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“Yeah, It’s Time to Speak,
But . . .”
Student Guide
Introduction
“Yeah butting” is a popular pastime for many of us. “Yeah butting” is
reluctantly admitting that something may be true and good but then
offering a negative spin on it. We do it best with the weather. “Sure is
a nice day.” “Yeah, but it’s suppose to rain tonight.” It is hard to
have a conversation about the weather, even among friends, without a
good deal of “yeah butting” going on!
It is hard to have a conversation about abortion, even among Christians,
without a good deal of “yeah butting” as well. It is an issue that has
so polarized our nation that many people just do not want to talk about
it. “Yeah, I know it is wrong but . . .” In this Bible study we will
look at some of the common “yeah buts” about abortion and see if they
stand up in light of Scripture.
1. It’s Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion is a political issue, and
we shouldn’t be talking about it in the church.”
Read Psalm 139:13-14; 119:73; 127:3; Mark 10:14-16; Proverbs 3:5-8.
2. It’s Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion doesn’t have anything to
do with me. I’m not going to have one.”
Read Proverbs 31:8-9; James 1:27; Matthew 25:40.
3. It’s Time to Speak! “Yeah, but the Church exists to proclaim the
Gospel, not to address social issues.”
Read John 4:13-14; 8:3-11; Romans 8:31-32.
4. It’s Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion is too controversial.”
Read Ezekiel 13:10-12 and John 14:27.
5. It’s Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion is divisive.”
Read Matthew 10:34-36.
Conclusion
The “Yeah buts” about abortion really do not stand up in light of
Scripture. The Church has a responsibility to uphold the Scriptural
truths about life. The Church has a wonderful message to apply to
abortion and those caught up in this evil—the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
“Yeah, It’s Time to Speak, But . . .”
Leader’s
Guide
[Answers to
questions and other comments
for the teacher are in brackets and italics.]
Introduction
“Yeah
butting” is a popular pastime for many of us. “Yeah butting” is
reluctantly admitting that something may be true and good but then
offering a negative spin on it. We do it best with the weather. “Sure is
a nice day.” “Yeah, but it’s suppose to rain tonight.” It is hard to
have a conversation about the weather, even among friends, without a
good deal of “yeah butting” going on!
It is hard
to have a conversation about abortion, even among Christians, without a
good deal of “yeah butting” as well. It is an issue that has so
polarized our nation that many people just do not want to talk about it.
“Yeah, I know it is wrong but . . .” In this Bible study we will look at
some of the common “yeah buts” about abortion and see if they stand up
in light of Scripture.
1. It’s
Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion is a political issue, and we
shouldn’t be talking about it in the church.”
[A
dictionary definition of political is: “Of, relating to, or dealing with
the structure or affairs of government, politics, or the state.” By this
definition, abortion certainly is political. In 1973 the U.S. Supreme
Court struck down all state laws forbidding abortion and made abortion
legal in all nine months of pregnancy.
A
dictionary definition of spiritual is: “Of, from, or relating to God.”
Is abortion a spiritual issue? Does it “relate to God”?]
Read Psalm
139:13-14; 119:73; 127:3; Mark 10:14-16; Proverbs 3:5-8.
[Psalm
139:13-14; 119:73; 127:3 – When you consider that abortion kills the
work of God’s hands, when it destroys what He has fearfully and
wonderfully made, then, yes, abortion is very much a spiritual issue.
This destruction is a mass destruction happening over 3,000 times each
and every day.]
[Mark
10:14-16 – You should also point out that these aborted babies are
children for whom Jesus Christ died, but they will never have the
opportunity for baptism. Abortion is a very grave spiritual issue!
Questions that may arise here about what happens to the soul of an
aborted baby must be dealt with in the same loving and sensitive way
that you deal with a stillborn or other cases where babies die before
baptism.]
[Proverbs 3:5-8 – Abortion is a spiritual issue because it leads people
away from trusting in God in times of distress. Abortion is, in fact,
putting your trust in the god of death instead of the Lord of Life. You
may want to quote Luther’s comments on the First Commandment in the
Large Catechism.
“Do you
have the kind of heart that expects from Him nothing but good,
especially in distress and want, and renounces and forsakes all that is
not God? Then you have the one true God. On the contrary, does your
heart cling to something else, from which it hopes to receive more good
and help than from God, and does it flee not to Him but from Him when
things go wrong? Then you have an idol, another god.”1]
2. It’s
Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion doesn’t have anything to do with
me. I’m not going to have one.”
Read
Proverbs 31:8-9; James 1:27; Matthew 25:40.
[The
fact that abortion is a spiritual issue, as indicated in #1, negates
this argument. In addition, however, the Bible verses in #2 show that
God’s people have always had a responsibility to speak for those who are
vulnerable and in need. This is a recurring theme in the Old Testament.
There God is called the “Father to the fatherless” and the “Defender of
widows” (Psalm 68:5). In the Day of Judgment, those who oppress the
needy are to be held as accountable as sorcerers and adulterers (Malachi
3:5). Therefore God’s people, from the king on down, had a God-given
responsibility to speak up for and defend the poor and needy. It is a
recurring theme in the New Testament as well. God’s New Testament people
are to “rejoice with those who rejoice and mourn with those who mourn”
(Romans 12:15). They are to “carry each other’s burdens” (Galatians
6:2). They are to care for the orphans and widows (James 1:27). Jesus
says we are to care for “the least of these” as if we are caring for Him
(Matthew 25:40). God’s people today, clergy and laity alike, have a
God-given responsibility to speak up for and defend those who cannot do
so themselves. Indeed, it is irresponsible not to speak. The old axiom
is true: “Silence is affirmation.”]
