- Wed, Jul 20, 2011
- Prolife
Does the pregnancy rate of women on the pill prove that it doesn’t prevent implantation?
Pregnancy rates do not prove that the pill does not prevent implantation.
Pregnancy rates do not prove that the pill does not prevent implantation.
In this six minute audio clip, Randy Alcorn answers the question, "What has the reaction been to your research on the birth control pill?"
When does human life begin? Many people say that this is a philosophical or religious question. Christians maintain that life begins at conception. Does this mean that the question of when life begins is purely religious? In reality, scientists agree on when human life begins.
Let's look at some sources.
There are several moral issues with in vitro fertilization.
In this clip, part 4 of his interview with Mark Driscoll, Randy Alcorn answers the question, "Is there a connetion between the birth control pill and abortion?"
I found some studies on animals that show hormonal birth control doesn’t interfere with implantation. What is your response?
These studies say nothing about the COC (BCP) about which Randy Alcorn and I have written. They speak only to Emergency Birth Control (euphemistically called Emergency Contraception). If you would like to study more about that topic (what all the studies say, not just the two you’ve mentioned), may I suggest a systematic review on the topic?
A dozen states are considering laws that require abortion clinics to provide ultrasound images for women seeking abortion. Obstetric ultrasound is a safe and noninvasive procedure using high frequency sound waves to provide a picture of the moving fetus on a monitor screen. A “transducer” is placed on the abdomen and moved to capture different views inside the uterus. The fetal heartbeat can be viewed as early as four weeks, and other fetal measurements can be made accurately from the images on the screen.
TNL Productions: A Christian worker, his family and a nurse friend investigate throughout North America to uncover the truth about the birth control pill.
Randy Alcorn answer the question, "what about the idea you can't be prolife without falling back on religion?"
My wife and I became involved in pro-life work out of concern for women who’d been devastated by abortion. In 1981 we opened our home to a pregnant teenage girl. I served on the board of one of the first pregnancy centers on the West Coast, offering help to pregnant women who were needy, confused, and desperate. Our objective was to help women in every way possible. And the best way to help these women was to provide them alternatives to abortion.