Archive for the ‘Pro-life’ Category
March for Life 2012 — The Rebellion
Thursday, January 26th, 2012State of the Unborn 2012
Monday, January 23rd, 2012Top Twelve Reasons to Defund Planned Parenthood Now
Sunday, January 22nd, 2012Pregnant Again
Saturday, January 21st, 2012Turn the Tide in 2012
Saturday, January 21st, 2012The Dignity of Human Life
Thursday, January 19th, 2012Christmas blessings from 40 Days for Life
Tuesday, December 27th, 2011“I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord.”
These words spoken more than 2,000 years ago by the angel of the Lord to the shepherds tending their flocks remind us that when God chose to come to Earth in human flesh, He did so through the womb of a mother.
During this Christmas season, we give thanks for the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ … and we count the many blessings God has showered on 40 Days for Life through your prayers and efforts:
- 1,633 individual campaigns have taken place in 422 cities across all 50 American states and 13 countries
- More than 500,000 people have joined together in an historic display of unity to pray and fast for an end to abortion
- More than 14,000 church congregations have participated in the 40 Days for Life campaigns
- More than 1,800 news stories have been featured in newspapers, magazines, radio shows and TV programs
- Reports document 5,045 lives spared from abortion — and those are just the ones we know about
- Thousands of women and men have been spared from the tragic effects of abortion, and many have stepped forward to begin post-abortion healing and recovery
- 61 abortion workers have quit their jobs and walked away from the abortion industry
- 19 abortion facilities have shut down following local 40 Days for Life campaigns outside their doors
On behalf of my family — and the families of Shawn Carney, David Brandao, Lauren Muzyka and Chantel Poisel (our national team) — THANK YOU for all you have done to help make such a profound impact on our world.
As we prepare for the new year of 2012, let’s rededicate ourselves to protecting every child made in God’s image and likeness.
Merry Christmas!
For Life,
David Bereit
National Director
40 Days for Life
PS: We’ve received inquiries about whether 40 Days for Life is a 501©(3) organization that is able to receive year-end, tax-deductible contributions. Yes. If you feel led to make a year-end gift to help save more lives in 2012 and beyond, visit:
Happy Christmas
Thursday, December 22nd, 2011Defund Planned Parenthood
Wednesday, December 14th, 2011180 Movie
Monday, December 5th, 2011Schiavo’s Legacy: The Value of Life in a Nation That Cheapens It
Friday, December 2nd, 2011Used by Permission, Author is Alan Sears, Townhall.com
Terri Schiavo would have been 48 this December 3 … not a major mile-marker among we, the living, but a cause for reflection for those who loved her, and for all those who fought so valiantly to save her, in those terrible years and months and days before she was starved to death, by court order, in March, 2005.
A cause for reflection because, as so many observed and warned us at the time, her death – court mandated, despite the express wishes of her parents and siblings and the best efforts of the President and Congress of the United States – marked a crucial turning point in our nation’s cultural attitude toward life. Perhaps no judicial action since Roe v. Wade has done more to convince ordinary Americans that individual lives are expendable to those pushing for an increasingly callous medical establishment.
Two recent events give signs of the undertow that is quietly dragging our society’s longstanding reverence for life out into a rising sea of situation ethics. One is the coming of ObamaCare, and with it concerns over what Sarah Palin, in her memorable phrase, termed “the death panels.” As this administration’s medical insurance plan now becomes a matter of debate at the nation’s highest court, so too will that plan’s seeming tolerance – if not encouragement – of medical profit centers who make decisions on their patients’ treatment based on comparisons of the cost of that treatment to the perceived value of those patients to society as a whole.
Doctors protest that such decisions are comparable to the triage medics perform on battlefields. Someone has to gauge which patients can be saved, and which must be allowed to die if others are to be spared. But back home at City Memorial, the battle involves bucks, not bullets. The enormous costs of hospital care in a spiraling economy inevitably corrupt the decision process.
In a medical arena where humanity is increasingly supplanted by multi-million-dollar economic interests, life and death decisions become all too easy. Soon, it’s cheaper to pull a plug than to fill a prescription.
Of course, the pressures aren’t only financial. As the lists of patients awaiting transplants grow longer, pressure is mounting in many medical circles to speed along the process of dying, the better to harvest organs for those in need. Rob Stein of The Washington Post reported a few months ago on the increasingly aggressive efforts by the United Network of Organ Sharing (UNOS) to rewrite the rules on when a patient is “dead” and his organs can be removed.
