Hi x0847Marine,
Originally posted by x0847Marine
I have more respect for the flea.
I suppose I should thank you for being so frank. Most proponents of abortion tend to draw a veil over their thoughts and motives rather than have people think they are just fine with the idea of burning a human being to death with saline in the womb, or cutting them into little pieces and sucking it out, or stabbing them in the head and vacuuming out their brain. Whereas you have indicated you know exactly what is entailed and do not feel even the smallest pangs of conscience. I don't think even one of the new 3d ultra-sounds complete with hi-def thumbsucking, smiles at mom's voice etc. would make a bit of difference. That and the stories gloating about taking your girlfriend for her abortion and managing to mace some kids on the way in paint quite a picture.
You know as someone who acknowledges the universal truth of passages like Romans 1:18-32, Romans 3:9-18, Eph. 2:1-4, Titus 3:1-3, and having dealt with a lot of truly horrifying examples of those principles (there's a lot of reasons I went prematurely gray) and counseled others who have been around them, I guess I should be more used to it, but for some reason I still shudder at total indifference to killing and cruelty, I suppose its the realization that the seeds of that indifference are in my heart as well and that but for the grace of God I could have committed and supported monstrous evil all the while justifying its "necessity."
It reminds me of the story from the Eichmann trial in 1961. One of the witnesses brought in to testify was an old man Yehiel Dinur:
"On his day to testify, Dinur entered the courtroom and stared at the man—behind the bulletproof glass—who'd presided over the slaughter of millions. As the eyes of the two men met—victim and murderous tyrant—the courtroom fell silent at the tense confrontation.
Then suddenly, Yehiel Dinur began to sob, collapsing to the floor. Was he overcome by hatred, by the horrifying memories, by the evil incarnate in Eichmann's face?
No. As he later explained in an interview with Mike Wallace, it was because Eichmann was not the demonic personification of evil he'd expected. Rather, he was a frightened old man, an ordinary man, just like anyone else. In that one instant, Dinur came to the stunning realization that sin and evil are the human condition. "I was afraid about myself," Dinur said. "I saw that I'm capable to do this … exactly like he.""I understand how we can end up sacrificing our children on the altar of convenience, I just recoil at it. All I can say is thank God for the good news of the Gospel and the fact that there is no sin so great that the grace He offers through the atonement of His Son is not greater still.
x0847, I'll admit to having been a pretty "salty" individual prior to conversion myself, just not quite so far on the path as you seem to have gotten. I hope and pray you don't follow that path to the end. My hope is that you will see the offer of life and take it.
Anywho, Its late, must go to bed.
- SEAGOON