Two New Exhibits: A First Look

Note: This Impact Report (print version dated July 2016) is the first of a series of Impact Reports which focus on JFA’s newly-expanded large exhibit campus outreach program.

 

One exhibit for fifteen years.  Two new exhibits in three days.  What’s going on?

 

I wish you could have been there to experience it with us.  After displaying one large exhibit on 40 campuses for more than 250 days over the past 15 years, the JFA team raised the nine panels of a new large exhibit called The Art of Life at Colorado State University (CSU) on April 18 and April 19.  Then on April 20, we raised the panels of another new exhibit called Stop and Think.  A month later we used both exhibits again to create dialogue at UCLA. 

Far from replacing the original Justice For All Exhibit built in 2000, these two new exhibits simply increase our options for large-format outreach.  For any given day of outreach, we can now choose to display the original JFA Exhibit, the Art of Life Exhibit, or the Stop and Think Exhibit.

Our goal with Art of Life and Stop and Think is to try some new things without losing touch with the original JFA Exhibit which has become a mainstay of JFA’s conversations with pro-choice advocates and JFA’s training program for pro-life advocates.  Indeed, while conducting conversations with passersby in front of these new exhibits, we are still using the original JFA Exhibit Brochure to help people connect with the humanity of the unborn and the inhumanity of abortion.  The Brochure is also still the main resource passersby can take with them from our exhibit conversations.

These new exhibits are part of an ongoing research and development project which the JFA team restarted with new energy last year, thanks to generous supporters of JFA.  These exhibits look different than the original JFA Exhibit, and this is very intentional.  We are still the same JFA, though, and we are still driven by the same twin passions: engaging hundreds of pro-choice advocates in conversations in each single day of outreach and training pro-life advocates to skillfully create those conversations wherever God places them.  In fact, it’s precisely our mission of training thousands to make abortion unthinkable for millions, one person at a time that is causing our team to seek to discover new ways to reach more people.

In the galleries below, we’d like to give you a first look at these new exhibits and allow you to experience them in much the same way that students first see them on campus, without much prior explanation.  Along with the galleries, five JFA staff members share stories of conversations and reflections from these recent events.  To learn more about the exhibits, please feel free to contact me or any JFA trainer.  We are happy to answer questions, listen to your comments, or delve deeper into the thinking behind our new exhibits.  You can also use the links at the bottom of each page to explore the exhibits.

I hope you enjoy learning about these new exhibits as much as we enjoyed creating them and using them in these recent outreach events.

- Steve Wagner, for the JFA Team

 

The Art of Life - An Exhibit by Justice For All

***

I spoke to “Cori” at UCLA who identified herself as pro-choice.  After asking more about her view, it turned out that she was only in favor of abortion in the case of rape.  I pointed to the feminism panels on the Stop and Think Exhibit and explained the picture of a first-trimester, suction abortion.  She said that prior to this she had never seen abortion.  I opened up our brochure to show her an eight-week embryo and explained that this was what a human embryo looked like before a suction abortion.  She thought for a moment and then said that she believed that all abortions should be illegal.  - Tammy Cook

***

At UCLA in front of the Art of Life Exhibit, I spoke with two sweet young women, Ani and Angela.  They were both “personally pro-life” but each gave reasons why abortion should stay legal.  Ani, a Christian, thought abortion is justified in certain “hard cases,” while Angela said the question should be left up to the individual pregnant woman, taking into account how she feels about her circumstances and what she believes about when the unborn becomes a human being.  Looking up at the “poverty” panel on the exhibit, the three of us found a lot of common ground as we discussed the difficulty of poverty, especially for single mothers.  The girls agreed with me however that, as difficult as poverty is (e.g. for the woman represented in the painting), it could not possibly justify a mother taking the lives of her already-born children.  After a few more questions, both girls became quiet.  I could tell their wheels were turning.  After a minute, Angela smiled at me, so I asked what was on her mind.  She said, “I thought it was up to the person and the circumstance, but I guess it’s not so much about that – it is a human from the beginning.”  - Catherine Wurts

***

In front of the three feminism signs on the Stop and Think Exhibit, two CSU students, Kevin and Megan, stopped to ask about the exhibit.  Kevin personally thought abortion was wrong but that it should be legal.  Megan felt abortion should be legal in most cases.  Because of the panels set in front of us, we discussed women's rights and the foundational reason that explains why women deserve to be treated equally – our human nature.  The conversation then turned to the fact that the unborn also have this same human nature: “So shouldn’t the unborn be included in the group that is granted equal rights if the unborn have this same human nature?”  Although she didn’t change her mind during our conversation, at the end of the conversation Megan extended her hand to shake mine and said, “Thank you so much for this conversation.  You have given me a lot to go home and think about.”  - Rebecca Haschke

***

We turned some of the Art of Life Exhibit panels into coloring pages and then set up a coloring station.  That quickly became my new favorite spot to start conversations at our outreach event.  (I’ve asked many questions in front of Justice For All exhibits, but “Would you like to color with me?” was new.)  My second conversation that took place at our coloring station was with three high school girls who were just visiting CSU for the day.  As we added our own unique spin on classic pieces of art, I learned about their views on abortion.  At the beginning of the conversation, one of the three girls was pro-life, but by the end of the conversation all three girls were pro-life!  My favorite part of the conversation happened when I talked to the girls about how we have equal rights because we are human and how the unborn should have the same equal rights because she is human as well.  With wide eyes the girls looked at me and one of them exclaimed, “Well, I guess I have to be pro-life now!”  - CK Wisner

***

My first few experiences with these displays reminded me that we can’t ever be totally sure which method or which exhibit will impact the greatest number of people, but when we stand for truth and interact with grace, we can be sure that God will open doors for many lives to be changed through the efforts.  - Jon Wagner

CK and Jamie

June 2016 Impact Report

CK Wisner, Training Specialist

PART I: SEPTEMBER 2015

Things were getting out of hand.  Voices were raised and the crowd was visibly upset.  Gathered in front of Justice For All’s display at the University of Georgia – Athens (UGA) were several pro-life men, most notably Matthew and Isaac, engaging one pro-choice woman, “Jamie.”  I joined the debate hoping to turn it into a gracious dialogue. 

I started by addressing a question to Matthew.  As I was beginning to understand Matthew's point of view on abortion, Jamie interrupted him.  Soon after Jamie started talking, Isaac interrupted her.  We weren’t getting any closer to having a productive conversation, so I laid some ground rules.

Me: Excuse me, but I don’t feel like we’re getting anywhere with this discussion.  I propose that we take time to listen to each other and try to understand where everyone is coming from.  If someone else is speaking and you have something you’d like to say, please raise your hand and that will signify that you get to speak next.  Now, I hold to “ladies first,” so I’m going to let Jamie speak next.