UNOS, a Richmond nonprofit organization with a contract from the federal government to coordinate organ transplants nationwide, is pressing for two crucial changes to the currently approved organ harvest system: one, requiring that a patient’s heart only has to be stopped for two minutes (rather than five) before harvesting begins. And, two, suggesting that the doctors trying to resuscitate the patient and the doctors waiting to harvest that patient’s organs no longer have to be two separate teams … they can be one in the same.
If that sounds like a conflict of interest, it certainly can be – and it worries many doctors and nurses who, in Stein’s words, “fear the medical system will give up on potential donors in their final days or even possibly speed their deaths by giving them anti-clotting medication or other organ-preserving drugs, which could hasten death.” Those fears become increasingly justified when you consider that some doctors at a Denver children’s hospital have already been caught cutting the waiting time down from five minutes to 75 seconds.
After all, many people are willing to pay a lot of money – or exercise a lot of influence – to ensure that their loved ones (or they themselves) receive the organ that can save their life. Under such circumstances, a living person can seem infinitely less valuable than the sum of his parts.
Friends of life like the Bioethics Defense Fund and Americans United for Life are doing everything in their power to reverse these trends, but perhaps no entity is doing more on the ground to awaken the nation to this creeping contempt for human life than the Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network. Each year, the group, founded by Terri’s surviving family, refers dozens of end-of-life cases to lawyers (like those of our own Alliance Defense Fund) willing to intercede when spouses, family members, or medical professionals seem determined to end a still viable life prematurely.
The Schiavo Network’s courage and integrity – born out of heartbreaking experience – is unmatched. And their influence is growing … as are the attacks and challenges they face alongside all who hold life sacred, and who see every living soul as made in the image of our Creator.
Forty-eight years old. No great mile-marker, as people count birthdays. But that’s all right. As a symbol … as a martyr … as a daughter mourned … but, mostly, as one whose soul once radiated that divine image so beautifully … Terri Schiavo will live forever.
The Ultimate Sacrifice by Stacie Crimm
Sunday, November 27th, 2011Astounding Video of Conception to Birth
Wednesday, November 23rd, 201140 Days for Life Webcast
Saturday, November 19th, 2011You can listen to the recent Breakthrough webcast here. Here is part of the transcript which you can download.
The one stat, when we look at all of the babies saved and we look at
clinics that have closed. We have had 16 abortion facilities close
following one or more 40 Days for Life campaigns. The one stat that
always moves hearts, it certainly moves my heart and was very
personal for me when our local abortion clinic director, Abby Johnson,
had a director, but in addition to Abby, we have had 61 abortion clinic
workers have conversions and leave their jobs since the fall of 2007.Tonight, we have for the first time we’ve got so many results back from
our local leaders we can announce the total number of saves, including
this fall 40 Days for Life campaign. Look on Page 6. For the first time,
40 Days for Life has pushed the total number of confirmed saves from
abortion to 5,000! 5,000 innocent little boys and little girls have been
spared. To be exact, it’s been 5,045 babies that we know of.These are unbelievable achievements. We want to make it clear
tonight, all of this – God did all of this over the last four years, and
certainly this fall with 301 cities, because of you. Because of your
prayers. Because of your participation. Because of your support of the
local and national 40 Days for Life effort.
REMEMBER: The matching challenge will only double
your tax-deductible gifts or pledges made by midnight
Tuesday, so don’t wait — please give NOW.
Here are those links again to have your gift DOUBLED …
One-time gift:
http://40daysforlife.com/donate.cfm?selected=onetime
Monthly pledge:
http://40daysforlife.com/donate.cfm?selected=monthly
Your gift may also be mailed to:
40 Days for Life
10908 Courthouse Road, Suite 102229
Fredericksburg, VA 22408
Abby Johnson: Sidewalk Counselors Helped Me Oppose Abortion
Sunday, November 13th, 2011From LifeNews.com
I am going to be honest…when I first left Planned Parenthood, I hated the idea of the “rescue” movement. I didn’t see the point. I thought it was a black mark against the pro-life movement.
Then I started meeting people who had once rescued. I started to see something that I had not before…these were normal people. Men, women, old, young, White, Black, Hispanic, Priests, Pastors, Laity…so different, but all one goal…to save babies.
