This morning I
learned that Roe v Wade has been overturned. This is something for which I have
prayed during my entire life. I have
voted in ways that were aimed at making this possible. It is a great victory
for which I give thanks to the Lord. It
is a day to celebrate, and I certainly do.
But I don’t
feel the way I thought I would. I have
looked forward to this all my life, and yet in the moment that it occurs it feels
hollow. The reason for this is that in the
very time that I learned the news about Roe v Wade, I was in the process of answering
emails that are aimed at organizing a response to an abortion clinic that will
be opening in Carbondale, IL, sixteen miles from my church.
In May we
learned that Choices – Memphis Center for Reproductive health will be opening an abortion clinic in Carbondale. They
were doing this in preparation for Roe v Wade in order to establish the furthest
south abortion clinic in Illinois. The
intent of this location is to draw upon states south of Illinois that will
limit or eliminate abortion. Planned
Parenthood has already done this in Fairview Heights, IL, just across the
Mississippi River from St. Louis. This too
has been positioned to draw upon Missouri and other states where abortion will
be limited or banned. Abortion clinics
are being established around Illinois’ borders to serve the same purpose directed
toward other Midwest states.
Roe v Wade has
been overturned. Yet I find myself living in a state where the Governor and legislature
have done everything possible to make Illinois a center of death for the
unborn. Sadly, Illinois is not alone and
the same process is certainly taking place in other states that support
abortion.
Today is a day
to give thanks to the Lord that Roe v Wade has been overturned. It is a time to
celebrate. But that celebration must be tempered with the recognition that the
fight against abortion is simply moving into a new stage.
The overturning
of Roe v Wade is not like the atomic bombs that ended the war in the Pacific during
World War II. It is more like the Battle
of Midway in June 1942. It is a victory
that makes ultimate victory possible. But
the road to that victory followed the path of names like Tarawa, Peleliu, Iwo
Jima, and Okinawa. It was a long and
brutal fight against a fanatical enemy.
Today we give thanks. But we
must not be naive. The next stage in the struggle against this evil has just
started.
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