Jamie: Well, I think that women are just in really difficult situations.  We don’t know what any given woman is going through or why she needs an abortion…

Matthew and Isaac: But wait!  There’s a baby in that situation…

At this point, Jamie was looking very angry.  Trying to avoid further outbursts, I decided to help the pro-lifers out a little bit by teaching them the concept of common ground.

Me: [raising my hand] Hey guys, I think Jamie is actually saying something about which we can all agree…if I understood her correctly, she is concerned about women who are facing really difficult situations.  I think we all are concerned for women in difficult circumstances.  Is that right?

Matthew and Isaac: Yes.  Definitely!

Me: I’m glad we agree on that.  I find that making note of the things we agree on is particularly helpful.

The dynamic of the conversation then changed.  Prior to introducing the concepts of listening and finding common ground, students were yelling their views and grouped together like a mob.  After adding structure and kindness, the group formed into a circle, and all of us started respectfully raising our hands when we had something to say.

Even though things were going well, I was becoming concerned for Jamie.  She was still highly emotional, and when I would aim to lovingly point out the flaws of her pro-choice position, she would admit that I was right, but then still cling with a passion to her views.  I could sense that something was underneath the surface that she was not sharing.

The conversation carried on for about 45 more minutes.  I heard the views of those who had joined our conversation.  Eventually it was obvious that everyone had said what he or she had to say.  As people were starting to repeat themselves, I raised my hand again.

Me: I’ve appreciated all of you sharing your views.  Can I see a show of hands on who understands what Matthew believes?

All hands rose.

Me: Who understands what Jamie believes?

All hands rose for a second time.  I continued asking this question about every person who had shared his view, and each time there was a complete consensus that everyone was at least beginning to understand what the others believed.  I then kindly ended the conversation.

Me: Now that we understand each other, I think it would be more productive to end the group discussion here, instead of each of us repeating our stances on abortion.  I think no one at this point is open to changing his or her mind in front of a group.  I’m more than happy to talk to each of you one-on-one.

The group disbanded, and I took this opportunity to pull Jamie aside.  I shared with her that I appreciated her sharing her view when nearly everyone had disagreed with her.  She thanked me, but she was still noticeably hurting.  I was becoming more and more convinced that Jamie had a personal connection with abortion.

Me: Do you know anyone who has had an abortion?

With that question, Jamie fell into my arms weeping.  I held her until she gained her composure.  Jamie then confirmed that she herself had an abortion in her past.

Jamie: [pointing at a photo of the aftermath of abortion] That photo condemns me to hell.

Me: Jamie, abortion is not the unforgiveable sin.  Jesus is just as willing and able to forgive the sin of abortion as He would be any other sin.  There is grace and healing in Jesus.  I’m not trying to take away your guilt [because I did believe what Jamie did was wrong], but I want you to know that redemption for your past mistakes is completely open to you.

Jamie: I just don’t know why I feel this way, because I don’t think abortion is wrong.

I just don’t know why I feel this way, because I don’t think abortion is wrong.
— Jamie

Me: [very gently] You don’t have to answer this question out loud, but I want to give you something to think about.  Are you sure abortion isn’t wrong, or are you just telling yourself that to justify your actions?

At this Jamie simply nodded her head.  We talked for a few more minutes, and I made sure to get her contact information so that I could connect her with resources for healing from her abortion.  Once I got back from Georgia, I did email Jamie.  Her message back to me showed me why I do this work with Justice For All.  She said,

“Thank you for this.  I have been thinking a lot since we met, and I want you to know that that has been good for me.  I've actually discussed the matter with my parents for the first time in several years, and it was a healing occasion for all of us.  Thank you for your help.”

When I returned to UGA in February of this year (2016), I had another conversation with Jamie.  (Continue reading below.)  I am confident that God continues to be at work.  He is at work in Jamie’s life, my life, and your life.  Let’s pray for Jamie to draw near to Christ that she might fully experience Christ’s healing work in her life. 

Note: Part I originally appeared in CK's December 2015 Newsletter.

The JFA Exhibit (2000) panels displayed at UGA on the day CK met Jamie.  Jamie was referring to the "Is this humane?" panel when she said, "That photo condemns me to hell," and CK was able to share the message of Christ's forgiveness with her.

 

PART II: FEBRUARY 2016

In my December 2015 newsletter, I shared with you one of my favorite stories about a dear young woman, “Jamie.” I told you about meeting Jamie at an outreach event and shared how she had opened up to me about the abortion in her past. I was able to love Jamie in the midst of the short time I had with her and share with her the hope of healing. We then exchanged a couple of emails.

But the story doesn’t end there. I returned to Jamie’s campus in February of this year. I knew that I wanted to see her again, so I sent her an email letting her know that I was going to be there. Early Monday morning on the first day of our outreach event she came by. We greeted each other with a hug of friendship and then I asked her how she had been doing. For the next several minutes, I heard more of her story. The details were heartbreaking.

After I had listened to Jamie, she said something that surprised me: “I’m the closest I’ve ever been to being pro-life, but I just have a couple of questions.” I asked Jamie to share with me what her questions were, and together we began to address them. By the end of our conversation, she recognized the truth of my answers, but understandably she still needed to think about it. I didn’t expect her to change her mind right then and there because she has been pro-choice her whole life. If I had believed something my whole life, I would need time to process a big shift in thinking, too.

Jamie came back by our outreach event the next day as well, but just to give me a hug. I had written her a letter after we had talked the day before and I was able to give it to her. In the letter, I shared with her that she is beautiful and also shared with her about the love of Jesus. I am continuing to pray for her to see the Truth. I count Jamie as a dear friend and my heart longs for her to find complete healing in Jesus. In the brief time we’ve been able to spend time together, God has used her to encourage me and to grow in me a heart to continue loving the hurting.

Stories like Jamie’s remind me why I work at Justice For All. They show me how deep the need is to reach the hurting and the great opportunity I have to share hope with them. Here is an awesome reality: God is able to work through you to love those He has placed in your life, too. If you need a little help getting started and you have not been through JFA’s training program, I strongly suggest that you attend. It has not only laid the foundation for me to communicate with those who believe differently than me regarding the value of human life, but it has also helped me learn how to communicate in general.

Thank you for your prayers, financial support, and encouragement. God is working through you to enable our team at JFA to meet more people like Jamie.

Note: Part II originally appeared in CK's May 2016 newsletter.

COMMENT

A woman walked up to me years ago at a JFA large exhibit event at University of Colorado (Boulder).  She was crying and could hardly speak, but she said something about our exhibit and her abortion.  As I attempted to show concern for her, she turned and walked away.  While I think that abortion images do a great deal of good when shown in public and that this woman’s grief might very well have been precisely what she needed to begin to grapple with her abortion, my heart breaks for this woman and others who for whatever reason weren’t able to find healing during their encounter with the JFA team.

