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About Mike Pohlman

Mike is a former senior pastor and church planter in the Pacific Northwest, and served for three years as the executive producer of The Albert Mohler Program, a nationally syndicated radio show dedicated to Christianity and culture. Mike is a Ph.D. Candidate in American church history at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary writing his dissertation on radio and the American church during the period 1920 to 1950. Mike is husband to Julia and father to four wonderful children: Samuel (9), Anna (7), John (6) and Michael (1). When not reading, writing or editing, Mike loves sports, music and hanging out with his family.

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Mike Pohlman

Executive Editor, The Gospel Coalition

Friday, March 20, 2009

When Life Happens

Robert George, writing at First Thinigs, has an excellent tribute to the late Father Richard John Neuhaus. In it George offers a compelling reason for why Father Neuhaus abandoned the political liberalism of the post-Roe era. After making the case that Neuhaus was positioned well to become the next great liberal public intellectual--"the Reinhold Niebuhr of his generation"--George explains,

Then something happened: Abortion. It became something it had never been before, namely, a contentious issue in American culture and politics. Neuhaus opposed abortion for the same reasons he had fought for civil rights and against the Vietnam War. At the root of his thinking was the conviction that human beings, as creatures fashioned in the image and likeness of God, possess a profound, inherent, and equal dignity. This dignity must be respected by all and protected by law. That, so far as Neuhaus was concerned, was not only a Biblical mandate but also the bedrock principle of the American constitutional order. Respect for the dignity of human beings meant, among other things, not subjecting them to a system of racial oppression; not wasting their lives in futile wars; not slaughtering them in the womb.

George goes on to show how the abortion issue opened Neuhaus to other departures from liberalism--departures that would come to define him not as liberalism's next Niebuhr, but its "nemesis."

I'm praying that some of the great thinkers on the left today will have a similiar "conversion." Not, ultimately, for political reasons, but for the sake of the unborn.

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