Christian leaders respond to vice president’s latest comments about abortion and faith

Christian leaders are taking issue with Vice President Kamala Harris’s recent comments that Americans do not have to “abandon their faith” to support abortion rights.

“I say this, one does not have to abandon their faith or their beliefs to agree that the government should not be making that decision for her,” she said, according to Fox News. “It’s literally that basic.”

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Harris made similar statements in recent months as the Supreme Court debated and ultimately overturned Roe v. Wade, including in July when she said, “It’s important to note that to support a woman’s ability, not her government, but her, to make that decision does not require anyone to abandon their faith or their beliefs.”

Bart Barber, Ph.D., pastor of First Baptist Church of Farmersville in East Texas and president of the Southern Baptist Convention, said it’s sometimes difficult to know what politicians like Harris actually want Christians to do with their faith when it comes to politics.

“If we fail to apply the teachings of our faith to questions like immigration or Herschel Walker’s behavior or Donald Trump’s behavior in the way that she thinks we should, we wind up being scolded and encouraged to let our faith shape our moral and political decisions more aggressively,” he said. “But when it comes to questions like abortion, she is willing to offer instruction about how we should divorce our faith from our moral and political decisions.

“I choose to let the teachings of Jesus instruct me about how to apply my faith. I show respect for our vice president by praying for her and by loving her as my neighbor, and I show respect for the fellow human beings waiting for their chance to be born by opposing their slaughter in the abortionist’s chamber.”

Bishop Robert Barron of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester in Minnesota and founder of Word on Fire: Catholic Ministries, said abortion is an “objective evil” and a “willful destruction of human life” that should not be determined by a “consultative process.”

“If there is a ‘choice’ to be made, it seems to me, that fidelity to Christ would obligate a Christian to advocate for saving life, rather than destroying life,” he said.

“Perhaps the vice [resident was talking about a different faith than the one ‘that was once for all delivered to the saints,’ as Jude wrote,” said Brent Leatherwood, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention. “That faith speaks of the precious dignity bestowed upon each individual at conception, their immeasurable worth and why it is necessary for the state to wield its authority to save defenseless lives. To characterize it otherwise is to be discussing a different faith altogether.”

–Alan Goforth | Metro Voice News

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