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The Dilemma of Single-Issue Voting: Abortion

The Dilemma of Single-Issue Voting: Abortion

Albert Mohler

President, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary


September 29, 2008

The question posed at "On Faith," the project of Newsweek magazine and The Washington Post, had to do with whether the Roe v. Wade decision on abortion should be reversed.  The responses from columnists were very revealing, if tragic.  My own column was brief, but to the point:

The lamentable legacy of Roe v. Wade continues to poison America's culture and corrupt our moral consciousness. The 1973 decision represents a judicial usurpation of the political process and the declaration of a new constitutional "right" to destroy fetal life set the precedent for further assaults on human life and human dignity.

Roe should be reversed because it took the power to establish law out of the hands of the people and their elected representatives. Reversing Roe would not end the abortion debate, but it would send it back to the 50 states, where the people can have their say.

Furthermore, Roe is based upon a sliding scale of human dignity, with its arbitrary and unsustainable division of fetal life into "trimesters" of increasing legal significance. The decision is just what it was known to be at the time -- a badly constructed argument that had much more to do with Justice Blackmun's own personal agenda than with either law or medicine.

Roe is a compact with the Culture of Death. So long as it stands, America is the land of abortion on demand. Every pregnancy is a tentative pregnancy. Every fetus is in danger. Every American is complicit in this tragedy.

You should take a look at several of the columns, for the worldview spectrum is really amazing.  I took special note of this argument from Willis E. Elliott:

Finally, I am deeply concerned about single-issue, anti-abortion voters. I consider them immoral. Given the multitude of complex problems the United States is facing, this presidential election may prove to be the most consequential since the Great Depression. Why would anyone let the abortion issue determine one's vote? Bad religion, that's why. The worship of "human life." Fetolatry, the idolatry of sacralizing the conceptus/embryo/fetus. Religion can be such good news. I hate to conclude with this instance of religion as bad news. But I must.

My guess is that he really doesn't mean that he considers all single-issue voting to be immoral.  Slavery?  Civil rights?  I think his later comments about "fetolatry" reveal that he pretty much means that voting on this single issue is "immoral."  I will let his words speak for themselves.


In addition to being one of Salem’s nationally syndicated radio talk show hosts, R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is the president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky and recognized as one of America’s leading theologians and cultural commentators. Contact Dr. Mohler at mail@albertmohler.com.

Most Recent User Comments
godscommander
10/2/2008 10:42 AM
8 years ago people voted single issue and elected President Bush. For 6 1/2 years he had the white house, the house and the senate as a majority. For that single issue vote, you still have abortion, the country was taken into a war base on mis-truths, the budget is out of control, people are losing there homes (and not everyone losing there homes are bad people or people who over-extended), there have been blank checks requested and written with no checks and balances. Yes, thousands of unborn children are dieing and it is wrong, but thousands of children here have no health care, parents can't buy food, banks foreclosing on hard working peoples homes. These to are important issues.
belongs2jc
10/2/2008 12:57 AM
I agree on the issue of the breaking down of the foundation of faith. I disagree that we should not make a choice based on this one issue, abortion. I think what is immoral is standing behind a politician who supports killing innocent babies! I can't imagine voting for someone who is pro-abortion even if they appear to have all other values in place. There is an enemy who wants to plant doubt in our minds that God is not who He says He is. He is The Creator of life. I think that this issue alone is worth making a stand for. This is not the only issue but is one that reveals the condition of hearts. When voting you have to look at the voting record of each candidate and make your choice according to that person upholding those specific values.
godscommander
10/1/2008 8:53 AM
The following is from a lady who is christian but not a member of crosswalk. She read the article & responded in an email letter:

Abortion is not the cancer that is killing this nation.
This nation as a whole has thrown morality, values and ethics to the curb. When we get back to basic teaching and empowerment principes, you will see young/old women make better decisions. When we have a better system in play than the warefare system which places people in bondage and strips them of there dignity rather than teaching them a skill and helping them to overcome a bad decision! When single moms who choose to keep their babies have a support system that they don't have to decide child or job. A system that will support them going back to school to get a better job. We as the church need to step up to the plate and become the first line of defense & support,to educate our people instead of relying on the government & voting based on ONE issue when there are many issues that affect many.
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