Abortion – 50 Years of Shame.
[An
edited version of this article is to be published in the
November issue of Evangelical Times]
How did we get the 1967 Act?
The history of UK abortion law is long but simple – for many
centuries abortion had, by and large, been a criminal
offence. And even today, abortion remains, perhaps
surprisingly, illegal in the UK. This is primarily because
sections 58 and 59 of the 1861 Offences Against the Person Act
still make it a crime for anyone, using any means whatsoever,
‘to procure the miscarriage of any woman’. The 1929 Infant
Life (Preservation) Act further extended this prohibition to a
child ‘capable of being born alive’. In other words, for a
100 years and more there was an explicit and widespread public
condemnation of abortion, severe penalties for those illicitly
involved, as well as genuine protection for the unborn and their
mothers.
So what happened in 1967? How did we acquire just about
the most liberal and ruthless abortion law in Europe, even the
world? Pre-1967 statutes allowed abortion only for the
preservation of the mother’s life and health. For some,
this was never enough. If the door to abortion was
slightly ajar, they wanted it ripped off its hinges. Yet
no British government was willing to grasp the nettle.
Several MPs had introduced abortion-liberalising bills, but they
had all foundered.
Then in May 1966, David Steel MP drew third place in the ballot
for private members’ bills and he introduced his Medical
Termination of Pregnancy Bill into the House of Commons.
Its first reading was on 15 June and a protracted and arduous
debate began. Days and nights were spent arguing,
rewording, lobbying and generally manipulating events in both
Houses. It was all quite legitimate – the Bill’s
supporters simply seized their opportunity. Eventually,
with parliamentary time being given by the Labour government of
the day to ensure its success, the Bill passed its third reading
on Friday 14 July 1967 after an all-night sitting in a
half-empty House of Commons by a majority of 167 to 83. It
received the Royal Assent on Friday 27 October. Six months
later, on 27 April 1968, the Act came into operation – the
legalised killing started.
One year later, its sponsor, David Steel, speaking at a meeting
of supporters, said that the Bill was successful because ‘The
right men were in the right place at the right time.’ By
contrast is the dismal fact that the number of evangelical
Christian leaders who ‘saw the issue’ and stood up and spoke out
against the Bill can be counted on the fingers of one hand.
Effective opposition was too little, too late.
What is the content of the 1967 Act?
The Act was not only a compromise, but also a poorly-drafted
piece of legislation. This may have suited the purposes of
the pro-abortionists, because over the years most of its
intended legal boundaries have been ridden over roughshod.
During the next two decades, no fewer than fifteen attempts were
made in Parliament to revise the Act either by tightening the
criteria for abortion or lowering the upper time limit.
All failed.
In outline, the 1967 Abortion Act did not legalise any
abortion. It gave no right to a woman to an abortion and
it did not provide ‘abortion-on-demand’. Also, it imposed
no duty on any doctor to carry out an abortion.
Nevertheless, it did offer a legal defence against the charge of
attempting ‘to procure the miscarriage of any woman’ under the
1861 Offences Against the Person Act. Thus it did,
according to section 1, protect from prosecution a ‘registered
medical practitioner’ who performed an abortion, as long as two
such doctors certified that, in their opinion, formed in good
faith, the continuance of the pregnancy would involve risk, on
one or more of six statutory grounds, greater than if the
pregnancy were terminated. After 50 years, 97% of all UK
abortions are now performed under ground C, the so-called
‘social clause’. It specifies the ‘risk of injury to the
physical or mental health of the pregnant woman’. In
effect, this criterion is as long as it is wide – almost any
pretext will do.
What is the effect of the 1967 Act?
In simple terms, the answer is that an estimated 8.8 million
unborn children have been aborted in the UK during the last 50
years. Such a colossal number is almost beyond
comprehension. The annual figures remain enormous – during
2016 there were 190,604 abortions performed in England and
Wales, plus another 12,063 in Scotland. This total of
202,469 is approximately the entire population of Bournemouth or
Swansea or Aberdeen. It is equivalent to 770 unborn
children every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday. Have you grasped the enormity of abortion, on your
doorstep?