3. It’s
Time to Speak! “Yeah, but the Church exists to proclaim the Gospel,
not to address social issues.”
Read John
4:13-14; 8:3-11; Romans 8:31-32.
[John
4:13-14, 8:3-11 – Jesus met people where they were. He shared the Gospel
by applying it to people’s lives. Yes, the purpose of the Church is to
share the Gospel. However, the social and moral concerns of our nation
provide opportunity for the Church to share the Gospel. The affect of
abortion on women and men, for example, is devastating. When the reality
of that decision sets in—and it almost always does sooner or later—it
crushes people with a heavy burden of guilt and hopelessness that can
lead to despair. If there is a single reason for the Church to speak on
the issue of abortion, it is so that those who have made this decision
can hear the Gospel applied to their sin. If the Church is silent, these
people will be led to believe that the sin of abortion is too big to be
forgiven.
The
Gospel is not just to be preached. It is to be preached into people’s
lives and to the specific sins they commit. If the Church never talks
about the sins against life under the guise of only wanting to proclaim
the Gospel, they have, in effect, relinquished an opportunity to
proclaim the Gospel. You may want to use some of the thoughts in the
following quote from C. F. W. Walther.
“Preachers, as a rule, imagine that they have fully discharged their
office, provided what they have preached has been the Word of God. That
is about as correct a view as when a ranger imagines he has discharged
his office by sallying forth with his loaded gun and discharging it into
the forest; or as when an artilleryman thinks he has done his duty by
taking up his position with his cannon in the line of battle and by
discharging his cannon. Just as poor rangers and soldiers as these
latter are, just so poor and useless preachers are those who have no
plan in mind and take no aim when they are preaching. Granted their
sermons contain beautiful thoughts; they do not, for that matter, take
effect. They may occasionally make the thunders of the Law roll in their
sermons, yet there is no lightning that strikes. Again, they may water
the garden assigned to them with the fructifying waters of the Gospel,
but they are pouring water on the beds and the paths of the garden
indiscriminately, and their labor is lost . . . May God help you in your
future ministry not to become aimless prattlers.”2 ]
[Romans
8:31-32 – This passage is a good one to use to show that the life issues
give opportunity to proclaim the Gospel as motivation for making good
decisions and therefore avoiding difficult situations. We are God’s
bought-with-a-price people! He is for us! He has demonstrated His love
in the giving of His Son. He is not going to forsake us when troubles
come. We do not have to turn to death as a solution to the problems of
life. We can turn to our God. He will not forsake us. He will get us
through.]
4. It’s
Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion is too controversial.”
Read
Ezekiel 13:10-12 and John 14:27.
[Ezekiel
13:10-12 – Not speaking about a specific evil because it is too
controversial is the same as proclaiming peace when there is no peace.
Our silence whitewashes a very bloody evil. Our silence proclaims
Satan’s favorite line, “‘Did God really say’ abortion was wrong?” Our
silence leads people to sin, and our silence offers no peace to those
who have.]
[John
14:27 – When we do speak about abortion, it will stir up controversy.
God’s truth often does. But it will give us opportunity to proclaim a
peace that the world cannot have and can never understand. We have been
given peace with God through Jesus Christ. This is a peace we can have
even when the peace in our lives is disrupted. This is a peace that we
can proclaim to those who have had their peace robbed because of sin.]
5. It’s
Time to Speak! “Yeah, but abortion is divisive.”
Read
Matthew 10:34-36.
[No one
wants division in a congregation or in a family. Sometimes it’s good to
be silent when the color of the carpet in the narthex is not what you
would have chosen or when Uncle Rob plays his accordion at the family
picnic each year! However, to be silent about abortion to avoid division
is a deadly silence. Jesus plainly says that He came to bring division
under certain circumstances. He came to proclaim Himself as the only way
to the Father (John 14:6). When that is proclaimed, especially in our
world today, it causes division. To be silent on this, however, would
undermine the very purpose of the Church. Jesus said He came as God in
the flesh (John 10:30). When that is proclaimed, it causes division. To
be silent on this, however, removes the very essence of the Gospel.
Jesus said that He came so that we might have life and have in to the
full (John 10:10). When that is proclaimed and applied to the unborn, it
causes division. To be silent on this, however, ignores the Biblical
truth that human life from the moment of conception is gifted by and
precious to God.]
Conclusion
The “Yeah
buts” about abortion really do not stand up in light of Scripture. The
Church has a responsibility to uphold the Scriptural truths about life.
The Church has a wonderful message to apply to abortion and those caught
up in this evil, the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
[How can
this be done in a way that is bold and courageous but also sensitive and
loving? Conclude the Bible Study with some ideas on how the members of
your congregation can speak. You may want to use LFL’s
“How You Can Speak” booklet, Item #100B.]
(Footnotes)
1The Book of Concord, Theodore G. Tappert, Ed. Page
368.
2 C.F.W. Walther. The Proper Distinction between Law and
Gospel. 99-100.
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