Thankfully, some women who have had abortions are able to begin to embrace healing at Justice For All outreach events, even when abortion images are shown publicly.  In the story of CK Wisner and Jamie (above), we see through CK's beautiful example how a compassionate, gentle, and skillful ambassador for Christ can play a vital role in a person’s process of healing from a past abortion.   

- Steve Wagner, Executive Director

More Conversations and More Advocates (Spring 2016 Report)

At JFA, we prize one-to-one conversations and the opportunity to help pro-life advocates develop skills for one-to-one conversations.  What isn’t always obvious when you look at stories of those conversations is a different sort of story—what it took to bring those conversations into being. 

Every semester, I look with pride at the list of high-quality events we’ve just completed across many states, awed by what JFA’s staff, volunteers, and supporters were together able to accomplish with God’s help.  Spring 2016 was a good example, as you’ll see in this Impact Report highlighting our work across nine states, including 12 seminars, various presentations, and 16 days of outreach on nine campuses.  Our passions for more conversations and more advocates animated and emanated from every one of these events. 

Thank you for your generous gifts to JFA to help us continue to work to make abortion unthinkable.  We’re honored to serve alongside you.

Georgia

(Jeremy Gorr, Rebecca Haschke, Jon Wagner, Joanna Wagner, CK Wisner)

  • February 19: Interactive Seminar (Roswell)
  • February 20: Interactive Seminars (Roswell, Athens)
  • February 20: Interactive Workshop (Smyrna) 
  • February 21: Interactive Seminar (Kennesaw)
  • February 22-23: Outreach at Kennesaw State Univ. (Kennesaw)
  • February 24-25: Outreach at Univ. of Georgia (Athens)
February: Jon Wagner (center) teaches during a seminar preceding outreach at University of Georgia.

February: Jon Wagner (center) teaches during a seminar preceding outreach at University of Georgia.

Bakersfield, California

(Catherine Wurts, serving Right to Life of Kern County with Mentors from Right to Life of Central California)

  • March 5: Interactive Seminar
  • March 7-8: Outreach at California State University, Bakersfield
The JFA training and outreach in Bakersfield was outstanding. The civil discourse, the fact-based information, and the consistent effort to find common ground prompted numerous thoughtful discussions with students. Those who stopped by the display were fascinated by the pre-born imagery and seemed eager to share their views and listen to ours. Of all our pro-life efforts last year, the JFA outreach in Bakersfield was by far the most impactful.
— Marylee Shrider, Executive Director, Right to Life of Kern County

Stillwater, Oklahoma

(JFA Team)

  • March 21-22: Outreach at Oklahoma State University
March: During outreach at Oklahoma State University (OSU), JFA Volunteer Carson Banks (who also helped invite JFA to campus through his work with the OSU student organization Cowboys for Life) interacts with other OSU students.

March: During outreach at Oklahoma State University (OSU), JFA Volunteer Carson Banks (who also helped invite JFA to campus through his work with the OSU student organization Cowboys for Life) interacts with other OSU students.

Fresno, California

(Catherine Wurts, with Mentors from Right to Life of Central California—RLCC)

  • March 31: Interactive Workshop
  • April 2: Interactive Seminar
  • April 4: Outreach at Fresno City College
  • April 5: Outreach at California State University, Fresno

Highlight: JFA/RLCC Mentor Marcos Espinoza led his interactive small group at the seminar in Fresno entirely in Spanish—a first for JFA.

Lawrence, Kansas

(Tammy Cook, Joanna Wagner, Steve Wagner, CK Wisner)

  • March 29, 31 (and April 1): Multiple Workshops and Presentations (Two Groups of High School Students)
  • April 1: Interactive Workshop (Kansas City, KS)
  • April 2: Interactive Seminar
  • April 3: Interactive Workshop
  • April 4-5: Outreach at University of Kansas
April: Workshop Preceding Outreach at University of KansasPastor Chris (above, left), who also attended the outreach event commented that the workshop was "so helpful and practical as an introduction for preparing believers to begin a loving convers…

April: Workshop Preceding Outreach at University of Kansas

Pastor Chris (above, left), who also attended the outreach event commented that the workshop was "so helpful and practical as an introduction for preparing believers to begin a loving conversation with those who are for abortion."

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

(Joanna Wagner, Steve Wagner, Former JFA Intern Holly Fugate)

  • April 8: Interactive Seminar
  • April 9: Interactive Seminar

Highlight: JFA equipped four Methodist ministers during these two seminars in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  This is especially exciting as recent pro-life efforts in the Methodist General Conference are this year causing productive discussion about the Biblical call to protect unborn children and will likely continue to cause discussion in future years.

Wichita, Kansas

(Paul Kulas, Jeremy Wheeler, JFA Team)

  • January 15-March 15: Design of Two New Exhibits
  • March 1-April 10: Construction of Two New Exhibits
  • March 31: Test of the Structure of the New Exhibits

Note: In addition to planning events and giving leadership to JFA, Paul Kulas and I led the JFA team in the design, construction, and structural testing that enabled us to display each of our new large-format exhibits for multiple days in April and May.  Jeremy Wheeler and Jon Wagner worked many hours in the warehouse with Paul building signs.  All of our training staff contributed ideas, gave feedback, and shouldered various day-to-day tasks for Paul so that the exhibits could be completed.  You can learn more about funding the new exhibits at www.jfaweb.org/invest.  Look for pictures of the new exhibits in a future letter, at www.facebook.com/trainthousands, or at www.jfaweb.org/blog.

Fort Collins, Colorado

(JFA Team)

  • April 17: Interactive Seminar
  • April 18-20: Outreach at Colorado State University
April: Catherine Wurts interacts with a student during outreach at Colorado State University using JFA's new "Stop and Think" Exhibit.

April: Catherine Wurts interacts with a student during outreach at Colorado State University using JFA's new "Stop and Think" Exhibit.

Los Angeles, California

(JFA Team)

  • May 21-22: Interactive Seminars (Playa del Rey, UCLA)
  • May 22: Interactive Workshop
  • May 23, 25: Outreach at UCLA

Other Events and Locations

In addition to the events listed above, JFA trainers were present at Washington and San Francisco pro-life events in January (Evangelicals for Life Conference, March for Life, Walk for Life West Coast, West Coast National SFLA Conference) and throughout the semester, JFA trainers gave presentations in Sheboygan, Wisconsin (Jeremy Gorr), Valley Center, Kansas (Joanna Wagner), Wichita, Kansas (Tammy Cook), and Prescott, Washington (CK Wisner).  Steve Wagner led an interactive seminar in Washington, D.C., and Rebecca Haschke led an interactive workshop in Norfolk, Nebraska. 

