Good conciliation story Ernie.

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
Sent: Friday, October 5, 2018 7:20 AM
To: Centroids Discussions <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] A Radical Centrist Solution to the Abortion Wars

 

This is purely a work of speculative fiction, but it has a Radical Centrist 
flavor I thought some of you might appreciate…

 


https://2transform.us/2018/10/05/the-san-jose-declaration-ending-the-abortion-wars/


The San Jose Declaration: Ending the Abortion Wars


April 1st, 2031 A.D.

Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the  
<https://2transform.us/2016/01/29/a-pre-history-of-the-san-francisco-revival/> 
San Francisco Revival of the 2020s was an end to the politicization of 
abortion, in a way that would have seemed unimaginable to those who lived 
through the culture wars that peaked during the Trump presidency.  While 
extremists on both sides still refuse to make peace, the public debate has 
largely moved on.

The turning point was when two courageous women made a conscious choice to 
reject the dichotomy between honoring women and honoring the unborn, thus 
defusing the righteous indignation that had fueled both sides.

And it all began with a yoga class…

 

Jen and Martha each joined the  <http://www.ymcasv.org/central/> San Jose YMCA 
on January 2nd, 2021 as part of  their New Year’s resolutions to lose weight.  
They ended up in a beginner’s yoga class together, and soon discovered they had 
a lot in common.  They were both professional women in their late forties, and 
had just started regaining personal time as their kids entered high school and 
autonomous vehicles became safe enough to eliminate the endless rounds of 
chauffeur duties. They would chat during class, and sometimes afterwards, 
commiserating about the frustrations of teenagers, the cluelessness of their 
husbands, and the sadism of their yoga instructor!

The one thing they never talked about was their jobs.  Surprisingly, neither 
ever asked the other where they worked, or volunteered any information about 
what they did for a living.  This blissful ignorance continued until Jen 
mentioned that her car was in the shop.  Martha volunteered to drop her off 
somewhere, but Jen waved away the offer saying that she could just walk to work.

This innocent statement struck a chill down Martha’s spine. Martha tried her 
best to control her suspicion, and her expression, though she could see Jen 
looking at her curiously.  She excused herself to use the ladies room, then 
guiltily snuck back to spy on where her new friend went.  Sure enough, her 
worst fears were confirmed.

Jen walked across the street from the YMCA and entered the building of the  
largest employer in the neighborhood: Planned Parenthood.  Just down the street 
from Martha’s employer, the local crisis pregnancy center.

After a long week involving many sleepless nights, Martha invited Jen to coffee 
after class at the nearby Starbucks, confessed to spying on her, and disclosed 
her own affiliation.

Jen stared at her in shock. “Why are you telling me this?”

Martha blurted out, “Because I still want to be your friend. And I don’t know 
how.”  And burst out crying.

Neither of them remembers what exactly they said after that.  But next week 
after class, they somehow ended up going out for coffee again.  And again.  And 
again, and again, and again…

What surprised Jen most was how much Martha loved the young women who visited 
her clinic, even those who chose to have an abortion.  In turn, Martha was 
amazed to discover that Jen hated doing abortions, but saw it as the only way 
to free women to live out their dreams.

Gradually they realized that they actually had much more in common with each 
other than with many of their so-called allies, who seemed much more concerned 
with scoring political points than actually honoring and helping women.

One day, Jen showed up for coffee with a brand new pad of yellow legal paper.  
She took a deep breath. “Martha, do you trust me?”

Martha stared at her friend.  She knew where this was going. All of her 
training and her ideology screamed that this person was the enemy.  One wrong 
step, and she could lose her job, her church, possibly even her marriage.

“Yes,” she said, and smiled.

Jen beamed, then burst into giggles.  “Then let’s do this.  Let’s write down 
all the things we can agree on.  As well as the things we don’t. And then?” she 
looked up, her heart in her eyes.

“And then we tell our bosses,” finished Martha.

And so they did.


  _____  


The document was called Balancing Personhood: What Would Jesus Protest?

They cleverly framed it as a modern retelling of  
<https://www.bibleapps.com/john/8-11.htm> John 8, with Jesus showing up at the 
Lincoln Memorial, during a confrontation between pro-life and pro-choice 
protesters that threatens to spiral into violence.  Shockingly, he does not 
condemn either side, but praises individuals from both camps — by name! —  for 
sacrificial acts of kindness each showed to the poor and forgotten.  Time would 
later say it “humanized both the necessity and horror of abortion, through the 
heartbreaking eyes of women on the front lines.”

Then Jesus kneels down and begins to write on  
<http://lincoln-memorial.org/fun-facts/> the 87 steps.  His nail-scarred hands 
carve statistics into the stone.  Poverty.  Malnutrition. Fatherlessness. 
Incarceration rates. Pornography. Human trafficking. Homelessness. Racial 
disparities. Gender disparities. Hate crimes. Income mobility. Religious 
persecution. The costs of various wars. Names of outspoken critics and 
proponents of abortion found guilty of sexual harassment. And finally, the 
number of children killed by abortion in the United States since Roe vs. Wade.

He turns and calls sternly out to the crowd. “Is there anyone here who dares to 
condemn you?”

The crowd is silent, except for many who are weeping.

Then suddenly he smiles. “Then neither do I condemn you.  Stop condemning each 
other, and go do the work I have called you to do.” And with a nod to the 
enormous statue towering over him, he disappears into the wings.


  _____  


Martha didn’t lose her job  – or her marriage.  Her husband Joe did lose his 
job, though.  He was the pastor who shared her essay at a  
<https://passiontalks.wordpress.com/2018/02/16/whats-possible-thoughts-from-the-truth-and-reconciliation-summit/>
 Truth and Reconciliation Summit between conservative and liberal churches, 
which republished it as part of what is now known as the San Jose Declaration.

His Board of Elders were freaked out by the resulting media firestorm that 
descended on their church, and demanded he either apologize or resign.  After a 
long night of prayer with Martha, he chose the latter.  He now works as a 
chaplain at a Christian video game company promoting  
<https://twitter.com/designmom/status/1040363431893725184?lang=en> responsible 
male sexuality, and is a leading voice in the new “pro-personhood” movement.

Joe and Martha also lead a church that meets on Sunday mornings at Planned 
Parenthood, where Jen and her daughter Grace were the first converts to be 
baptized. They continue to pray for Jen’s husband Bill, who walked out on them 
when Jen defended Grace’s decision to keep her baby.

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