GotQuestions.org:
How does Exodus 21:22–23 relate to the issue of abortion?
ss Exodus 21 lays
some of the groundwork for the laws of retribution, in which punishment is
tailored to fit the crime. Exodus 21:22–23 gives
this rule: “If people are fighting and hit a pregnant woman and she gives birth
prematurely but there is no serious injury, the offender must be fined whatever
the woman’s husband demands and the court allows. But if there is serious
injury, you are to take life for life.” The passage goes on to say that, in
general, penalties should be “eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot
for foot, burn for burn, wound for wound, bruise for bruise” (verses 24–25).
The punishment, in other words, should fit the crime.
This law relates to abortion in that it gives the example of
a pregnancy ending prematurely. Basic to the statute is the assumption that the
baby delivered prematurely has the same rights and protections under the law as
an adult human being. That is, the fetus is a person.
Medical science says that life begins at conception (see
Moore, Keith, Before We Are Born: Essentials of Embryology,
Saunders, 2008, p. 2; Sadler, T., Langman’s Medical Embryology, Lippincott Williams
& Wilkins, 10th ed., 2006, p. 11; and Krieger, Morris, The Human Reproductive
System, Sterling Pub., 1969, p. 88). Several passages of Scripture
also show that truth.
One such passage is Psalm 139:13 and 16: “You created my inmost
being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. . . . Your eyes saw my
unformed body; all the days ordained for me were written in your book before
one of them came to be.” David’s declaration reveals that God is present in the
womb, in the first moments of a person’s life, and He has plans for that life
from before birth.
Phrases like unformed body, inmost being, and knit me together describe
processes occurring at the cellular level of embryonic and fetal life. God
makes unique plans for every life He creates, including how many days each
person will live—all before that child is born.
God planned for Jeremiah to be a
prophet before he was even conceived: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew
you, before you were born I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the
nations” (Jeremiah 1:5). The
statement I
knew you indicates that God regarded Jeremiah as an individual
well before he was born.
Paul says in Galatians 1:15 that
God had set him apart for a special work before he was born.
In God’s eyes, each baby in the womb is
already an individual, no matter where in the developmental process the baby
happens to be.
The law of Moses gave equal protection
to both the pregnant woman and the child she carried: “Now suppose two men are
fighting, and in the process they accidentally strike a pregnant woman so she
gives birth prematurely. If no further injury results [i.e., the baby is born
alive and healthy, and the mother suffers no lasting injury], the man who
struck the woman must pay the amount of compensation the woman’s husband
demands and the judges approve. But if there is further injury [to either the
woman or the fetus], the punishment must match the injury: a life for a life”
(NLT).
Under the law in Exodus 21, causing the
death of an unborn child was a serious crime, and the punishment for it was “a
life for a life.” That law was an extension of a more basic law in Genesis 9:6: “If anyone
takes a human life, that person’s life will also be taken by human hands. For
God made human beings in his own image” (NLT). Couple these two passages, and
we conclude that the fetus given legal protection in Exodus 21 was
considered a human life—a human being created in God’s own image.
Note that, if the only consequence of
the men’s fighting was that the woman gave birth prematurely, but she and the
baby were ultimately unharmed, then the worst that would happen was that the
offender would pay a fine determined by the husband and approved by the judges.
The law did not address every loss or consequence, but it did ensure that permanent consequences
were justly compensated.
If the mother or baby or both were
injured, the husband of the baby’s mother, along with the judges, would decide
a fair punishment. If a life was lost, however, the law specified that the
offender would also lose his life.
Human life is
inherently precious to God. We are made in His image. Anything that cheapens
human life, denies the image of God in humanity, or devalues God’s handiwork is
sin. The shedding of innocent blood, including the blood of an unborn child,
was punishable under the Old Testament law. The same standard of protecting the
innocent should be reflected in today’s laws as well.
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