Recent Unforgettable Conversations

At the heart of all of these events are unforgettable conversations in which we seek to change hearts and minds about abortion.  Here are recent newsletters:

Thank you for partnering with JFA as we create events that make it possible for more advocates to have more conversations.  Your gifts are especially helpful during these summer months, as our team focuses on planning a full slate of events for the fall!

More Recent Praise for JFA

JFA does a magnificent job forming students to be winsome and persuasive when engaging the culture on abortion. I deeply appreciate how they communicate truth with grace and I heartily recommend them.
— Stephanie Gray, Love Unleashes Life, 2015
JFA’s training and outreach helped make me the pro-life advocate I am today. I wholeheartedly recommend anyone interested in learning how to defend the unborn check out their program.
— Trent Horn, Catholic Answers, 2015 (Trent was an intern with Justice For All from 2009 to 2010.)

 

#Mindblown: JFA Staff Members Reflect

steve@jfaweb.org

It's common for us to hear people say, "I’m pro-life, but I can’t tell other people what to do.  Therefore, abortion should be legal."  JFA trainer Rebecca Haschke did a beautiful job of helping a young man reconsider this sentiment in a conversation she described in a recent letter entitled #Mindblown.  Recently, members of JFA’s training team interacted with the topic of Rebecca’s letter.  Here are some of their thoughts (add your own in the comments section):   

On Impact in Conversations

CK Wisner

I can't assume I know what is going on in someone’s heart. We rarely get to see the person change their views in front of us. It is easy to get discouraged and think that no difference is being made. This story reveals that more is going on than we often see. It also causes me to think about the value of being patient in a conversation and working through the arguments with someone.

CATHERINE WURTS

I appreciate the reminder that we often don't know what's going on in someone's mind or heart during the conversation!

JEREMY GORR

I appreciate her last sentence to Brian.  I probably would have not been bold enough to say that, but it seems to be the sentence that most affected him...It is great how she turns it from "we should limit some choices" to "those of us who know the truth are morally obligated to help."

I have experienced that similar discouragement that is in many cases un-redeemed. However, I am encouraged by the fact that he seemed unmoved by almost everything, but that a single point transformed him.  It makes me eager to keep trying with people who I am discouraged by in order to find the single argument that works for them.

[This conversation] gives me hope. Anyone can be reached with the right approach, so we should not dismiss people as "unreachable" without trying everything we can to reach them.  It is tempting to think that someone will just never get it.  However, there is always something that may trigger their intellect, and it may not be the same thing that triggers mine.

Also, it shows we need to fully describe the consequences of people's views to them.  I am always tempted to stop after giving examples like child abuse.  But I need to take the conversation further like she did, to historical atrocities and our obligations in response to those. 

TAMMY COOK

I would conclude that she felt the same discouragement that many of us feel in our conversations that don't seem to be making progress, but we should be encouraged and trust the Holy Spirit that He is the One who is ultimately guiding our conversations and changing hearts.

Steve Wagner

Note that Rebecca assumed throughout this conversation that Brian was confident and unwavering in his views, but that turned out to be entirely a mistaken impression.  How often do we judge from a person’s body language or from the confidence of their statements that he or she isn’t open to change?  How often do we move on from the conversation too early, when laboring a little longer with a person might produce change?  We tend to trust our impressions, but stories like this remind me that I am better off assuming my impressions about what’s going on inside someone’s mind aren’t reliable.  Since we don’t want to waste time with those who have hardened hearts either, we would be wise to be in a spirit of prayer, depending on the Holy Spirit to help us judge rightly when to keep laboring with a person and when to exit the conversation.

I think the main conclusion I draw from this conversation and Rebecca's reflection about discouragement is that we are too confident in the midst of conversations that we know what the other person is thinking.  I think we, especially if we are professionals-at-dialogue, think more of our powers of perception than we ought.  I think our powers of perception are pretty limited when it comes to figuring people out.  We constantly seek the knowledge (control?) of what the other person is thinking, and we settle on some explanation or account of it.  I think we do this instinctively, without effort.  We need an answer on "is this making an impact on the person," so we draw a conclusion.  And, I believe, we draw this conclusion many times too hastily.  Really, we don't have much evidence usually about what's going on for the person.  Their body language is something, but it's really not as clear as we think.  Their eye contact is something, but it too can cause us to draw hasty conclusions.  Their words and phrases and responses are something, but they also usually provide too little information to draw much of a conclusion about.  The very thing we so need in order to feel equilibrium in the conversation, to get direction for what to say next, is the very thing that's inaccessible to us, which is the inner self-awareness of the person's mental states.  And people are very good at hiding them.  So, in sum, I think this reminds me to give thanks for the black box of a person's heart, which is not accessible to me, trusting God to use me, move me, and remove me from the conversation as he sees fit.

On Rebecca's Conversational Strategy

CK Wisner

You can see Becca's strategy in this conversation from the questions she asked (note: I took some liberties in summarizing):

  • What reasons do your Christian beliefs give you that cause you to believe abortion is wrong?
  • Do you believe the unborn is biologically human?
  • Is the unborn a human being like you and me?
  • Do you think it is ever right for the government to take away a "choice"?
  • Should these specific "choices" (ones that protect people) be taken away by the government?
  • Do we agree that there are some "good" laws?
  • Should the government uphold those "good" laws, even if they are based on your religious belief?
  • Can we agree that a "good" law would be protecting human rights?
  • If the unborn is a human, shouldn't we protect her human rights?
  • If this is true, and you can help, don't you have an obligation?

Catherine Wurts

It seemed Becca's basic strategy was to establish the common ground that one's religion (or lack thereof) should not keep them from endorsing laws against crimes like child abuse, and then to make the logical case that laws against abortion fit in this same category.

Tammy Cook

Becca was very bold in her last question to Brian and we should perhaps be courageous to be bold like she was!  I think this paragraph also reflects Becca's beautiful spirit of humility.

STEVE WAGNER

Becca's conversational strategy was essentially a "Trot Out the Toddler."  She sought clarification regarding the circumstances in which Brian thought it was okay to force beliefs on people in law (circumstances in which born people are being harmed) and then why (because we should protect human beings and human rights).

So, one might put her strategy this way: 

Pro-Choice: I can't force my beliefs on others so we shouldn't make laws against abortion.

Pro-Life: It sounds like you're trying to be charitable in a pluralistic society.  You think generally we shouldn't force people to do things or agree with us when they don't in fact want to do those things or don't actually agree with us.

C: That's right.

L: I agree with your sentiments in this sense: I don't want to force people to be Christians or force them to participate in religious services or to sign a confession of belief in things they don't believe.  These are things that should be left to free will. [Agree]

C: Cool.

L: Imagine though that some adults in our city are being killed.  For example, on this college campus.  Can we pass laws to protect them? [Apply]

C: Sure.

