Needing help answering a popular pro abortion argument
Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 6:44 am
Hey guys with the recent news of the planned parenthood and Susan G. Komen foundation mess it made me think of something I ment to ask you all.
It has to do with a popular "pro abortion" argument, and I think it out of all of them is the hardest one to answer but I do think there are good answers for it I just need some slight clearification on some of the details of the response.
The argument kind of taps into people's greedy sides and it goes something like this:
"Abortion helps weed out the troublesome,lazy, and poor among us. With the economic recession, high oil prices, and a limited amount of "stuff" (ie houses, building materials, land to own, land to grow food on, food itself, water , or just fill in the blank) there is less and less of stuff to go around. Which makes people afford less and live poorer quality lives. Therefore, abortion should be kept legal."
Now anyway, in finding a good response to this argument, I've noticed that many of the far left wing and even atheist types who use this argument love to have this view of economics called a "zero sum game".
And in so doing, I've heard many Christian apologists (for instance Jay Wesley Richards) give a response to this. I've heard bits and pieces but I don't know exactly how the detailed response goes. If anyone knows please let me know.
I've also noticed that unlike with the liberal atheist types who desire less and less people and more and more "stuff", based on what Christianity teaches and based on what I believe God's plan is. God form what I currently think, loves having a world full of people. God loves people. In fact the more people He can get into His kingdom the better.
But the only thing I wonder about is, in this life and in this world if hypothetically everyone on this planet was a Christian but yet we had five times as many people on the planet as we do know, could we all, still live happy, healthy and sustainable lives?
Because I've heard about all the horror stories like in China where people are almost literally stacked on top of each other with extremely limited living space, in bad living conditions and with little food to go around.
But if we had ten trillion people living like in the state of Texas and all were Christians living in unison to God's teachings could they make things work?
I'm curious to see what you all think. Anyways, thank you all for your time, God bless.
It has to do with a popular "pro abortion" argument, and I think it out of all of them is the hardest one to answer but I do think there are good answers for it I just need some slight clearification on some of the details of the response.
The argument kind of taps into people's greedy sides and it goes something like this:
"Abortion helps weed out the troublesome,lazy, and poor among us. With the economic recession, high oil prices, and a limited amount of "stuff" (ie houses, building materials, land to own, land to grow food on, food itself, water , or just fill in the blank) there is less and less of stuff to go around. Which makes people afford less and live poorer quality lives. Therefore, abortion should be kept legal."
Now anyway, in finding a good response to this argument, I've noticed that many of the far left wing and even atheist types who use this argument love to have this view of economics called a "zero sum game".
And in so doing, I've heard many Christian apologists (for instance Jay Wesley Richards) give a response to this. I've heard bits and pieces but I don't know exactly how the detailed response goes. If anyone knows please let me know.
I've also noticed that unlike with the liberal atheist types who desire less and less people and more and more "stuff", based on what Christianity teaches and based on what I believe God's plan is. God form what I currently think, loves having a world full of people. God loves people. In fact the more people He can get into His kingdom the better.
But the only thing I wonder about is, in this life and in this world if hypothetically everyone on this planet was a Christian but yet we had five times as many people on the planet as we do know, could we all, still live happy, healthy and sustainable lives?
Because I've heard about all the horror stories like in China where people are almost literally stacked on top of each other with extremely limited living space, in bad living conditions and with little food to go around.
But if we had ten trillion people living like in the state of Texas and all were Christians living in unison to God's teachings could they make things work?
I'm curious to see what you all think. Anyways, thank you all for your time, God bless.