It’s instructive for those who eschew their history lessons (or conveniently forget their history lessons), because they are condemned to repeat it. The prediction that God will judge America over abortion (and homosexuality) is pitiful because it ignores past God-will-get-you predictions from past religionists. Let’s not forget that the Shakers thought the world would be over in 1792, while the Jehovah’s Witnesses pegged various years between 1914 and 1994 as an end date. Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormon church, who told church leaders in 1835 that his conversation with God revealed that Jesus would return within the next 56 years to begin the End Times. Or in 1980, televangelist and Christian Coalition founder Pat Robertson telling his 700 Club TV show “I guarantee you by the end of 1982 there is going to be a judgment on the world.” What these doomsday predictions have in common is fear-mongering foisted upon the gullible.
This recent God-will-get-you prediction also ignores America’s history of exploitation, pillaging, maiming and killing native Americans and their land, the enslaving, maiming, and killing of millions of Africans, the support of foreign regimes that raped and killed millions, and the corrupt leaders in our own government and military who killed their own, who notoriously engaged in medical experiments on our poor black brothers and nuclear experiments on unknowing populations and who neglected the millions who are needy, oppressed, hungry, poor, sick, and homeless. And, guess what? God did not judge America. It’s still open for business. It remains fully immersed in the basic constitutional principles of freedom, individualism and unobstructed commerce, principles embraced by God-fearing, family-values oriented Republicans.
So when antiabortion crusaders post their dire prediction about God judging America, it’s an opportunity to remember yet another history lesson. Since biblical times, the prophecy of Armageddon, where it was alleged that God would destroy the armies of the Antichrist, is as ordinary as dirt, as quotidian as germs and as dangerous as cold oatmeal.
To get to the root of such a dystopian perspective, one need only open religious tracts to understand the machinations of (mostly) men with a proclivity toward the dramatic, men who are positioned as thought leaders in the prolife culture. Take Fr. Frank Pavone who cherry picks from old and new testaments to push his Priests for Life celebrity life. From his web site, in a section titled “Life is Victorious over Death,” (an anti-science statement if there ever was one), Pavone explains, “Abortion is death. Christ came to conquer death, and therefore abortion.” Note that his fractured syllogism does not cite any biblical text because there is no mention of abortion anywhere in the bible. But to authenticate his logic, he attaches a random biblical citation “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10) as if this adds clarity and confirmation of its righteousness.
Visit Flip Benham’s tracts (Operation Save America) for an even more dramaturgical response to abortion. Like Pavone, Benham “unashamedly takes up the cause of the preborn” using the “Cross of Christ” as their strategy (whatever the Hell that means). But rather than proclaim that God will judge America, Flip and his followers believe they ARE the heart and voice of God to solve the problem of abortion through “The Cross of Christ.” Knowing how literal these folks can be, it’s worrisome to imagine that the crucifixion is better theater than Pavone’s blather.
Joe Scheidler’s Pro-Life Action League shares Flip Benham’s affinity for the theatricality of public demonstrations in his Culture of Death performances. Recalling the twisted, disfigured and bloody body of Christ hung on a cross or the depraved killings in which bodies were stacked like cordwood during the Holocaust as teachable moments, Scheidler translates these two grotesque moments in time using images of mangled fetuses hung on signs and posters in his Face the Truth shows. And, quite naturally, their signs create opportunities for them to be on camera wherever they set up their traveling circus.
Calling abortion a national atrocity, as Scheidler does, ignores the sanctity of women’s lives and the choices they make. Calling the 9-11 tragedy God’s judgment and revenge for America’s slaughter of 45 million children, as Benham does, ignores the agency of the men who flew the planes into the buildings, those who supported them and all associated global politics including the Bush administration. Benham’s comments also ignore the rights and wishes of women. And in stating that a when a prisoner is put to death, he is afforded more dignity than the dignity a fetus deserves, Pavone is absolutely discounting the dignity of the woman who is carrying the fetus.
