Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Opinion|Thu, Nov. 29 2007 09:41 AM EST

American Moral Values: Narrowed or Prioritized?

By Richard Land|Christian Post Guest Columnist

It’s a cheap shot to criticize socially conservative American “values voters” for narrowing the political litmus test to abortion and same-sex “marriage,” because “narrowing” and “prioritizing” are two different things. Can there be a higher priority or a more compelling moral issue than three thousand six hundred babies dying every day? If a child is born poor, he at least has some chance of escaping poverty. If he is killed before he is born, he doesn’t have a chance of escaping his mother’s womb.

We lose more babies through abortion every year than the total fatalities in all of the wars in which we have ever participated, commencing with the French and Indian War and including the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Civil War, the Spanish-American War, World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Gulf War I, and Gulf War II. What’s wrong with religious people who are not making this their paramount issue?

Again, I would contend that supporting traditional marriage is not narrowing, but prioritizing. Marriage is the basic building block of human society. A couple of years ago, I was lecturing at Harvard. During the question-and-answer period, a student asked me the following question concerning my opposition to same-sex “marriage”: “You seem like a nice guy. Why would you want to interfere in the personal, private relationship of two individuals?”

I answered that marriage is anything but a personal, private relationship. That is one reason the state requires a license to get married. Marriage is a social and civic institution with profound social responsibilities, obligations, and impact. Every society in human history has severely regulated who may get married to whom, and under what circumstances they may dissolve the relationship, precisely because of this institution’s enormous importance to the entire society. Same-sex “marriage” is a cultural and social issue with profound moral, social, and public policy implications.

I am stunned when someone isn’t concerned about the threat of further unraveling the nation’s already frayed social fabric by redefining marriage through judicial fiat against the will of the people. Even Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, probably the current Supreme Court’s most liberal justice, has criticized Roe v. Wade as a misguided attempt to rewrite and liberalize the nation’s abortion laws through judicial imposition rather than through a democratic movement to liberalize abortion through legislation.

Had such a popular movement succeeded, it would have built a more lasting consensus on social policy. Instead, the Supreme Court’s rulings on abortion made the issue far more divisive than it otherwise would have been. If the courts try to force same-sex “marriage” on America, their judicial overreach will be equally destructive of the social fabric.

Criticizing social conservatives for prioritizing opposition to abortion and same-sex “marriage” is like criticizing Martin Luther King Jr. for being “preoccupied” with racial reconciliation and social justice. Did Dr. King have other concerns? Yes. And so should we. But, like Dr. King, we should understand that some moral issues take precedence over other issues in times when grave injustices are being committed. By the way, when Dr. King said his dream was a country in which people would be judged by the content of their character, not by the color of their skin, he wasn’t exactly espousing a secular, relativist vision.

What was his focus? He kept the main thing the main thing. The abolitionists in the nineteenth century kept the main thing the main thing. The twenty-first-century pro-lifers are keeping the main thing the main thing. The Bible specifically condemns the pagan practice of sacrificing children, and I’m happy to be criticized for taking on the issue of abortion as a grave moral crisis.

The bottom line is that one’s view of human life impacts (prioritizes) how one regards other serious social issues, such as the sex trafficking of women and children, the genocide in Darfur, and the grinding poverty that grips many in Third World countries and in sections of our nation. If innocent human life is indeed precious, then it deserves protections at all ages and in all places.
____________________________________________________________

Dr. Richard Land is president of The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, the Southern Baptist Convention's official entity assigned to address social, moral, and ethical concerns, with particular attention to their impact on American families and their faith.

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  • GMG »
    Thu Nov 29, 2007 9:51 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    mcfbc - God has obviously given you a great heart for this neighborhood that needs you so badly. And yes, there are an abundance of people so busy with their own lives that they really can't conceive of the conditions you deal with. So show them. Take some video, some testimonies, things that show the reality of their lives, to some of these rich churches. Ask for mission status. Use that money to pay for tutors, etc. from that very neighborhood if that's feasible. You may have already thought of some of these things, I know. But don't forget that a lot of these people are afraid of that kind of environment, and though that might stop them from physically helping, some of them are bound to be interested in helping financially.