L: Why? [Ask Why]

C: Life is sacred.

L: I agree, but what about all of the people in our country who don't believe anything is sacred.  Is there any reason we could give to them that would lead them to think we should make killing people illegal? [Ask Why, elaborated]

C: Sure, human rights.

L: So, we can force people to respect human rights of adults?

C: Sure.  We definitely can.

L: Do they have human rights based on their development or based on the kind of thing they are, the kind of nature they have? [Ask Why, elaborated]

C: They have human nature, so they have human rights.

L: I agree.  So isn't that the issue with abortion then?  If the unborn have human rights, then shouldn't the unborn be protected by law?  You could force your views on people then, in the sense that you could force them to not kill those unborn people. [Ah] 

C: I already said the unborn are human beings with human rights.  #Mindblown.

So, one thing I like about Becca's dialogue here is that it gives a more realistic picture of how a Trot Out the Toddler (our moniker for "reductio ad absurdum") looks with the non-straightforward "can't force my beliefs" idea. 

Can We Tell Other People What to Do? (#MindBlown)

In election seasons, it is very common for people to talk about what the law should be on abortion.  When that is the topic, it is also very common to hear some version of the following sentiment:

“I’m pro-life, but I can’t tell other people what to do.  Therefore, abortion should be legal.”

JFA trainer Rebecca Haschke did a beautiful job of helping a young man reconsider this sentiment in a conversation she described in a recent letter entitled #Mindblown.  In this man’s case, he felt that because he had religious reasons for his point of view on abortion, he was disqualified from making a case that abortion should not be legal.  I think you’ll be encouraged to see how this young man came to see things differently in just minutes.  In the process, you’ll witness Rebecca’s manner, and you’ll learn a sequence of questions you can ask when you confront this sort of concern in conversations with friends and neighbors.

Members of JFA’s training team interacted with the topic of Rebecca’s letter recently.  You can read some of their reflections and post your own at the JFA blog.

#Mindblown

By Rebecca Haschke, Training Specialist (November 2015, with Rebecca’s Introduction Edited Slightly for Clarity in Summer 2020)

Introduction: In election seasons, it is very common for people to talk about what the law should be on abortion. When that is the topic, it is also very common to hear some version of the following sentiment: “I’m pro-life, but I can’t tell other people what to do. Therefore, abortion should be legal.” JFA trainer Rebecca Haschke did a beautiful job of helping a young man reconsider this sentiment in a conversation she described in a recent letter entitled “#Mindblown” (below). In this man’s case, he felt that because he had religious reasons for his point of view on abortion, he was disqualified from making a case that abortion should not be legal. I think you’ll be encouraged to see how this young man came to see things differently in just minutes. In the process, you’ll witness Rebecca’s manner, and you’ll learn a sequence of questions you can ask when you confront this sort of concern in conversations with friends and neighbors. - Steve Wagner, Executive Director (April 2016 Impact Report)

I met “Brian” at the University of Georgia-Athens. He confidently stated he was pro-life. I mentioned this conversation briefly in my March newsletter earlier this year, "Give Thanks In All Circumstances," because of what Brian said next. He shared that he was pro-life and a Christian, but that he felt he could not “force his beliefs on others.”

This response is not an unusual one. I’ve heard it many times. Hearing it as often as I do can be discouraging, which is why I took the time in March to reflect on the need to give thanks in all circumstances, not just the circumstances that seem uplifting and enjoyable.

Rebecca Haschke interacts with a student at the University of Georgia at Athens in September 2015.

The conversation with Brian didn’t end there, though. Look at what happened: 

Brian: I’m pro-life.

Becca (me): Brian, what does that mean for you? Do you think abortion should be illegal?

Brian: No, we can’t force our beliefs on others.  I’m pro-life because I’m a Christian, but legally enforcing my stance on abortion would push my religion on people who don’t believe the same as me.

Becca: Brian, you mentioned that it is because you are a Christian that you are pro-life.  Do your Christian beliefs give you reasons for thinking that abortion is wrong?

Brian: Of course.  Human life is sacred.  God created those human lives, they are valuable, and we should not kill them.

Becca: I agree with those statements.  From what you just said it seems that you may believe the unborn are human beings biologically.  Is that true?

Brian: Yeah, absolutely.

Becca: Human beings like you and me?

Brian: Yes.

Becca: When do you believe that the unborn become biological human beings like you and me?

Brian: [He walked up to the Justice For All Exhibit and pointed at a picture of fertilization.] From the very beginning.  Conception.

Becca: Okay.  Brian, can you explain to me why you think that you would be pushing your religious beliefs on others if you supported laws that would protect unborn human beings from being killed through abortion?

Brian: Well, women have a lot of difficult choices that they have to make in their lives.  Choice is an important thing.  If we make a law against abortion, we are taking away their right to that choice.  That’s like pushing my views on them.  They no longer would have the right to choose.

Becca: That’s true.  The choice to kill their children in utero would no longer be granted to women.  I’m curious.  Do you think that it is ever right for the government to make a law that takes away a “choice”?

Brian: Uh…no?

Becca: Well, do you agree that the laws that make it illegal to walk onto this campus and kill college students are good laws?

Brian: Of course.

Becca: I agree.  However, when enforcing that law, the government is taking away particular choices of other people.  What about laws prohibiting beating children in the privacy of your own home?  Are those good laws?

Brian: Yes, yes.  Those are good laws.

Becca: What if it is just your religion that makes you think that it is wrong to beat children?  Should you have the right to impose and force your religious beliefs on me?

Brian: Yes, because those laws protect others from being harmed.  That’s not just a religious belief.  It is a law protecting human rights.

Becca: So we can agree that laws which restrict “choice” in order to protect human lives are good, despite the fact that your support of those laws might be based on religious beliefs?  It’s possible that our religious beliefs may guide us to the same conclusion as those who don’t share those beliefs—the conclusion that all human lives should be protected.  That wouldn’t be forcing our religion on others, but simply protecting human rights.  Can we agree on that?

Brian: Yes, we can.

Becca: If it is important for us to protect human life and if the unborn are just as human and valuable as you and me, shouldn’t they also be granted that same protection under the law?

Brian: Wow.  Yeah, I guess.  I just have always thought that would be imposing my beliefs on others.

Becca: [I then pointed to pictures in the JFA Exhibit Brochure depicting various genocides throughout history.]  Brian, do you think that people who were not victims of the injustices shown in these pictures had an obligation to stand up for those who were being killed?

Brian: Yes.

Becca: I’m going to make a proposal.  Brian, not only is it right for you to believe that abortion should be illegal because it takes the life of a human being; but actually—as a person who has the knowledge that 1) the unborn is a human being and 2) over a million are killed each year in the country in which you reside—you have an obligation to speak up for those humans who are being killed.