Recall, for a moment, the absurd expression that guns don’t kill people—people using guns kill people. Most rational citizens understand this about guns. Most understand that life and death by guns is more complicated than some bumper sticker expression. So when antiabortion crusaders like Benham, Scheidler and Pavone (and their followers) fabricate such prophecies about abortion and about God’s judgment, aren’t they really saying something more complicated like railing against women and their providers? Like the inert quality of a gun, abortion is a procedure without agency. Abortion cannot be accomplished without human agency. So to say God will judge America for abortion makes no sense unless we unpack what these crusaders most likely mean.
In an anti abortion Wikipedia under the “Condemnations and Predictions” category, the entry might read: “God will judge America over Abortion” is a slogan adopted by pro life conservative, evangelical Christians, both Protestant and Catholic, as an abbreviated dystopian version of reality and an alternative to the longer version: “We God-fearing Christians, who don’t believe in the evils of contraception or abortion or unruly American women, want you to know that God will judge abortion-minded women and all abortion providers. It is from our faith that we must inform you that you are the incarnation of evil and that you are condemned to eternity in Hell if you are in any way affiliated with the sins of murdering unborn children.”
Bottom line: It’s not God’s judgment. It’s the anti abortion folks’ judgment on women.
December 13, 2012 at 9:53 pm
Well, if you have any doubt about protesters judging women, just take a look at the words of one woman who posted a letter to the editor of the Morning Call, Allentown. She was perturbed not about the stories about 11 animals being skinned and left on the side of the road but about the public outcry and, in true warped-mind of an anti, connected it to abortion. I’m not kidding.
She claimed that the “same atrocities are committed against unborn children” and that “a couple thousand unborn children are hauled away as “infectious waste from Lehigh Valley abortion mills every year” and to offer a reward for information about these poor animals just added “insult to injury.”
I don’t know about all of you lovely readers, but I’ve never known a doctor to skin a 12 week fetus. When I think of animal abuse, I don’t automatically think of unborn children. Yet, this woman does. Hell, she even used to tell women going into the clinic “Your baby’s gonna look like road kill. So the next time you see road kill, think of the baby you killed.”
Yep, that’s what I’m talking about….the judgment of one “thou-shalt-not-judge” so-called Christian woman on other women…judging in the newspaper and in person at Planned Parenthood and at the Allentown Women’s Center.
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December 14, 2012 at 12:58 pm
I read her article and responded to her question ‘are animals more important than humans’?
Are animals more important than humans? In some cases, yes. When humans act like animals outside abortion clinics, like this woman does, when they prey on young women, invade their rights and their privacy, they are acting worse than most animals. Animals don’t shame or stigmatize women. Animals don’t lie. They don’t use misinformation or scare tactics to try to “save” babies that don’t belong to them. Animals don’t try to take other women’s babies away for adoption to their friends, like the animals outside abortion clinics attempt.
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December 15, 2012 at 9:09 am
Pro lifers cannot wait to get their two cents in about the Sandy Hook shootings and their SHAMELESS pandering about abortion. In an article from LifeNews “Time to Pray for Our Nation and a Respect for Human Life” comes this tidbit:
“It would be easy to point out how the deaths of millions of unborn children from abortion have resulted in a general lack of respect for life that plays out in incidents like this. But today is not a time for politics and exploiting a horrific tragedy to make a political point.”
Wait, didn’t you just try to make a political point?
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December 15, 2012 at 6:15 pm
Anti choicer – pro forced birthers are losers.
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December 16, 2012 at 12:51 pm
this just in from the loser cruisers outside the AWC clinic, two loud mouthed, angry men connecting the clinic to the CT shootings. Pathetic–both of them.
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December 17, 2012 at 1:43 pm
Are you serious about them connecting the two? What the heck was the “connection”?
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December 20, 2012 at 2:21 pm
Who knows? Anti-choicers have never been that good on the whole logic thing.
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December 20, 2012 at 3:54 pm
No joke. No logic, as in Cannot-Connect-the-Dots.
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May 28, 2014 at 10:10 pm
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October 3, 2014 at 8:30 pm
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