Legalised abortion was never envisioned to be like this.
Back in 1967, abortion was intended for the poor, overworked,
struggling woman with several children, living in squalor with a
useless drunken husband. It was regarded as a last
resort. Today, 50 years on, abortions are typically for
young, single women, in good health, in decent housing, with a
regular income, carrying healthy unborn children. What are
we doing?
Over the years the 1967 Act has been tweaked so that the upper
time limit for abortion is now typically 24 weeks.
However, if disability, such as Down’s syndrome, is suspected
then the upper limit is birth, yes, 40 weeks. However,
what has not changed in the last 50 years is the physical and
mental toll on mothers, fathers and, of course, the
unborn. For many parents, the aftermath of abortion is
often shadowed by guilt and regret. Such symptoms of
post-abortion syndrome are denied by many medical authorities
but are familiar to those involved in pro-life counselling.
What is the future of the 1967 Act?
For some, the reach of the Act is still not enough – they want
more than 200,000 abortions each year. And there are now
serious calls to decriminalise abortion. Indeed, in March
of this year, a Ten-Minute Rule Bill was presented to
Parliament. Its purpose was to remove all legal
restrictions on abortion by tearing up sections 58 and 59 of the
1861 Offences Against the Person Act, the 1967 Abortion Act and
probably the 1929 Infant Life (Preservation) Act too.
Alarmingly, the Bill was passed by 172 votes to 142. The
second reading was set for 12 May, but in the meantime, a
General Election was called, Parliament was dissolved and the
Bill fell. Nevertheless, this episode should jolt the
consciences of MPs and us.
Furthermore in September, the 33 Council members of the Royal
College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) voted to
change the College’s position from neutrality to supporting
decriminalisation. The RCOG’s president, Lesley Regan, has
said that abortions should be treated no differently from other
medical procedures – including something as simple as removing a
bunion. While most abortionists are members of the RCOG,
its full membership of 6,000 was not consulted. A similar
ethical stance has also recently been taken by the British
Medical Council and the Royal College of Midwives. The
latter’s chief executive, Cathy Warwick, who incidentally is
also the chairwoman of the British Pregnancy Advisory Service
(BPAS), the UK’s largest abortion provider, also did not bother
to consult her members. There is clearly an alliance of
radical pro-abortionists currently pushing their extreme
agenda. Decriminalised abortion for any, or no, reason, at
any stage of pregnancy, performed anywhere would be a truly
disturbing prospect.
How are you affected by the 1967 Act?
Since an estimated one in three women in the UK has now had an
abortion before the age of 45, you, your family and your
friends, may well be directly affected. Indirectly, we are
all affected. Because the lives of more than 8 million
unborn children have been terminated in the UK in the last
half-century, we should all be dismayed. It is our 50
years of shame. Evangelical Christians have, for too long,
been equivocal about abortion – shame on us especially! If
you have not shed tears about its practice and aftermath, you
have not yet understood abortion.
We are the people who should, above all others, understand such
life and death issues and respond with principled
compassion. Have you responded at all? Do you still
hold ‘a moderate view’ on abortion? What hinders you from
upholding a wholeheartedly pro-life position? Is it the
issues of disability or rape or underage girls? Perhaps
you need to ponder anew what it means to be ‘created in the
image of God’ (Genesis 1:27) and to be ‘fearfully and
wonderfully made’ (Psalm 139:13-15). Abortion is a direct
rebellion against the God-given gift and dignity of the unborn.
What must we do about the 1967 Act?
Christians have an onerous task here. We have been
entrusted with both the diagnosis and the cure. The
Christian worldview possesses rugged answers to difficult
questions and then it calls us to engage and care for all those
entangled with abortion and its consequences.
So, have you prayed for, given of your energy, time and money to
help those caught up and suffering? They are all around
you. Perhaps now, on this heinous 50th anniversary, is a
good time to pledge to respond more biblically. Abortion
has been called the greatest genocide in history. As the
great anti-slavery campaigner, William Wilberforce, once
declared in another context, ‘Having heard all of this you may
choose to look the other way but you can never again say you did
not know.’