(silent pause)

Brian: #MindBlown [hashtag: Mind Blown].

It was as if he had finally been given permission to defend the lives of innocent human beings that he understood were valuable, permission to voice his opinion without shame. Relief and amazement radiated from his eyes.

Brian’s final response took me by surprise.  From the start of our conversation he seemed so confident in his belief that it is wrong to enforce laws telling others what they can and cannot do.  Until that final moment in our conversation, the questions I had asked him did not seem to be creating any change of mind or heart.  When he looked at me and said, “#MindBlown,” his entire demeanor changed.  It was as if he had finally been given permission to defend the lives of innocent human beings that he understood were valuable, permission to voice his opinion without shame.  Relief and amazement radiated from his eyes.

The culture in which we live is permeated with the belief and mantra that we cannot tell others what to do.  Thank you for your support that not only helps us challenge the beliefs of those who do not think the unborn are valuable human beings, but also helps us encourage the students who recognize the unborn are valuable, but do not feel they have the right to share that belief with others.

Note: Members of JFA’s training team interacted with the topic of Rebecca’s letter recently. You can read some of their reflections and post your own at the JFA blog.

Confidence Creates Conversations

Impact Report: March 2016

Note: Chris Haynes, one of the pastors at Trinity Baptist Church in Norman, Oklahoma, said this about JFA: "I know of no other group that does such an outstanding job of training and then guiding teams of people through the actual process of dialogue.  If you have one day and JFA training [team] comes close to you, don’t miss the opportunity.  Our church and specifically college students have been equipped to now be on campus and have meaningful, life changing conversations."  This Impact Report explains through the story of Andrew some of what motivated Chris to say these encouraging words.  We hope you hear through Andrew's story our heart for established Christian communities.  For example, we are eager to serve local churches as they carry out their God-given role of helping the disciples in their flock to grow in their ability to actively love those too often forgotten in relation to pregnancy and abortion - women and men in distress, the smallest humans on earth, and those who disagree with us.  We see ourselves as helping these established Christian communities fill a gap in their discipleship in this area, rather than doing the work of mentoring and discipleship totally apart from or in place of these communities.  - Steve Wagner, Executive Director

Before the JFA conference, I was hesitant to raise the topic of abortion with my peers.  — Andrew (right)

Like so many of us, Andrew did not often have conversations about abortion.  He was pro-life, but he lacked confidence.  Then he participated in the Justice For All (JFA) training program last fall.  His college pastor, Chris Haynes, and their church, Trinity Baptist Church in Norman, Oklahoma, have a very purposeful emphasis on “the equipping of the saints for the work of service” (Eph. 4:12), so this was one of many times that they have invited JFA to help train their students.  Later, Andrew said,

Before the JFA conference, I was hesitant to raise the topic of abortion with my peers.  While this was due mainly to my lack of knowledge about abortion, I also felt uncomfortable raising the subject due to my lack of experience in conversing about the topic with someone from another worldview.

Through these interactions, I learned not to categorize someone too quickly… you really don't know where someone stands on an issue until you ask specific questions.  — Andrew (left)

I’ve heard these same hesitations often.  Many people say that there is no way the average person is capable of engaging in productive dialogue with pro-choice advocates.  Andrew’s JFA experience proved the opposite.  JFA training helped Andrew develop (1) confidence in his own pro-life convictions, (2) confidence to begin creating dialogue, and (3) confidence to create further conversations in his daily life.

The first dose of confidence came for Andrew during the interactive seminar (Seat Work) portion of the training program.  In a mentor group led by Rebecca Haschke and me, Andrew and other students said they felt apprehensive about coming to our outreach event at the University of Oklahoma (OU) the following week.  As these students learned why common pro-choice arguments fail and practiced sharing the evidence which supports the pro-life position, however, their confidence grew.  Andrew reflected,

JFA not only has given me the tools I need to reach out to my peers, but also has helped me firm up my position on abortion as well as my reasoning behind my stance.

Even with this confidence, though, Andrew wondered if he personally could take these ideas and produce a good conversation with them.  Here’s how our outreach event at OU (Feet Work) enabled him to do just that.  At the beginning of the outreach event, Andrew got a second dose of confidence as he listened in to conversations that JFA staff members were having with pro-choice students.  The next day, he took the critical step of starting not just one, but many conversations.  He was surprised by what he learned:

During the time I spent in outreach with JFA, I had several opportunities to dialogue with other college students about their beliefs about abortion.  Through these interactions, I learned not to categorize someone too quickly.  To my surprise, many people who initially stated that they supported abortion were less supportive after receiving information.  Most of the people I spoke to were not the die-hard leftists I had thought they would be.  On the other hand, several people who thought abortion should be illegal turned out to support early abortions!  Through outreach with JFA, I discovered that you really don’t know where someone stands on an issue until you ask specific questions.

Andrew gained an understanding of pro-choice advocates and of himself through outreach that he could not have gained otherwise.  That’s why JFA has found Seat Work and Feet Work to be such a powerful combination.  Seat Work provides the tools for creating good conversations, but Feet Work gives a real-life opportunity to practice using those tools, to get rid of false caricatures of the people we’re trying to reach, and to explore ways to grow in dialogue skills.    

Andrew found that creating conversations during Feet Work gave him a third dose of confidence so that it was natural for him to continue creating dialogue about abortion after the JFA events (Repeat Work):

The [seminar] and outreach JFA allowed me to take part in have prepared me for several discussions since their visit to campus.  In dialogues with fellow students, finding common ground has been very important as have techniques such as “trotting out the toddler.”  I am thankful for the opportunity I had to volunteer with JFA and to develop my convictions and my ability to share them.

The [seminar] and outreach JFA allowed me to take part in have prepared me for several discussions since their visit to campus.
— Andrew

Andrew initially had the same hesitance to have conversations that most people have.  His biggest hurdle was his first conversation.  Once that hurdle was past, creating more conversations did not seem so daunting.  Andrew’s story demonstrates that gaining knowledge at a JFA seminar and taking a first dialogue step at a JFA outreach event can produce bold action on behalf of the unborn.

Are you someone who wants to be prepared for these kinds of conversations, but you’re hesitant like Andrew was?  Do you know someone in the same boat?  You can gain confidence like Andrew did by participating in JFA’s training program, including a Feet Work event.  You can find upcoming opportunities on the JFA Event Calendar.  Or, inquire about JFA Mission Trip opportunities.

We thank God that he used Justice For All, in partnership with Andrew’s very supportive college pastor and church, to help Andrew gain the confidence to be able to regularly and graciously share his views about abortion with his peers.  Thank you for supporting the mission of JFA so that we can offer Seat Work and Feet Work experiences to others who simply lack the confidence to start the conversation.  Through thousands of bold advocates like Andrew, we can truly make abortion unthinkable for millions – one conversation at a time.

