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Silence in the pulpit and the pew signals hesitancy on abortion.
Summary
The author, CEO of Save the Storks, says many churches avoid discussing abortion and shares a Colorado story of a teen father who faced bullying after choosing to continue a pregnancy.
Content
January is observed as Sanctity of Life month, first recognized in 1984 when President Ronald Reagan designated January 22 as the first National Sanctity of Human Life Day. The author identifies as CEO of the pro-life ministry Save the Storks and describes volunteer work at pregnancy resource centers and as a foster and adoptive mother. She writes that while encouraged by young people at March for Life events, she worries many Evangelical church leaders do not speak about abortion from the pulpit. That concern is illustrated by a recent anecdote from a Colorado fatherhood conference.
Reported details:
- January is observed as Sanctity of Life month; President Ronald Reagan designated January 22, 1984, as the first National Sanctity of Human Life Day.
- The author is CEO of Save the Storks and reports volunteering at pregnancy resource centers and serving as a foster and adoptive mother.
- The article cites a Students for Life figure that 37% of young adults consider themselves pro-life and notes 19.5 million abortions from 1997 to 2011.
- At a Colorado conference, the author recounts a high school junior who became a father and said teammates bullied him for choosing to continue the pregnancy; she reports 15 teammates bragged they paid for abortions.
- The author says she offered to show the film "Unplanned" at a youth group night and was politely declined, and she cites Barna Research (43% of U.S. churchgoers identified as pro-life in 2024) and a 2019 Pew finding that 4% of sermons shared online discussed abortion.
- The article notes Colorado has one of the higher abortion rates in the nation and mentions a community described as having about 125 churches within a 15-mile radius.
Summary:
The article argues that a pattern of silence in many local churches leaves young people without visible church-based discussion or support on pregnancy and abortion matters, illustrated by a personal story of a bullied teen father. Undetermined at this time.
