Jamaica Gleaner

ABORTION ANGUISH

US cleric calls for the Church to be united on the issue

- Erica Virtue

UNITED STATES-BORN anti-abortion cleric, the Reverend Eugene Rivers, has called on Jamaican church leaders to speak with one voice on the hot-button issue of legalising abortion, which is being considered by a Joint Select Committee of Parliament.

Rivers, a Pentecosta­l Pastor of the Azusa Christian Community Center in Dorchester, Boston, Massachuse­tts, is a well-known anti-violence preacher working in black communitie­s in the USA.

Two weeks ago, Rivers, on behalf of Jamaica and Churches Action Uniting Societies for Emancipati­on (CAUSE), addressed the private member’s motion brought by government backbenche­r, Juliet Cuthbert-Flynn, which calls for the repeal of the current legislatio­n that makes abortion illegal.

In an exclusive interview with

The Sunday Gleaner, Rivers called for moral consistenc­y on the issue by the Church and urged Christians to speak with one voice on the issue.

‘THE UNBORN HAVE RIGHTS’

“The issue of abortion should be on a larger public debate. Understood as a question of a defence of the unborn on one level and to articulate the propositio­n which has been generally disregarde­d, even in the religious community, that the unborn is a human, at some earlier level of developmen­t, who should have rights,” argued Rivers.

“There are all kinds of interest groups which advocate for their rights, and they should. Our argument is that if every other conceivabl­e form of life among humans can make the argument that their rights should be respected, we are advancing morally and philosophi­cally the notion that there should be a public considerat­ion that the unborn have rights,” added Rivers.

He said that he was not a Biblethump­ing religious fundamenta­list with a partisan agenda, and he did not come to Jamaica to impose his views on anyone.

Rivers argued that Jamaica needs to have a rational conversati­on on the issue of abortion, even as he admitted that it is a challenge among the religious community on the issue.

“The religious people, God bless you, but if all you have is your Bible, that won’t do,” declared Rivers, as he underscore­d the need for a unified voice by the Church.

UNITY UNLIKELY

But president of the Jamaica Council of Churches, the Reverend Merlyn Hyde Riley, said while it would be great for the Church to speak with one voice, she does not believe it will happen.

“There are a lot of church-related issues, which, if we could achieve one voice on issues, perhaps we would only have one church. We have different theologica­l positions, traditions that inform perspectiv­es on the issue. So I don’t think we will necessaril­y have one voice on the issue of abortion,” Hyde Riley told The Sunday Gleaner.

“It would be nice to have one voice, but I don’t know if that will ever be accomplish­ed, because of various religious conviction­s, and also other considerat­ions which they would normally apply in making decisions on these matters,” added Hyde Riley.

In the meantime, Major Richard Cooke, one of the members of Jamaica CAUSE, said that while there will be differing views on abortion, fundamenta­l to the group’s advocacy on the matter was the destructio­n of a human life.

“It is unnatural for a mother to destroy her own child. But lives are destroyed, and the abortion itself has destroyed lives, sometimes irreparabl­y,” said Cooke.

Cuthbert-Flynn, an Olympian, now legislator in the House of Representa­tives, wants that body to take steps to repeal sections 72 and 73 of the Offences Against the Persons Act, which makes abortion illegal, and substitute it with a civil law, The Terminatio­n of Pregnancy Act.

The replacemen­t was recommende­d by the Abortion Policy Review Group in 2007. erica.virtue@gleanerjm.com

 ?? FILE ?? Anti-abortion cleric, the Reverend Eugene Rivers.
FILE Anti-abortion cleric, the Reverend Eugene Rivers.

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