News

Europe’s Top Courts Are on a Pro-Life Roll

Recent rulings surprise observers.

A string of pro-life rulings by Europe’s two highest courts has surprised experts.

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) upheld Austria’s ban on in-vitro fertilization in November. Weeks earlier, the European Court of Justice ruled against destroying human embryos for scientific research. In December 2010, the ECHR upheld Ireland’s abortion ban.

“It’s definitely a trend,” said Roger Kiska of the Alliance Defense Fund in Slovakia. “Two or three years ago, you never would have thought that within a year you would have three pro-life [victories] in the courts.”

The cases coming from the ECHR—Europe’s equivalent of the U.S. Supreme Court—show judicial restraint, deciding simply that abortion is not a right and leaving its legality up to each of the Council of Europe’s 47 member states, Kiska said. But the Court of Justice’s ruling went a step further, ruling that embryos are human beings.

This stand was both strong and surprising, he said. “It’s the first international court decision to say that life begins at conception.”

“The very Western, liberalized way of thinking is losing its monopoly over the ECHR,” said Gregór Puppinck, director of the European Centre for Law and Justice. As more conservative Eastern countries join the council, they have felt that the founding states—such as France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom—are trying to impose their own vision of human rights, he said. “The non-Western countries are now trying to balance the ideology of the court.”

The religious composition of many European nations has also changed, he said. Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant Christians, as well as Muslims, are all now weighing in where secular groups have had the loudest voices.

“Europe is not only Western,” said Puppinck. “It is large again.”

Copyright © 2012 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Previous Christianity Today coverage of abortion and life ethics includes:

Mississippi Personhood Initiative Defeated | Ballot efforts initially gained momentum as some groups say they could backfire and entrench abortion rights. (November 9, 2011)

The New Pro-Life Surge | Political gains by U.S. conservatives unleash waves of anti-abortion legislation. (June 10, 2011)

Live Action, Planned Parenthood, and a Year of Change | Surveying two months of dramatic news on the abortion front in the U.S. (Her.meneutics, February 24, 2011)

CT also has more news stories on our website.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

The Cure for Election Madness

Amy E. Black

Calling All Callings: Amy Sherman on ‘Kingdom Calling’

Interview by Morgan Feddes

News

A Crackdown on International Adoptions

Matthew D. LaPlante in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Review

Strength in Weakness: The Bible, Disability, and the Church

A Pro-Life Plea This Election Season

Jesus and the Goodness of Everything Human

Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen

How Bethany Hoang Was Wired for Justice

Mark Moring

Is Cage Fighting Ethical for Christians?

Joe Carter, Ted Kluck, and Matt Morin

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Go Figure

Excerpt

J. I. Packer and Carolyn Nystrom on God's Will

J. I. Packer and Carolyn Nystrom

Review

Girl Meets Grace: Lauren Winner's New Reflection on Her Divorce and Desolation

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Discipling the Dragon: Christian Publishing Finds Success in China

John W. Kennedy

News

Will Immigration Slowdown Prompt a Bilingual Ministry Bust?

Wilson's Bookmarks

John Wilson

How the Physical Form of a Bible Shapes Us

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Counterterrorism Laws Hamper Humanitarian Aid

Ruth Moon

Editorial

Thou Shalt Not Abuse: Reconsidering Spanking

A Christianity Today Editorial

Blessed Are the Jobless: How Ministries Aid the Unemployed

Elissa Cooper

Six Indie Films You Won't Want to Miss

Kenneth R. Morefield

Readers Write

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Passages

Natural Length Reading: Christianity Today Launches eBooks

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Quotation Marks

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Corporation Switches to Adult Stem-Cell Therapy, Copeland Loses Suit, and More

My Top 5 Books on Christians in Politics

Stephen Mansfield

Commander and Chaplain: The Faith of Presidents

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Has the Same-Sex Marriage Debate Helped Pro-Life Advocacy?

Compiled by Ruth Moon

Don't Worry, Read Happy: Alan Jacobs on The Pleasures of Reading

Interview by John Wilson

2012 Christianity Today Book Awards

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Top 10 News Stories of 2011

The Annual Book and Music Awards

Matt Reynolds, CT associate editor

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As USCIRF Faces Possible Closure, Funding Divides Religious Freedom Experts

Bobby Ross Jr.

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Against the Casinofication of the Church

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