By: The Rev. Dr. W. Ross Blackburn
The wages of abortion is death. Most obviously, of course, it brings about the death of a baby. But abortion also causes significant collateral damage. Mothers can die or be physically injured, sometimes endangering their ability to have children in the future. Relationships between the parents of an aborted child routinely often do not survive. Abortion deadens the heart, either through grief or hardness, particularly in (but not limited to) the mothers. And for the culture that tolerates it, life becomes increasingly cheap and violent.
The irony is that abortion promises life. Freedom to get on with life without the responsibilities of motherhood and fatherhood, and therefore the freedom to pursue a career, to enjoy this or that thing unhindered, to avoid the shame and/or embarrassment of being sexually active and pregnant, or simply to make ends meet. In each case, abortion is a solution to a problem that appears to be death dealing, which, left unchecked, appears to bring bondage. The implication being that one is more likely to find life on the other side of an abortion.
But it never works, because the wages of sin is death. This is why abortion will always be a Gospel issue. Paul speaks of the gospel in terms of fruit.
But what fruit were you getting at that time from the things of which you are now ashamed? For the end of those things is death. But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the fruit you get leads to sanctification and its end, eternal life. For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Romans 6:21-23)
Many who have been through abortion know all too well that the end of abortion is death and can answer very well Paul’s question concerning the fruit of the things of which they are now ashamed. What they may not know is that, in Christ, God offers fruit that leads not to death, but to eternal life. But this is the thing—people who are ashamed rarely will come forth to speak of their need, precisely because they are ashamed—which is why the Church needs to understand that abortion is a gospel issue and to speak clearly and proactively about it as such. Not to bring burdens, but to lift them. Not to make people ashamed of their fruit that leads to death, but to lead them to the One who freely gives life. Abortion is hardly the only opportunity, but it is nonetheless an important opportunity to make the Gospel plain to those living in shame.