Is Hollywood Unwokening?
Columbia University's Pro-Hamas Activists Vow to Defend Camp Against Police Action
Capitalism Versus Racism
Groupthink Chorus Emerges at Trump Trial
Anti-Censorship Group Canceled by Pro-Hamas Authors
Mike Johnson Is a Hero
City Where Emergency Response Time Is 36 Minutes Wants to Ban Civilians Carrying...
There's No Right to Sleep Outdoors
State Department: Ukraine Has 'Significant' Human Rights Issues
The Alarming Implications of Trump's Immunity Claim
In Every Generation They Try to Destroy Us
Love to See It: Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Ted Cruz Fight to Protect Public...
1968 Returns as Biden’s Nightmare
The Greatest Challenge to DeSantis' Legacy in Florida
Senate Passes Foreign Aid Package, Sending It to President Biden to Sign
OPINION

Don’t Ignore the Axioms

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Chapter 2 of Genesis describes two special trees that stood in the Garden of Eden: The tree of life, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Before they sinned, Adam and Eve had permission to eat of the tree of life: God explicitly said, “You may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat.”

Advertisement

You know the rest: Chapter 3 shows how they ate the fruit from the one banned tree. God then expelled Adam, and Eve with him, “lest he reach out his hand and take also of the tree of life and eat, and live forever.” God’s desire to keep them from living forever was so strong that at the garden’s entrance “He placed the cherubim and a flaming sword that turned every way to guard the way to the tree of life.”

So God is not pro-life in the sense of letting us eat from the tree of life and live forever in our current bodies. He is pro-life in the sense of wanting us to give life to babies. Immediately following that sentence about the flaming sword, Chapter 4 of Genesis introduces the first child: “Now Adam knew Eve his wife, and she conceived.”

The “Hail, Satan” cries offered up by five pro-abortion demonstrators in Austin early last month do not indicate that most abortion advocates are subjectively Satanists—but objectively, they are fighting God. When Bible authors want to show how sick a culture is, they write about Egyptians, Rome-imposed monarchs like Herod, and sometimes Israelites themselves killing babies (Exodus 1, Matthew 2, 2 Kings 17 and 21). That’s why crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) will not refer abortion-seekers to abortionists: They do not want to be complicit in sin so grievous.

Abortionists would prefer that CPCs not exist—but they do, so the pro-abortion desire is to make them a part of the abortion web. They want CPCs to put signs on their doors announcing: No physicians here. No abortions here. In essence, go elsewhere. But CPCs know that a woman looking for an abortion does not need, first and foremost, an abortionist. She needs counseling to help her see bearing a child as a gift from God, not a curse. She may pass that gift on to others. It’s never right to toss that gift into a trashcan.

Advertisement

So CPCs lay out welcome mats, not “go elsewhere” placards. Several years ago city councils in Austin, Baltimore, and other municipalities mandated such signs. They tried to force pro-lifers to post words contrary to their beliefs. That obviously violates First Amendment rights to freedom of religion and freedom of speech. Judges saw that and said “No.”

That’s what U.S. District Court Judge Marvin Garbis saw and said two years ago when he awarded summary judgment to a Baltimore CPC. Summary judgment essentially means that one side obviously has the Constitution on its side, and last year a panel of three appeals court justices said Garbis was right. Sadly, the entire U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in July saw it differently, and commanded the district court to have a full trial.

You can read the court’s 60-page decision, but the dissents that follow it are better. Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III, the lone remaining Reagan appointee to the 4th Circuit, noted that “the majority fails to respect the Center’s right not to utter a state-sponsored message that offends its core moral and religious principles?…?it should be axiomatic that the First Amendment prohibits the government from dictating the terms of private expression.”

“Should be axiomatic.” Axioms, you may remember from math or logic class, are premises so evident as to be accepted as true without duking it out: The second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence could have started out, “We hold these truths to be axioms.” But our culture now holds nothing—not creation as described in chapter 1 of Genesis, not marriage as defined in chapter 2, not sin as shown in chapter 3—to be axiomatic.

Advertisement

That’s our problem. Yes, we need changes in courts, colleges, and media. But nothing works when we ignore biblical axioms.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos