Belfast Telegraph

Attacks on abortion critics beyond the pale

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MICHELE Obama coined one of the great political slogans of this century: “When they go low, we go high.”

In an interview with The New York times, she unpacked the meaning of this.

“‘Going high’ doesn’t mean you don’t feel the hurt, or you’re not entitled to an emotion. It means that your response has to reflect the solution. It shouldn’t come from a place of anger or vengefulne­ss. Barack and I had to figure that out. Anger may feel good in the moment, but it’s not going to move the ball forward.”

Abortion is an emotive issue and I’ve seen a lot of anger in public discourse over recent days. The journalist Allison Morris tweeted on Sunday, “Why do almost all men with ‘Christian Dad’ in their profile hate poor women so much?”, while the Alliance councillor Glenn Finlay posted on Facebook to accuse pro-life protesters at Stormont of “self-championin­g”, “salivating over Photoshopp­ed foetuses”, “turning their gaze away from the children in need among us” and being unwilling to do the “hard work” of actually helping.

It hurt to read those words. It especially hurt on behalf of the many good people I know who are passionate in their support of the vulnerable, the poor, the needy. I think of friends who have gone through the fostering process, with its long, invasive checks, hope and heartbreak, and weep to imagine them lumped in with a callous stereotype.

One of the biggest Christian conference­s in the country is New Horizon in Coleraine at the start of August. One of the speakers was Rosaria Butterfiel­d, who spoke passionate­ly and powerfully about adoption within the broader theme of radical hospitalit­y. As Christians, adoption is one of our most precious pictures of salvation and of our identity as God’s adopted children, shown the same love that the father shows to Jesus Christ, his son. I wish that those who pour petrol on the flames of public discourse would, instead, sit down and talk to people they disagree with.

At the same time, we Christians need to walk the walk — not merely to head off accusation­s of hypocrisy, but to live out a faith in the God who cares for the fatherless and the widow and adopts the unwanted and the damaged, the unworthy and the unloved.

REV JONATHAN BOYD Hyde Park and Lylehill Presbyteri­an Churches Templepatr­ick, Co Antrim

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