More than 100 black faith and community leaders in Ohio are urging Ohioans to vote against an upcoming ballot measure that would place a right to abortion in the state constitution, arguing that the issue is a “life-or-death” matter for the black community.

 

The bipartisan group of black faith leaders organized by Choose Life Ohio released a joint letter Tuesday in opposition to Issue 1, the ballot initiative Ohioans will vote on in November. The faith leaders argued that the issue is not partisan or a “party-line vote,” highlighting the impact abortion has had on black women and families.

Ohio Issue 1 would establish a constitutional right to “make and carry out one’s own reproductive decisions,” including abortion, contraception and fertility treatment. The amendment would allow the state to restrict abortion after fetal viability but not when deemed “necessary to protect the pregnant patient’s life or health.”

Citing a 2022 U.S. Census Bureau report, the faith leaders noted that Ohio’s black population is overrepresented in the state’s abortion data. While black individuals account for only 13% of Ohio’s population, the letter contends that 48% of women who undergo abortions in the state are black.

 

The letter also cited a Washington Examiner report that estimates that at least 20 million black children have likely been aborted between 1973 and the reversal of Roe v. Wade last June, which the letter noted is “enough to fill the Ohio stadium more than 194 times.”

The religious leaders claim Issue 1 helps the abortion industry push an “agenda driven by racism and greed,” condemning the measure as “more extreme” than Roe. The pastors echoed objections to Issue 1 voiced by pro-life advocates, believing that the measure would allow abortion throughout all nine months and allow minors to obtain abortions without parental consent.

Brian Williams, senior pastor of Hope City House of Prayer in Columbus, Ohio, was one of the spiritual leaders who signed on to the letter. In an interview with The Christian Post, Williams declared that the stakes surrounding Issue 1 are much higher than if the measure were a piece of legislation.

The pastor said that his church promotes the sanctity of life from a biblical standpoint and encourages the congregation to become involved in the civic process by providing voter registration.

Williams believes that faith leaders have a duty to speak on issues like abortion, asserting that it’s “a betrayal of our faith, a betrayal of our ethnicity, and a betrayal of babies in the womb” if spiritual leaders remain silent.

While Williams would like to see voters block the amendment, he’s hopeful that society will work to create a culture of life that not only values the pre-born child but throughout all stages of life by building social structures that provide for the child’s educational and health care needs.

Regardless of the outcome, the pastor will continue to advocate against abortion because the public will likely look to Ohio as an example as other states throughout the country potentially seek to enact similar measures.

 

 

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