Mennonite Church USA delegates voted by a broad majority yesterday
to approve a statement on abortion, affirming the sacredness of life
and calling on the church to act with compassion on the issue.
With 847 ballots cast, 687 delegates voted for the statement, 160
voted against and 13 abstained. The statement, which required a two-thirds
majority to carry, passed with 81 percent approval.
“I’m glad that it passed,” the Mennonite Church
USA moderator, Ervin Stutzman, said after the final tally. Though
the statement generated substantial discussion in the minutes before
the final vote, Stutzman said he believes more delegates will come
to a clearer understanding of the statement as they discuss it in
their table groups in coming days.
The afternoon delegate session concluded before the ballot results
were announced. During the morning session, the assembly’s resolutions
committee presented a proposal to amend the statement. The amendment
would have deleted language discouraging the pursuit of anti-abortion
legislation.
Sharon Waltner of the resolutions committee said the amendment had
been called for by several delegates. Because the committee felt the
deletion would not substantially change the intent of the statement,
it was brought to the entire assembly.
Leah Ann Alcazar, who worked on the statement as part of a committee
appointed by the church’s Constituency Leadership Council, said
the committee knew it would be impossible to draft an abortion statement
satisfactory to all. Instead, they focused on remaining consistent
with Anabaptist values. She said there was no call for anti-abortion
legislation because abortion is an individual choice and because outlawing
abortion would not eliminate the issue.
“Illegalizing abortion places additional burdens on people,
especially women,” Alcazar said, noting that illegal abortions
potentially could lead to even greater harm for the women and children
involved.
Alcazar said it is the place of the church to encourage dialogue on
the issue, especially by educating young people and helping place
sexuality in its proper marital context.
The proposed amendment failed on a paper ballot, 486 votes to 356,
with 16 abstaining — a 58 percent majority.
The approved document states in part that abortion should not be used
to interrupt unwanted pregnancies, and calls for a commitment to caring
for infants who are brought to term. The statement also calls for
the church to act with compassion toward those who choose to have
an abortion and to find ways to “walk with individuals seeking
guidance as they deal with unexpected and unwanted pregnancies.”
A last-minute proposal to delay a final vote on the statement until
July 7 failed.
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–Sarah Phend
Youth worship:
Members of First Mennonite Church, Berne, Ind., sing during worship. Services
are held twice daily in Exhibit Hall B-5.