
Sarah St. Onge is a Christian wife, mother, and writer. She writes about child-loss, grief, and issues pertaining to continuing a pregnancy after a lethal anomaly has been diagnosed, at www.shebringsjoy.com. She’s also the founder of limbbodywallcomplex.net, a pro-life, diagnosis specific website which supports parents who continue their pregnancy after receiving the same lethal diagnosis which took her daughter, Beatrix Elizabeth. You can find her on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Americans in state and federal elections will decide if Roe and all of its implications will become official law. Millions of lives hang in the balance.
There’s an important distinction between supporting the Black Lives Matter organization and lovingly supporting black people whose lives matter.
In her final performance, Norma McCorvey has given the pro-life movement a profound gift: exposing the potential for great cruelty.
While we recognize Zara Dawson’s son would most likely have passed away after birth, to ignore the fact she had a hand in the ultimate violence towards him is disingenuous.
Tinslee Lewis is just the latest victim of politicians who believe the state has more interest than families in determining who should receive care.
Two premature babies were born in New York City this summer, at similar ages. One was abandoned in a park, the other killed in a late-term abortion.
It’s a blessing when someone chooses life. So how can communities come together and help make an expecting mother’s burden a little lighter?
In the event Roe gets overturned, it won’t be the win for abortion abolition that pro-lifers claim. We must strategize accordingly.
Melodramatic headlines that make pro-lifers seem hypocritical are straight out of the mainstream media playbook, designed to deceive. In this case it’s more overt than usual.
Maddi Runkles is just a small symptom of a larger dilemma within the church: holding unwed, pregnant teen girls to a separate set of standards than others who fall from grace.