These people had been convicted to do SOMETHING because nothing was being done. There were no peaceful vigils…very limited sidewalk counseling…not many laws to guide pro-life activity. I started to wonder…what if I had been pro-life during the rescue movement? Would I have been willing to sacrifice my freedom in order to save babies and take a stand against abortion?
When I became director of the Planned Parenthood clinic in Bryan, my life changed. All of a sudden, I was acutely aware of the responsibility that sat on my shoulders. I was now the face of that clinic. If something went wrong, it was now on my head. I worked all the time…usually about 70 hours per week. I was addicted to my job…addicted to the responsibility. I carried heavy burdens…many were self inflicted. I will share with you my heaviest.
Every day I would arrive at work and check the schedule. Not because I had an enormous amount of employees or because I wanted to micromanage and see who was late…nothing like that. I wanted to look and see who was there that day. I wanted to place them in the clinic…where would they usually be? Why would that be important? Every day I prepared for someone to come in and harm us. Maybe they would bomb our clinic. Maybe they would shoot us. I didn’t know how it would happen, but I was ready.
I wanted to know where my employees would be in the clinic so I could rapidly get them out and keep me in. I figured that if someone wanted to harm one of us, it would be best to go after me…I was the most responsible for the abortions that happened in that clinic. Surely I would be a good enough sacrifice. That was my burden every day. I was willing to DIE for the sake of abortion.
I look back now and realize how selfish I was. I had a child. I am a wife…a daughter. How could I have even entertained that thought? Be a martyr for abortion? Ridiculous. But back then, I would have done it without question.
So, would I have been involved in the rescue movement? You bet. I was willing to DIE for abortion when I was pro-choice. It would have been an honor to risk jail time in order to save lives if I would have been pro-life.
Luckily, I don’t have to worry about that risk. None of us do. We are able to go and peacefully pray outside of abortion clinics whenever we choose. We are able to sidewalk counsel. We can thank the rescue movement for that. The rescue movement came about like most…people were frustrated and they wanted to do something…anything. There was no such thing as effective and strategic sidewalk counseling. There were few places where you could go and stand in a “public right of way.”
Abortions were happening and there seemed to be nothing anyone could do about it. How could pro-lifers reach the women? If they stood out on the sidewalks, they would most likely be arrested and they wouldn’t be able to talk to anyone. How can they talk to them inside the clinics? They had to get in those abortion clinics. Yes, it was trespassing…yes, it was illegal…but so was standing out on the sidewalks in most cases. So, they organized and they went. They trespassed…they broke the law…they were arrested…they saved thousands of babies. They were not violent. How could they be? They were there to show women the alternative to abortion…the most violent act committed against a child. In fact, during the rescue movement, 75,000 arrests were made…not one of those arrests were made for any violent act.
The rescue movement came, laws were broken, new laws were made, organized sidewalk counseling began to form, and the rescue movement died. The pro-life movement evolved, as it should. The pro-life movement continues to get better. If we were still doing the same thing from 20 years ago it would show failure. Ideas change. Technology changes. Laws change. People change. If there is one thing we can be sure of it is this…never be sure of anything. This world is constantly evolving…just like this movement. Some things work, some things don’t. The rescue movement worked for the time. It is not a viable option now…not in this country.
I am so grateful for those that risked their freedom to save the lives of children. I wish all pro-lifers had that same courage. I am thankful that they did something…they didn’t just sit around and wait for abortion to resolve itself. They made a difference. They saved lives. I don’t think many of us realize how much we owe to this group of pro-lifers.
My life was changed because of an ultrasound and sidewalk counselors. Both parts were equally important in my story.
Without the laws that came about from the rescue movement, those sidewalk counselors probably wouldn’t have been there. And without those sidewalk counselors, their prayers and their constant outreach, I couldn’t have crossed that line. It takes all of us fighting this battle…different techniques, different groups, different types of people. And even now, many of us are “rescuers.” We just rescue in a different way. We are out on the sidewalks, talking to women moments before they walk into an abortion clinic. Or maybe we are counselors in a pregnancy center who talk to women after they have a positive pregnancy test. Maybe we are hotline operators who counsel young women during a time of crisis. Yes, rescues still happen, but they happen in a very different way now.
And even though times have changed, we must look back and be thankful for our past and for those dedicated pro-lifers who paved the way for us today.