- Jeremy Gorr, for the JFA Team

Confidence Creates Conversations - Andrew's Story

Andrew gained the confidence to create conversations in a matter of a few days.

Andrew gained the confidence to create conversations in a matter of a few days.

Imagine how many lives would be saved and how many hearts would be changed if all of the people who have pro-life views would regularly talk about abortion with their pro-choice friends. Often, pro-life advocates don’t raise the topic, and when it’s presented to them on a silver platter, they don’t dare speak up. That is why Justice For All’s training program is so vital.

In our March Impact Report, "Confidence Creates Conversations," JFA trainer Jeremy Gorr and one recent JFA volunteer, Andrew, reflect on Andrew’s experience with JFA. Along the way, they illustrate how confidence is built little by little, through the right kinds of activities.

Thank you for partnering with JFA to serve pro-life advocates like Andrew and help them gain the confidence to become the sort of powerful pro-life advocate we imagined above, able to create conversations that change hearts and save lives.

[Note: This was posted on May 4, but was back-dated to sync with the content so that JFA's content can be viewed in order through the blog.]

Ministry Notes for February 2016

Recent and Upcoming Events in 2016

Pray for our preparations and for good attendance during the events yet to come.  Pray that many will stop during outreach, interested in discussing abortion.  Pray that God will cause a love for every human being, born and unborn, to sink deep into the hearts of those with whom we have conversations and those we lead through our training program.  See www.jfaweb.org/calendar for more details, more events, and to register. 

  • Jan. 21-22: DC – Evangelicals for Life Conference & March for Life Events (Washington) *
  • Jan. 23: DC – Abortion: From Debate to Dialogue (ADD) Seminar (Washington)
  • Jan. 23-24: CA – Students for Life of America Conference & Walk for Life (San Francisco) *
  • Feb. 19-25: GA – ADD Seminars & Outreach Events at Kennesaw State, Univ. of Georgia
  • Mar. 4-8: CA – ADD Seminars and Outreach Events (Bakersfield)
  • March: OK – ADD Seminars and Outreach Events – Details Still to Be Confirmed
  • Mar. 31-Apr. 4: CA – ADD Seminars & Outreach Events (Fresno)
  • Apr. 2-5: KS – ADD Seminars & Outreach Events at the University of Kansas (Lawrence)
  • Apr. 8-9: PA – ADD Seminars (Pittsburgh)
  • Apr. 16: KY – Workshop – Students for Life of America Leadership Summit (Lexington)
  • April: CO – ADD Seminars and Outreach Events – Details Still to Be Confirmed
  • May: CA – ADD Seminars and Outreach Events – Details Still to Be Confirmed
  • June 20-21: LA – ADD Seminar & Outreach Events – Louisiana Right to Life PULSE Camp

* 3 staff members were present at various events in DC, and 2 were present in San Francisco.

Recruiting Interns and Staff

Pray for our recruiting efforts.  Catherine Wurts is hard at work to recruit at least one intern to be working in our office by September.  We have already received $2,300 of the needed $8,000 for a four-month internship, so pray for both the funds and applicants.  If you or someone you know would like to apply, go to www.jfaweb.org/internships or call Catherine at 316-683-6426.

Recruiting Mission Trip Participants

Pray for our mission trips for 2016.  While any of our outreach events can be turned into a mission trip (in which the participant handles all of his own housing, meals, and transportation), Tammy Cook is working to encourage people from all over the US to participate in our May 2016 mission trip in Los Angeles, CA.  Contact Tammy (316-683-6426, www.jfaweb.org/mission-trips) for more information.

Pray with Us for God’s Help

We are mindful that we need God’s help for our small efforts to have any impact making abortion unthinkable.  Pray that God would first cause our hearts to be humble and dependent on him, even as we work with great energy to make the most of the hours he gives us each week.  Pray also for our families and local church communities, that we would give them the time and energy they deserve, even as we stand in the gap for the nearly forgotten unborn children being take off to slaughter each day (Prov. 24:11-12).

"You Aren't Going Anywhere."

I watched as the standby passenger just in front of me gave the agent his ticket and was the last passenger to disappear down the jet bridge.  He was going home, and I…I wasn’t going anywhere. 

[You] educated me to the max.
— Claire, seminar participant in Washington, DC, January 2016

Washington, DC, was about to be buried under one of the worst snowstorms in recent memory.  The mayor of DC had declared a state of emergency…a day before any snow would fall.  I had been notified about ten hours before that the Students for Life Conference I was in DC to attend had been cancelled, and I had hurried to the airport in the wee hours of the morning in hopes of flying standby back to Wichita to avoid getting stuck.  That was Friday morning, January 22, the 43rd anniversary of Roe v. Wade (1973).

I wasn’t going anywhere.  It was fitting, though, that I and many other pro-life advocates who had gathered in DC for the March for Life were feeling this way as we entered the 44th year of legal abortion in America.  If you’re like me, you take stock of where things are for the unborn child in America, and you conclude, candidly, “We aren’t going anywhere.”  We seem to be stuck in a place where the right to first-trimester abortion is as firmly entrenched as it can possibly be in the laws and consciousness of the people. 

What happened during the next 48 hours, however, provided a different sort of picture.  It’s a picture of hope and the progress that’s possible when we take small steps with the opportunities God provides. 

When in Doubt, Take a Polaroid

STOP = GO...create conversations that change hearts and minds.

STOP = GO...create conversations that change hearts and minds.

I was standing in front of the gate agents already, so I asked them to rebook my flight, since it was certain that my Sunday flight would soon be cancelled.  As I waited, I decided to liven things up a bit.  I mentioned that I had a Polaroid camera.  I took it out, turned it on, clicked the button, and the flash went off.  A piece of white plastic emerged from the camera.  The two gate agents, both women, were surprised and delighted with this “relic from the past.”  Our conversation went something like this:

“Now, when did the picture come into being?” I asked, as the image began to be visible.

“When the camera clicked the photo,” the older of the two women responded.  

“When the film was exposed, right?” I added.  “It wasn’t a picture only once we could see it…  Now, when does a human being begin?”  The older woman made a motion of sperm and egg coming together. 

“I think you’re right – at fertilization.  The Polaroid is a good picture of the way humans begin: Even though we don’t have the apparatus to see them at fertilization, they are there.  Time and development make it possible for us to see them, but they were the same humans at fertilization that they are later on.” 

Rare videos of the unborn are now easy to access and show to friends anytime, using your phone or tablet!

Rare videos of the unborn are now easy to access and show to friends anytime, using your phone or tablet!

