At
Ohio State University, Ravi Zaccharias did an open forum on a radio
talk show. The host was an atheist. From the start, the callers were
antagonistic. "I could feel the tension as soon as the lines lit
up. One angry woman caller said, “All you people have is an agenda
you’re trying to promote.” Referring to abortion, she said, “You
want to take away our rights and invade our private lives.”
Abortion
had not even been brought up.
“Just
a minute,” I replied, “we didn’t even raise the subject.”
“Ok,”
she said, “what is your position on abortion then?”
I
said, “Can I ask you a question? On every university campus I
visit, somebody stands up and says that God is an evil God to allow
all this evil into our world. This person typically says, ‘A plane
crashes: 30 people die, and 20 people live. What kind of God would
arbitrarily choose some to live and some to die?’”
I
continued, “But when we play God and determine whether a child
within a mother’s womb should live, we argue for that as a moral
right. So when human beings are given the privilege of playing God,
it’s called a moral right. When God plays God, we call it an
immoral act. Can you justify this for me?”
That
was the end of the conversation.
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