Joseph Parker: Post-Roe — What Does a Pro-Life Church Look Like?

In the aftermath of the overturning of Roe v. Wade, what should a pro-life church look like? What are some of the priorities, attributes, and perspectives of a local church that seeks to be the hands and feet of Jesus in our nation today as it addresses life issues?

This question is a very important one, and a very important companion question is this: Am I really seeking to honor the Lord in doing what He would have me to do — as an individual disciple of Christ — to help stand for life?

Well, an individual church family and each individual within it should prayerfully consider and possibly seek to live out several important characteristics.

A pro-life church needs to be a praying church. It is a church that seeks God faithfully in prayer as a lifestyle. Through prayer, they help to usher in the presence of God. They share the heart and mind of God with the culture.

It can help a church family and an individual believer to both ask and receive the answer to another important question. The question the apostle Paul made immediately after he met Christ in Acts 9:6 is wise for all believers to pray: “Lord, what do you want me to do?”

The church should seek God’s heart by asking the same question.

It knows prayer is crucial. A church that is involved in this kind of prayer and spiritual warfare will be working with God’s power to change women’s minds even after they may have entered an abortion clinic. This leads to women deciding, “I can’t do this,” and leaving.

A pro-life church is wise to be a humble church. Yet the question needs to be asked: “What is humility and what does it mean to be humble?” Real biblical humility is complete submission to the Word and will of God.

It’s a church that will pray and ask God about placing a local pregnancy center and/or other pro-life ministries into its monthly budget and into its mission budget. They will educate themselves on the issues related to life and minister to those affected by the realities surrounding life.

It’s a church that will prayerfully consider encouraging members to volunteer at local pregnancy centers.

It’s a church that would prayerfully consider supporting a baby clothes closet with diapers, clothes, wipes, and other needed items.

It’s a church that will prayerfully consider becoming a sanctuary church. They will help moms who find themselves expecting a baby at a difficult time. They will come alongside a mother who feels all alone and walk with her through her term of pregnancy and beyond. They will prayerfully become like family with the love and support a mother may not have in her own life.

It’s a church that will learn about important pro-life outreach ministries that are doing vital work to end legalized abortion in different ways. It will sacrificially and faithfully support such ministries with their prayers and their finances.

It’s a church that is wise and informed enough to know and understand it should in no way rest until abortion is once again illegal in every state in our nation.

Post-Roe, as before and always, the church should seek to faithfully follow God and His ways.

Praise God for the reality that Roe v. Wade has been overturned. That was a great blessing from the hand of God. The reality is that Roe v. Wade should have never happened in the first place. It legalized the murder of babies in their mothers’ wombs.

Now that the decision has been overturned, it’s important that we understand that our work is far from over. It is, in fact, just beginning. Let us, as the church of Jesus Christ, faithfully roll up our sleeves. Let us have a renewed commitment to help save the lives of women and babies. Let’s get to work.

(AFA Editor’s note:  Pastor Joseph Parker is the author of the book A Pastor’s Notes: God Calls the Church to Stand Boldly for Life. It can be found at resources.afa.net HERE.)

Joseph Parker is Chairman of the Board of the Pregnancy Care and Hope Center and serves as Director of Outreach and Intercession with the American Family Association. He has been in the ministry for almost 40 years and hosts the radio broadcast, “The Hour of Intercession,” on the American Family Radio network.

The views expressed in opinion articles are solely those of the author and are not necessarily either shared or endorsed by Black Community News.

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4 comments

  1. Excellent pastoral exhortation, Pastor Parker! It sums up the path forward very clearly. It is the path that many of us have been (somewhere along) on and it is a call to step up our efforts. It is a call to many others to join and support life as the only God filled choice. Been engaged in my local RTL of Michigan chapter for a few years now. Along my journey of turning back to God and turning all over to Him, choosing and supporting life, was clearly the only logical choice. God Bless you, your family, and your congregation always, good sir.

  2. To answer the question asked in the title of the article, a pro-life church would be one where life is honored and cherished, irregardless of any other factors of the congregants.
    To support abortion is to support murder. As if we, the common sense and logical thinking folks didn’t already know that fact.
    Its all in God’s hands and he works through those of us who are still on the planet.
    Just sayin’.

  3. Thank you for the plain spoken truth in your article, Reverend Parker. You mention a pro life church, but how can a church that isn’t pro-life be a church of our Father, God? I guess the question is answered in the question itself. Thank you. God Bless you.

  4. Wise words from Rev. Joseph Parker.