  • Thu Nov 29, 2007 6:07 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    RussellStJohn,
    I'm afraid I don't agree. You can make your arguments about how people have a chance to escape poverty, but the numbers dont back that. And I don't want to get into a comparison of sins but I have dealt with horrible examples of sins that I would put on a par with murder, such as kids in sexually, emotionally and physically abusive situations,. But, if you want to argue about degrees of sins, how about children born to poverty in other countries. What about the millions of children that are born worldwide who die for malnutrion. You see the pictures and videos, they are in such bad shape that they cannot even hold their heads up. They have no chance to live in poverty. Their only fate is death.

  • Thu Nov 29, 2007 6:02 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I notice there's a whole lot of outrage around here about retail stores with signs that say "Happy Holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas". Is that a higher priority than torture, too?

    I'm starting to think there may be some truth to the caricatures painted of us.

  • Thu Nov 29, 2007 3:16 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Dr. Land has made a good case for his comments regarding “narrowing” vs. “prioritizing.” I will quote from his opening paragraph something which SportinLife and mcfbc obviously failed to read and/or comprehend. "Can there be a higher priority or a more compelling moral issue than three thousand six hundred babies dying every day? If a child is born poor, he at least has some chance of escaping poverty. If he is killed before he is born, he doesn’t have a chance of escaping his mother’s womb."
    The person who places torture or poverty on a higher or even an equal priority to abortion is clearly someone who is not thinking rationally. Try to read Mr. Land's article with an open mind. Not all human actions which are evil are of equal weight. Abortion involves the premeditated killing of a fellow human being, an action of immense evil. Torture and neglect of the poor may well be evil actions also but neither can compare with murder.

  • Thu Nov 29, 2007 10:16 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    How about the torture of other human beings? I'm horrified that our government is now doing it openly, and millions of Americans have apparently accepted it as normal and necessary that we treat our enemies (actually, just people suspected of being our enemies, which is even more awful) in such a way. This is evil, period. And it's being done in our names.

    Jesus said to love our enemies and even to offer the other cheek when they strike us. Where is the voice of Jesus in our society on this issue? Whether it's a "cheap shot" or not, many Americans disagree with the priorities outlined here by Dr. Land. They have reason to mistrust our moral judgment if we are silent about torture. I never imagined I would be living in a country where I would even have to say something like this.

  • Thu Nov 29, 2007 9:30 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    My question to Dr. Land, who are you to decide what those issues of priority are? Why are issues of life in the womb more important than issues related to the poor and disenfranchised.

    Why are babies in the womb more important than children living in poverty conditions? I have a ministry to lower income families. I live in a town that is a suburb of a major city. The neighborhood deals with gangs, drugs, unemployment, family violence, prostitution and a variety of other issues. And based on my experience with churches, it is all about narrowness. I live in a very conservative part of the country with many conservative churches. If I contacted these churches and told them I wanted to organize a pro life march volunteers would be everywhere. If I contacted these same churches and asked them to send volunteers for an after school tutoring ministry, guess what, no one shows. I have found that conservative Christians like Dr Land get very touchy when they are called narrow in their view, but I can only go by my experience. And my experience is that conservative Christians don't care beyond a couple of issues.

    The people in my neighborhood need Christians who are willing to commit real time, talents and treasures to the neighborhood. These same Christians scream bloody murder about their taxes being raised to help the poor and how this should be the church's role. Yet where are the churches? I'll tell you where they are, they are on the other side of town, the good side of town, where all the money and people are at. More concerned about building their nice new structures than doing what God has called us all to do.

    Dr Land, I wish you would come down my neighborhod sometime. And go by some of the drug houses, and visit some of the roach infested governemnt housing, and meet some of the kids that are doomed at birth to a life of poverty, drug addiction and gang banging because of where they are born. And you tell me that abortion is a bigger priority than these children.

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