Thursday, July 03, 2008
Honouring The Convenience of Death
The Order of Canada is being conferred on Dr. Henry Morgentaller. It is sad and strange that we should honour such acts as are performed thousands of times a year in this man's clinics.
How can abortion be celebrated?
Has it become a virtue?
Is it worthy of praise?
Abortion may be a choice but how can we be so callous as to celebrate and promote it?
http://www.informz.net/pfm/archives/archive_693793.html
Once you get past the rhetoric of choice, what’s left is a bloody and, for most people, disreputable business.
Someone who understands what abortions really mean is Stojan Adasevic, a Serbian doctor who performed 48,000 abortions in 26 years. Studying medicine in communist Yugoslavia, he was taught that abortion was simply removing a piece of tissue.
Then he began to have nightmares about a field filled with children playing and laughing. When they saw him, they ran away in fear. In the dream, a man in a black and white habit explained to Adasevic that these were the children he had aborted. The man in the habit was St. Thomas Aquinas.
Adasevic insists that he had never heard of Aquinas. In any case, he knew what he had to do. He stopped performing abortions.
taken from
Walking and Talking
Pro-Choice as Rhetoric
by Chuck Colson
Break Point
May Henry M. receive this mercy also.
How can abortion be celebrated?
Has it become a virtue?
Is it worthy of praise?
Abortion may be a choice but how can we be so callous as to celebrate and promote it?
http://www.informz.net/pfm/archives/archive_693793.html
Once you get past the rhetoric of choice, what’s left is a bloody and, for most people, disreputable business.
Someone who understands what abortions really mean is Stojan Adasevic, a Serbian doctor who performed 48,000 abortions in 26 years. Studying medicine in communist Yugoslavia, he was taught that abortion was simply removing a piece of tissue.
Then he began to have nightmares about a field filled with children playing and laughing. When they saw him, they ran away in fear. In the dream, a man in a black and white habit explained to Adasevic that these were the children he had aborted. The man in the habit was St. Thomas Aquinas.
Adasevic insists that he had never heard of Aquinas. In any case, he knew what he had to do. He stopped performing abortions.
taken from
Walking and Talking
Pro-Choice as Rhetoric
by Chuck Colson
Break Point
May Henry M. receive this mercy also.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment