|
[Killing aborted babies] [CARE and pro-choice counselling] [CARE and situation ethics] [Curse of Abortion Act] [Is abortion murder?] [CARE and abortion] [Book review]
What is going on in Christian Crisis Pregnancy
Counselling?
By Dr ES Williams
CARE
is passionate about abortion.
So passionate that they have a network
of Christian Crisis Pregnancy Centres scattered around the UK.
According to CARE’s Chairman, Lyndon Bowring, ‘We believe that we have a
responsibility as Christians to be a voice for the voiceless, because
they are defenceless, and because God alone gave them life. Our 162
Centres, committed to helping women facing pregnancy crises, continually
seek to offer understanding and support – and at the same time
underlining our belief that all human beings are made in the image of
God,
and are of supreme value.’[i]
CARE
Centres Network is an
organisation that claims to be concerned about the welfare of women in
relation to pregnancy, including abortion. The centres provide a free
pregnancy test, confidential counselling and post-abortion counselling.
Women with a positive test are promised that a trained advisor will
‘listen to you, give you all the information you need, help you find out
what you want to do’.[ii]
To understand what is happening in CARE
counselling centres, I have compared the counselling messages of CARE
with that of prominent pro-choice organisations, such as the British
Pregnancy Advisory Service, Marie Stopes International and the Planned
Parenthood Federation of America. What I found was astounding, for
there was no difference in substance between the pro-choice,
non-judgemental options counselling of BPAS and the pro-choice,
non-judgemental, options counselling of CARE. In my book What is
going on in Christian Crisis Pregnancy Counselling? I reach the
following conclusion:
‘The above analysis, which compared
CARE with BPAS, shows that the advice provided by CARE’s network of
pregnancy counselling centres exhibits all the essential characteristics
of pro-choice dogma. Like pro-choice, CARE’s counselling promises a
pregnant woman to help her find out what she wants to do about her
pregnancy. Like pro-choice, CARE’s counselling offers a woman three
options, including abortion. Like pro-choice, CARE’s counselling is
impartial, non-judgemental and non-directive. Like pro-choice, CARE’s
counselling encourages a woman to examine her feelings. A pregnant
woman is advised to “think about your feelings and values before coming
to a decision”. CARE’s leaflet, Making a Decision, uses the
words feel or feelings over twenty times. Like pro-choice, CARE’s
counselling helps a woman clarify her personal values. Like pro-choice
counsellors, CARE’s counsellors invite a woman to make an “informed”
choice between the options that have been set before her. Like
pro-choice counsellors, CARE’s counsellors persuade a woman that the
most important thing is that she feels able to live with her choice. Is
there, in reality, any difference between the non-directive,
non-judgemental options-based counselling of CARE and the pro-choice,
non-directive, non-judgemental options-based counselling of BPAS,
Planned Parenthood, Pro-choice Connection, National Abortion Federation
and Marie Stopes?
Many supporters of CARE will be
dismayed at the thought that it is being bracketed together with
pro-choice abortion organisations. There is something profoundly wrong
here. Either CARE’s position is being misrepresented or it has departed
from the faith that was once for all entrusted to the saints and is
promoting, or at least condoning, abortion in the name of the Christian
Church. This is a serious accusation that demands an answer. To
consider the question of whether CARE has departed from the biblical
faith, we need to examine the theological justification for its
pregnancy counselling. We need to understand the theology that lies
behind CARE’s ministry of non-judgemental, options counselling.’
For those who wish to understand what
is really happening in Christian abortion counselling, and for those who
support CARE, What is going on in Christian Crisis Pregnancy
Counselling? is essential reading.
[i] CARE, Dear
Friend Newsletter, November 2004, Right to choose?
[ii] CARE, Centres
Network website, It’s positive – what are my options?
|