Abortion Rights Sports Journalist Backs Tim Tebow Ad

imagesbannerscp_120x1201Reprinted by permission of the Christian Post

By Jennifer Riley|Christian Post Reporter

She thinks the government has no right to tell a woman whether she can have an abortion or not. But this pro-choice sports columnist also thinks that the group NOW is not right in trying to pull the pro-life Tim Tebow ad from airing during the Super Bowl.

“I’ll spit this out quick, before the armies of feminism try to gag me and strap electrodes to my forehead: Tim Tebow is one of the better things to happen to young women in some time,” quips Sally Jenkins in a Washington Post column entitled, “Tebow’s Super Bowl ad isn’t intolerant; its critics are.”

Jenkins pointed out that the public is always calling on athletes to be more responsible and to care about social issues, but when star college quarterback Tebow and his mother Pam try to tell their “genuine pro-choice story,” the group National Organization for Women goes on the attack. NOW’s criticism, Jenkins says, reveals that the group is not pro-choice but rather pro-abortion.

“Apparently NOW feels this commercial (featuring Tebow) is an inappropriate message for America to see for 30 seconds, but women in bikinis selling beer is the right one,” Jenkins writes.

Last month, Focus on the Family announced it would broadcast its first Super Bowl ad this year that will feature Tim and Pam Tebow. During the 30-second spot, the Tebows will share a personal story centered on the theme of “Celebrate Family, Celebrate Life.”

Though the exact content of the ad has not yet been revealed, many speculate the ad will recount Pam Tebow’s refusal to have an abortion while she was pregnant with Tim despite having suffered from a life-threatening infection at the time. Doctors had told her that continuing the pregnancy could be dangerous to her health, but “she exercised her freedom of choice” and gave birth to Tim.

John Cappelletti's 1973 Heisman Trophy
John Cappelletti’s 1973 Heisman Trophy (Photo credit: Robert J. La Verghetta)

“[N]ow, 20-some years later, the outcome of that choice is her beauteous Heisman Trophy winner son, a chaste, proselytizing evangelical,” Jenkins writes.

While pro-choice and pro-life advocates may differ on whether there should be a legal ban on abortion, both camps can agree that abortion is undesirable and a reduction of the number of procedures is a good thing.

“Here’s what we do need a lot more of: Tebows,” the sports columnist states.

Jenkins went on to say there is a need for collegians who are “selfless enough” to spend their summers helping needy children in impoverished countries, athletes who “believe in something other than themselves” and live out their beliefs, and celebrities who send a message other than materialism.

“You know what we really need more of? Famous guys who aren’t embarrassed to practice sexual restraint, and to say it out loud,” Jenkins writes, referring to how Tebow said he is saving himself for marriage. “If we had more of those, women might have fewer abortions.”

Jenkins concluded by saying though she “couldn’t disagree with Tebow more” about the government’s role in a woman’s decision to have an abortion, she thinks he has a right to express his beliefs in public.

“If the pro-choice stance is so precarious that a story about someone who chose to carry a risky pregnancy to term undermines it, then CBS is not the problem,” Jenkins writes.

This year’s Super Bowl, which pits the Indianapolis Colts against the New Orleans Saints, will kick off at 6 p.m. ET on Sunday, Feb. 7.

Super Bowl broadcasts are typically viewed by over 90 million people each year.

Copyright 2009 The Christian Post. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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  • Brian Rutledge
    CBS should run any ad they see fit as long as it is lawful and this one is just that. I just wish Pam Tebow would come clean. She was never hospitalized for her illness and it was never life-threatening i.e. she had no complications. Amoebic dysentery has an excellent prognosis if treated and she was treated. She told her Bible class that the drugs she took could be harmful to a fetus, which is true. but the occurence of that is minimal to rare.

    I don't mind if she and Tim talk about how great life and family are, but I just wish Pam Tebow would be honest, come clean with the public and not let her story be propagated on the false premise that she was at death's door and perservered and triumphed.

    Preganant women are faced with similiar and much worse medical problems and decisions everyday, so her story is not unusual. The real story isn't about some trumped up choice she made, but what a fine young man Pam Tebow has raised.
  • WXRGina
    Brian, I guess we're looking at two different stories of Pam Tebow here.

    You say she wasn't "hospitalized." Do you know that at the time, she was in the mission field in the Philippines? I don't know what kind of facilities were around where she was. You don't consider that she was sick enough for doctors to say her baby might be damaged, so I guess you don't consider being in a coma a very serious thing? The drugs she was given were to bring her out of a coma and to treat the dysentery. The doctors were recommending abortion, not to "save the life of the mother," but because they thought her baby might be in danger.

    Nowadays, I'm sure it doesn't take much for a doctor to recommend abortion, though that was back in '87. I just don't see why you find Pam Tebow to be disingenous. None of us has even seen the ad, so none of us know what specific story it will tell, except "celebrate family, and celebrate life." There's not a single objectionable point in that message.
  • Brian Rutledge
    Well I am all for the celebrate life and celebrate family mantra which we have strayed from. Tim Tebow is also a good role model for all those men out there who don't want to support their families and take on some responsibility.

    Maybe Pam Tebow will eventually clarify 'her story' a little, because of confusion. Even in the comment that the doctors recommended an abortion 'because the baby might be in danger', is befuddling. Think about it. If the child has only a 10% chance of surviving and a 90% chance of dying in utero, it is hard to believe a doctor would say ' well the baby has a small chance of survival, but it does have a chance, but we recommened killing it now '

    Would just like to hear her true testimony someday if she is going to be a spokesman for this cause, but the message of celebrate family and life still stands no matter.
  • People are already killing their unborn children "because they might be in danger." Children in the womb are being aborted in significant numbers because of real or suspected birth defects, with children with Down syndrome at the head of the list.

    As usual, it's always more about "what's convenient for me" than respecting the sanctity of human life, despite disability.
  • WXRGina
    Brian, I believe you can "overthink" these things. Although, I absolutely agree with you that our world would benefit with the "late term abortion" of some murderous, Muslim animals in the hundredth trimester. But, that type of abortion is only for the Lord to decide.
  • I haven't seen any evidence that Pam Tebow is unclean. Some doctors will throw out the abortion option at the drop of a hat, so I don't find her statement that this doctor advised her to abort incredible at all. I also have not seen, read or heard her imply that she was "at death's door" during this incident.

    As for the respect and appreciation pro-life people like myself extend to her for choosing not to abort her son, I look at it this way: in a day and age where more than 80% of the abortions done in South Dakota are performed for the reason "The mother did not desire to have the child," when a woman passes up any excuse whatsoever to have an abortion, it is commendable. Sad that it's commendable, but commendable nevertheless.
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