By: The Rev. Dan Kinkead
The promise of a son: What a joy to Abram and to Sarah, who had all but lost hope for children of their own after years of being barren. Even though Sarah laughed at the thought of having a child so late in life, she was blessed by the Lord in being given the desire of her heart. And this is the way that parenthood should always be. When a couple finds that they have been blessed with a Child, they are to rejoice in God’s favor toward them. But, sadly, in our day a child is not always a gift greeted with praise and thanksgiving.
As I stand outside the abortion clinic talking to women making their way in for abortion services, all of them are at various stages of pregnancy, and many of them are “showing” and are obviously past their first trimester. My silent prayer is that the dear baby inside them will quicken, that their baby will leap, just as the child John the Baptist did in his mother’s womb when she came face to face with her cousin, the Blessed Virgin Mary. I want them to know that their baby is alive, that that baby has a heartbeat, and that their baby is doing everything it can to live and to grow and to be the blessing God intended.All life is precious: We plead with those bound for the abortion clinic to reconsider and to let their baby live, just as we turn our attention and our pleading against the growing evil of euthanasia in our world.
These two opposite ends of life, birth and death, seem so unrelated. But, in truth, we are to be as thankful for the baby that is born to a loving and caring home as we are for the aged and spent elderly one who no longer recognizes family or reality. And why are these both (and every stage in between) actually “precious”? It’s because they are created in the image of God, and it is He himself who has placed within them a soul fit for His companionship. We are God’s workmanship, the scripture says, and only in appreciating His presence and His loving hand in the creation and preservation of all people can we fully understand His call for us to respect life.