The gate agents didn’t know this, but I was sharing a portion of the JFA seminar, a lesson we learned from Richard Stith: The unborn isn’t constructed from pieces like a car; the unborn develops from within, from fertilization, much like a Polaroid picture.  The older gate agent was especially intrigued.  She shared the picture with a third gate agent, a young man, and there was some discussion about the unborn and abortion.  If I remember correctly, I also pulled up the new “See Baby” app on my phone and showed video of the unborn child in the womb (www.ehd.org/apps).  I gave the gate agents the Polaroid picture as a memento to remember the conversation by, and one of them took my business card.  She was smiling.

Instead of walking away from that counter dejected, I walked away excited that God had given me a few free minutes to defend the unborn child in a way that was both natural and memorable.

Snowed in: A Great Time for Getting Equipped to Save Unborn Children

Blizzard snows begin during the March for Life! 

Blizzard snows begin during the March for Life! 

A friend of JFA’s, Kellie Taylor, had mentioned that her group of 46 high school students, college students, and chaperones from Phoenix would be snowed in with “nothing to do,” so why not spend the day equipping the students to dialogue about abortion?  That sounded like exactly the sort of thing that would redeem the time and effort I had put in to come to DC, so I texted Kellie to ask if there was a place for me to stay at the facility that was housing them.  Happily, she was able to secure me a room, so I hurriedly positioned my car so that it would be stuck there when the snow fell.  Then I joined Kellie’s group for a subway trip to the Washington Mall and the March for Life.

Students from Phoenix and I work on pro-life dialogue skills in a makeshift basement seminar environment.  They were troopers!

Students from Phoenix and I work on pro-life dialogue skills in a makeshift basement seminar environment.  They were troopers!

The snow began falling during the March and kept falling through the night.  We spent much of the next day on the Abortion: From Debate to Dialogue seminar, beginning at 10 AM.  Kellie and the other chaperones were delighted.  I “just happened” to have barely enough materials on hand for everyone.  We punctuated the short lectures and interactive activities with meals and plenty of snow time. 

Shortly after we concluded at 9 PM, one student was already creating dialogue on abortion with her pro-choice cousin using Facebook, one of the tools we had discussed in the seminar.  A few others gathered around to discuss questions they still had about the pro-life position until “lights out” at 11 PM. 

One Shovel-Full of Snow at a Time

From "not going anywhere" to "getting somewhere"...

From "not going anywhere" to "getting somewhere"...

...one shovel-full at a time!

...one shovel-full at a time!

On Sunday afternoon, after the snow had stopped, I was about to leave the students to visit family before flying out on Tuesday.  One problem: my car was buried in the snow.  It took two hours for at least five high-school students, one neighbor, and I to dig the car out.  I had underestimated the power of two feet of snow.  One can only dig oneself out of that sort of barrier one shovel-full at a time.  Even a snow-blower, which a neighbor was teaching one student to use, can only displace a little bit of snow at a time.

That’s a good picture of the hope we have, though, since we’re in the same sort of deep, intractable snow regarding abortion in our culture.  We’re not going anywhere.  It’s going to take many of us, one shovel-full at a time, just to help one carload of Americans, let alone a strong majority of Americans, get moving through the snowbank of thinking abortion is a necessary evil.

That’s why, when I found myself stuck in DC, I took the opportunity God provided to talk to the gate agents about the unborn children we so often forget.  A different kind of conversation.  And that’s why I took the opportunity to equip 38 students and 8 chaperones from Phoenix to start engaging their friends and relatives in ways that change hearts and save lives.  A different kind of advocate.

Do you feel like we’re stuck in the snow and “not going anywhere”?  Remember that it’s one shovel-full at a time that gets us out.  It’s one advocate, one conversation at a time.  We at JFA are privileged not just to hand you a shovel, but to also stand by your side creating the conversations, one person at a time, that will make a difference for unborn children and their parents in the end.

More pictures: 

Breaks are better in the snow!

Breaks are better in the snow!

Seminar in the basement...

Seminar in the basement...

Students interact during a role play activity focused on the question, "What about abortion in the case of rape?"

Students interact during a role play activity focused on the question, "What about abortion in the case of rape?"


Unburied Treasure (Part 3)

Here are some other great places on the website to check out: 

Unburied Treasure (Part 2)

In the shadow of the Justice For All Exhibit, Ashley found that God was doing a special work in her life, even as he was working through her to bring hope and healing to three others.

Ashley’s story is one of my favorite treasures that we’ve recently “unburied” from JFA’s archives and posted on the JFA website (www.jfaweb.org) to illustrate how God has used JFA (and in this case the big Justice For All Exhibit) through the years.  Go on a treasure hunt at the following pages:

  • At JFA’s “Stories” page you can find Ashley’s story, Christina’s story (“Thank you ... you’ve given me my life back.”), Jinny’s story (“…sorry if I was a little harsh on you…Anyways I think I'm keeping the baby!”), and more.

  • The Stories page has sections that are also their own pages. “Dialogue Examples” is a great place to find over 30 word-for-word accounts of conversations experienced by JFA’s staff and volunteers. “Testimonies” features Amanda Coles sharing about a baby she helped save, quotes from our Twitter feed, and links to many volunteer reflections.

  • The “Explore Resources” page allows you to quickly find many of the resources available through JFA’s website for free.

Check out these stories and resources.  Every page of our website is easy to read on any device (“responsive”) and easy to share with friends on Facebook and other social media sites.  (See www.jfaweb.org/unburied-treasure for more links to more pages.) 

Please don’t miss Ashley’s moving story.  It is sure to increase your confidence that God is concerned about and at work among those with shame from unplanned pregnancy and abortion.  As we are in the midst of building new big exhibits, we pray that God will use these tools to help volunteers like Ashley bring hope and healing to many more students in the coming year.

Note: For ministry notes about recent JFA activities, see this separate post.

Ministry Notes for January 2016

We’re hard at work on three projects this month:

  • Pro-Life Movement Events (January 21-24, 2016): JFA staff members are making connections with pro-life students and organizations at the March for Life events and at the Students for Life conferences in both Washington D.C. and San Francisco.  JFA is also attending the Evangelicals for Life conference in Washington D.C.  Read our updates from these events on our blog (www.jfaweb.org/blog) or on Facebook (www.facebook.com/trainthousands).
  • New Exhibits: We’re aiming to finish the design, printing, and construction of two exhibits by the end of March.  Pray for wisdom as we select panels.  If you’d like to learn more about the specifics of the project or if you have an interest in contributing financially to help make it a reality, please see www.jfaweb.org/invest or contact me (316-683-6426).
  • Planning JFA’s 2016 Calendar: Pray for our connections with college students and college ministries.  We’ll update you soon with the specifics of our 2016 calendar.

Note: These ministry notes were meant to accompany the JFA Conversations Letter for January 2016.  The monthly letter is available on the JFA Blog, and you can sign up to receive the monthly letter in your inbox or mailbox here.