reality of abortion fairly close
to home. Of course even closer are the abortions
you have experienced personally: your girlfriend,
your wife, your daughter, your granddaughter,
yourself. Jesus hates abortion and he loves
you. When you feel both of these truths
the way he wants you to, you will weep with
brokenhearted joy. I know women in this
church who have walked through it, been
broken by it, and emerged strong in the
Lord and in the cause of life. Be patient
with your healing. Your time for courage
in the cause of life will come.
Who
is my Neighbor?
O
how many things we could observe from the
parable of the Good Samaritan! But I have
one main observation to make and apply to
our situation. The parable begins with a
lawyer trying to justify himself by asking
the question “Who is my neighbor” (in verse
29), and ends with Jesus’ question in verse
36, “Which of these three, do you think,
proved to be a neighbor?” Ten sermons could
be preached on ten different issues raised
by this parable. But I want you to see this
one crucial thing: Jesus tells a story that
changes the question from What kind
of person is my neighbor? to What
kind of person am I? He changes the
question from What status of people
are worthy of my love? to How can
I become the kind of person whose compassion
disregards status?
Let’s
make sure we see this and then apply it.
A lawyer asks in verse 25 about how to inherit
eternal life. He is not sincere. It says
he is testing Jesus. Jesus puts the question
back to him in verse 26 to reveal the duplicity.
What does the Law say? He answers in verse
27 that we should love God will all our
heart and our neighbor as ourselves. Jesus
exposes him by saying in effect: So you
already know the answer. He sees that he
has been exposed and needs to cover up his
hypocrisy and so verse 29 says, “Desiring
to justify himself, said to Jesus, ‘And
who is my neighbor?’” In other words, it’s
not so easy, Jesus. Life is complicated—like,
which kind of people do we have to love?
Who qualifies for being a neighbor in the
command, “Love your neighbor”? Every race?
Every age. The unborn?
Now
how will Jesus answer? He does not like
this question. Carving humanity up into
groups some of whom are worthy of our love
and others are not. Jesus does not answer
the question, “Who is my neighbor?” He tells
a parable that changes the question.
Jesus
Shifts the Focus
Between
Jerusalem and Jericho a man falls among
robbers and verse 30 says they “stripped
him and beat him and departed, leaving him
half dead.” The first two people to pass
by are a priest and a Levite—the most religious
folks—and they both pass by on the other
side (vv. 31, 32). Then came a Samaritan,
not even a Jew, and the key phrase about
this man is at the end of verse 33: “he
had compassion.”
You
see how the focus has shifted. The question
about what kind of man is dying is not even
in the story any more. The whole focus is
now on the kind of people who are walking
by. The first two felt no compassion. The
Samaritan was a different kind of person.
So when you get to the end, what’s the question
Jesus asks? Was it, “So was the wounded
man a neighbor?” No. That is not the question.
Jesus asked the lawyer (v. 36), “Which of
these three do you think proved to be
a neighbor to the man who fell among the
robbers?” The lawyer said in verse 37, “The
one who showed him mercy.” And Jesus said
to him, “You go, and do likewise.”
No
answer to his question: Who is my neighbor?
Instead: Go become a new kind of person.
Go get a compassionate heart. This is exactly
what Jesus died for. This is the promise
of the new covenant in Ezekiel 36:26, “A
new heart also will I give you, and a new
spirit will I put within you.” And Jesus
said at the last supper, “This cup that
is poured out for you is the new covenant
in my blood” (Luke 22:20). Those who follow
Jesus all the way to the cross will see
him there paying for their new heart.
What
Kind of Person Am I?
So
the point I believe I should make about
abortion is this: When all the arguments
are said and done about the status of pre-born
human life and whether the unborn qualify
for our compassion along with mommy and
daddy and grandma and granddaddy—when we
are done trying to establish, “Is this my
neighbor?”—the decisive issue of love remains:
What kind of person am I? Does compassion
rise in my heart for both mommy and daddy
and grandma and granddaddy and this unborn
baby? Or do I just get another coke and
change the channel?
Look
at the practical compassion—the concrete,
hands-on, get-messy compassion of verses
34-35. This is a huge part of the parable.
Jesus belabors this to drive something home
about the kind of person who follows him.
Here it is (vv.34-35):
He
went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring
on oil and wine. Then he set him on his
own animal and brought him to an inn and
took care of him. 35 And the next day
he took out two Denarii [two days wages,
maybe $300] and gave them to the innkeeper,
saying, “Take care of him, and whatever
more you spend, I will repay you when
I come back.”
That
is amazing!
A
Heart of Compassion
My
prayer for us in response to this message
is that we become like that. A heart of
compassion leading to hands-on, messy, sacrificial,
time-consuming, stressful action. I believe
there is something everyone can do in the
cause of defending and protecting and loving
everyone involved in abortion.
Which
takes us back to Midwest Health Center for
Women, and Meadowbrook Women’s Clinic, and
Robbinsdale Clinic, and Mildred Hanson,
and Planned Parenthood. The people who own
and operate and work there are real people.
Above all, they need Christ. What might
God be pleased to do if 4,000 concerned
Christians committed ourselves to pray daily
that Christ would manifest his saving grace
in those places? What divine encounters
of compassionate involvement might God create?
Let there be no violence from our side.
The gospel is the power of God unto salvation
for everyone who believes. If the owners
and administrators and employees of these
five clinics met the living Christ and were
saved, would abortion be offered in Minnesota
any longer? There is more that you can do.
But this much I ask you to do. Pray regularly
that the owners, administrators, and employees
of Midwest Health Center for Women, Meadowbrook
Women’s Clinic, Robbinsdale Clinic, Mildred
Hanson, and Planned Parenthood would be
saved.
Footnotes
1
Richard John Neuhaus, “While We’re at
It” in First Things (January,
2006, Issue 159), 74.
2
Steve Calvin, “Think Fetuses Can’t Feel
Pain? Try Telling Them That” (Minneapolis
StarTribune, August 30, 2005).
|