| General Assembly
backgrounder: Abortion Three overtures seek further
restrictions
by Jerry L. Van Marter and Evan Silverstein, Presbyterian
News Service [posted here 5-31-06]
To access this story
on the PC(USA) web site >>
LOUISVILLE * Issues surrounding abortion have been on the agenda of the
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) General Assembly almost every year since 1983,
when that year's Assembly established the church's first basic policy on
abortion. That policy supported a woman's right to choose with virtually no
reservations.
Over the years, pro-life Presbyterians have persuaded
Assemblies to modify the church's policy on several occasions, most
substantially in 1992.
While the policy remains pro-choice, the church opposes
abortion as a means of birth control and gender selection, affirms adoption
as a preferable alternative in cases of unwanted children and says that the
"intact dilation and extraction" procedure commonly known as "partial birth
abortion" is a "matter of grave moral concern."
The policy holds that abortion should be the choice of
last resort in problem pregnancies. The church's Board of Pensions has
established a "relief of conscience" program, in which the Medical Plan dues
paid by employers conscientiously opposed to abortion are set apart so they
cannot be used to pay for abortions.
With advances in prenatal science, the church's attention
in recent years has turned to "post-viability abortion," defined as unborn
babies well enough developed to survive outside the womb.
The 2003 General Assembly stipulated four circumstances
under which post-viability abortion can be an acceptable moral choice: "when
necessary to save the life of the woman; to preserve the woman's health in
circumstances of a serious risk; to avoid fetal suffering as a result of
untreatable life-threatening medical anomalies; and in cases of incest or
rape."
An overture from Upper Ohio Valley Presbytery in 2004 that
would have eliminated fetal suffering, incest and rape from that list was
defeated by just four votes.
This year, an overture from Redstone Presbytery seeks
further restrictions. It asks the Assembly to "affirm that the lives of
viable unborn babies -- those well-developed enough to survive outside the
womb if delivered -- ought to be preserved and cared for and not aborted. In
cases where problems of life or health of the mother arise in a pregnancy,
the church supports efforts to protect the life and health of both the
mother and the baby. When late term pregnancies must be terminated, we urge
decisions intended to deliver the baby alive."
Mississippi Presbytery has submitted an overture opposing
abortion except to save the life of the mother or in cases of incest or rape
"where there is a finding by a competent, licensed physician that carrying
the unborn child to term would, more likely than not, result in serious,
long-lasting and debilitating mental and emotional distress of the mother."
And Beaver-Butler Presbytery has submitted an overture
that would "cease (General Assembly) funding of any group that supports or
advocates either for or against abortion," leaving Presbyterians to make
those decisions locally.
Issues related to abortion will be considered by
Assembly Committee 10 * Health Issues.
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