Both the Saint Paul and Minneapolis papers ran an identical story on June 5 related to new prenatal tests on the genetic makeup of pre-born children: New earlier blood test for Down syndrome pregnancies may bring women comfort — or conflict.
The ramifications of what is presented in this article are huge for parents and churches and society at large.
But this article highlighted something really delightful: a woman passionately committed to her baby.
Witkowski, who prayed as that needle was slipped into her swollen belly in 2009, got her answer: It was Down syndrome. As her doctor gave her the news, her baby kicked her and “I could see my belly move,” she recalled.
Her doctor started talking immediately about abortion, a step Witkowski rejected. She changed doctors and gave birth to Grady in February 2010.
“When they first gave him to me,” Witkowski said, “I saw tiny little hands, and he had the most beautiful eyes… He didn’t have `Down syndrome’ stamped on his forehead. He cried and he peed and he pooped. He was a baby.”
New prenatal testing is getting cheaper and more widely available. But it is not something to fear when we know that good decisions can be made, like in this case! And those good decisions can be made even when those in authority, like doctors, are offering really, really bad alternatives.
There are those to whom we grant authority over us, like doctors and social workers and university professors and even some pastors, who are vocally against life with disability rather than for it. That doctor, whether because of training or because of bias, immediately started talking about abortion because our society has turned against people with disabilities.
Was that doctor going to be as vocal about the humanity of that baby or about the entire possible spectrum of how that child’s life could turn out? In addition to all of the struggles, and there will be many, are parents really being told the entire truth about their situation? This article also notes that studies show doctors emphasize the negative ramifications of the diagnosis.
And who will tell these parents the truth about God’s sovereignty over all things and all circumstances?
Obviously this young mother knew something that doctor didn’t – she was carrying a baby, not ‘Down syndrome.’
May God be pleased to encourage many, many more who behave like Erin Witkowski of Port Jervis, N.Y.!
Attempting to honor in helpful ways
Posted in commentary, Helpful things on June 12, 2011| 9 Comments »
As most of you know or could guess, The Works of God is named primarily because that phrase shows up in John 9, the accounting of Jesus healing the man born blind.
But it also shows up in other places, like Psalm 78:
He established a testimony in Jacob
and appointed a law in Israel,
which he commanded our fathers
to teach to their children,
that the next generation might know them,
the children yet unborn,
and arise and tell them to their children,
so that they should set their hope in God
and not forget the works of God. . . Psalm 78:5-7a
How do fathers learn how to teach their children to do that? I’ve learned a great deal from other men.
Several weeks ago I had the thought that on Father’s Day it would be nice to honor some of the men who help me do what has been commanded that I do as a father. Then I abandoned it because of all the problems it seemed to create:
God gets the glory! Ok, that seems like a good thing to talk about.
And there it was – I can freely honor by showing how these men have been helpful, and maybe others can learn from their examples.
Over the next seven days, Lord willing, I hope to raise up examples of men who are or have been helpful to me. I have a personal relationship with all of them; no dead authors in this group although two have passed on from this life. And I am very fond of all of them! But I’ll try to keep those affections as secondary to explaining how they have helped.
In doing so, I hope you will be encouraged that God does things like give the gift of people who help us love him more. And I also hope that you will take the time to honor and thank men in your lives who have helped you.
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