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DNC abortion service highlights America’s new religious war

Reproductive rights demonstrators dressed as misoprostol tablets march in protest ahead of this week's Democratic National Convention. Credit: Getty

August 19, 2024 - 10:00am

Was the end of Roe v. Wade the beginning of religious conflict in America? The announcement of a sellout abortion-on-wheels clinic at this week’s Democratic National Convention in Chicago has highlighted the increasingly divisive nature of this issue as a political, cultural, and spiritual scissor in the Land of the Free. Indeed, it is one that now openly threatens the long-treasured American principle of separating church and state.

America’s abortion debate has become increasingly bitter since Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022. Since then, numerous conservative states have enacted more restrictive abortion regulations; and for all that Donald Trump seems ambivalent on the issue, Democrats have leaned into it, embracing what the New York Times recently called “a new, unbridled abortion politics”. Kamala Harris is now campaigning on “reproductive freedom”, while those around her strike an increasingly strident and even celebratory note on abortion, including spectacular promotional stunts for their preferred policies, such as the DNC abortion bus or protestors dressed as abortion pills.

Pro-life conservatives, meanwhile, are sharply critical. Georgia Republican congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene yesterday called the Planned Parenthood clinic “truly heartbreaking”, and entreated Americans to “choose life”. Children’s rights campaigner Katy Faust decried it as “anti-child in every way”. Some online commentators employed far more colourful language, describing the DNC abortion-wagon as “demonic”, or as “free child sacrifice”, or calling the Democrats “the party of Satan”.

The latter phrasing in turn references a meme which characterises progressives as worshippers of the ancient Canaanite god Moloch, implied in the Old Testament to require the sacrifice of children. To some, this isn’t merely a metaphor but a literal resurgence of demonic forces in the world. The Jewish megachurch leader Jonathan Cahn, for example, claimed in his 2022 book The Return of the Gods that as the Christian faith recedes across the West, ancient Near Eastern deities are returning to fill the space. This includes Moloch, whom Cahn links with abortion.

So it’s probably fair to say that returning American abortion access to state level has done nothing to take the heat out of the issue. But perhaps this shouldn’t surprise us. Even before we get to the more divisive matter of “choice”, the capacity to bear children often intersects with poverty, violence, and abuse, to leave women in grim predicaments with no obvious solution that doesn’t involve someone paying a terrible price. Historically, where cultures have come down on who should pay that price has depended on that culture’s broader moral — which is to say, religious — outlook.

And the abortion debate is best understood as a proxy for a religious dispute on precisely this ground: a zero-sum conflict between two moral frameworks that cannot coexist, and which in both cases imply the need for legislation to override individual conscience. In other words, this is a matter where state cannot be separated from church, whatever the American founding may assert.

In the pro-life worldview, humans are understood as free, equal, deserving of dignity but constrained by our embodied nature and obligations. This implies legislation to protect natural human fertility from undue medical tinkering, and also to protect unborn humans. Within the pro-choice worldview — which is, albeit in a slightly disguised way, every bit as religious an outlook — the focus is more narrowly on individual freedom and equality. Here, assertions of constraint or obligation are rejected as oppressive, which in turn calls for legislation to protect women’s freedom to be sexually active on the same terms as men, but pregnant only when desired.

Both sides draw, in different ways, on the Christian tradition but emphasise different aspects. That each asserts a foundation in freedom and equality does not diminish this: the most bitter religious conflicts tend to emerge between irreducibly divergent branches of the same faith. And there is no way of accommodating both in the same political framework. In a dispute over the nature of the human, and individual freedom, and the welfare of women and babies, the stakes are simply too high and too emotive.

The classical liberal solution of leaving it to individual conscience is thus a non-starter. Where fundamentally spiritual disagreements over the nature of human personhood are concerned, there is no squashy “centrism” — and there is certainly no disentangling moral outlook (“church”) from policy (“state”). One side will have to win, and when they do it will be ugly.


Mary Harrington is a contributing editor at UnHerd.

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