Part 1:
When we were faced with tough issues as JWs, we used one or more of a few ways to find answers. We either searched the publications, consulted with an Elder, or in some cases, wrote to the Society. Once the answer was received and made clear ... and the Watchtower system seems to have answers for everything ... we most likely followed the recommended course, whether we liked it or not. Yet, while I was a JW Elder, I was brought face-to-face with an issue, and I was not able to provide an answer or make a judgment:
My manager's dilema: My former engineering manager is Hindu. He and I always got along, and as a Hindu, he respected my beliefs as a JW. He sought out my advice and input on more than one occasion. One day, he asked to talk to me, privately, in the conference room. He said, "I know you are a man of God, and I want your views on a very serious issue facing me and my wife." I was somewhat gaurded, but extremely curious ... and anyone would be, but especially as a JW, because we always kept our distance with worldlings. He then told me that his wife is pregnant, and that they have already done tests and confirmed that the baby will be extremely mongoloid. In fact, some of the medical opinion is that the baby will not live more than a year, and may not even have many needed brain functions, or a fully developed brain. Some of the brain cavity appeared extremely abnormal. His questions: "Given this terrible situation, do you think my wife should have an abortion? Will God hate us?" He broke down in tears.
My mind started swimming: I felt terrible for him. I thought to myself at the time, "Oh no, I can't give this guy advice on such a serious and personal issue. Yet, at the same time, how can I deny my own views and values." I asked him to let me think a second.
My own birth: I was born on a military reservation in 1951. Back then, abortions were not common, and were subject to state law rather than federal rulings. Given that the hospital was on a base, it was not subject to local or state laws. When my mother gave birth to my sister (Child No. 3) her uterus tore loose. So, the doctors tied her uterus to her backbone. The doctors strongly advised her to not have anymore children. Three years later she became pregnant with her fourth child, and miscarried. because of her weakened uterus, her doctors strongly advised her to have a hysterectomy. She declined to do so. Three years after that, she became pregnant with me. This time, the doctors told her she should abort me because carrying me full term could cost her, her life. My mother refused to abort me. Why?
JWs call on our door in 1951: The Jehovah's Witnesses of 1951 had some strange views as they do today. While my mother stood at the door bulging with me inside, the JW man told her that I was not a living soul because I had not taken the breath of life. As a result, if she died before Amrageddon, while still pregnant (yes, Armageddon was expected any month, just around the corner) that I would not be resurrected. My mother told him to go to hell. She told him that as a Roman Catholic, she believes that at the moment of conception, when a woman becomes pregnant, God puts a soul in the new life. She said that she could not accept the JW view.
Back to the military doctors: My mother told the doctors that as a Roman Catholic she believed that I was a living soul of God, and not just the result of a human sex act. Furthermore, she said that she cares not for her own life at the expense of her own child. She told them that abortion was really murder, and she could not murder her own baby.
Now, back to my manager at Bechtel Corp. in San Francisco. He was waiting for an answer, and asked me again what I thought. I told him that I was not sure what to say. I told him of my own mother, and how this affected my own outcome and a chance for life ... and that I can't imagine having to face such a terrible decision. However, I could also see his dilema, and how this must be their own personal decision ... between he and his wife. I told him that I would not be judgmental, for that is God's job. I felt ill, because abortion to me is so close and personal, and were it not for my dear mother, I would not be here typing away on these keys.
This is a close and personal issue to my heart. I place it to everyone, because now that we no longer have Watchtower Indexes, Elders, or the Society to lean on for our values and answers in life ... what does your own human spirit tell you? I am NOT interested in the "politics" of the issue, but rather, the personal morality of it. How would you have answered him?
Jim W.
PS: This will be a short series. Each part will be about a new topic and presented in a different way.