'Blessed Are Those Who End Pregnancies' Pastor Redefines Jesus
By PNW StaffFebruary 09, 2026
Share this article:
Imagine sitting in a church pew, expecting to hear Jesus' words of mercy, hope, and eternal truth--and instead hearing Him recast as an advocate for ending unborn life. This is the reality confronted by those who witnessed Rev. Dr. Rebecca Todd Peters, a Presbyterian pastor, openly bless abortion from her pulpit.
She did not hedge, soften, or apologize. She claimed that Jesus would act as an abortion escort, a doula, and even bless those who terminate pregnancies. And she rewrote the Beatitudes to declare: "Blessed are those who end pregnancies, for they will be known for their loving kindness."
This is not Christianity being "inclusive" or "progressive." This is a direct assault on the words of Christ, the moral foundation of Scripture, and the conscience of the Church.
The Beatitudes are not suggestions for modern moral convenience. They are the radical, God-given blueprint for life in the Kingdom of Heaven. "Blessed are the meek," "Blessed are the merciful," "Blessed are the pure in heart"--these are declarations of God's eternal values, not interchangeable slogans for contemporary political agendas. To rewrite them in service of human ideology is not creativity; it is sacrilege.
From a biblical perspective, human life is sacred from conception. Psalm 139 declares, "For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb." The unborn are not property, inconvenience, or political talking points. They are persons, loved and known by God, entrusted to the care of humanity. To bless their intentional destruction is to invert the very gospel Christ came to proclaim.
What makes this sermon all the more shocking is the absolute confidence with which it was delivered. There was no nuance, no lamentation, no acknowledgement of moral complexity. There was a replacement of sin with celebration, a redefinition of tragedy as sanctity.
Rev. Peters even shared her own personal history--two abortions alongside two children--and declared each "sacred." But Christianity does not sanctify sin; it offers redemption from it. Forgiveness presupposes the reality of wrongdoing. Blessing what Scripture mourns erases the need for repentance and nullifies the transformative power of Christ's love.
The sermon also highlights a dangerous shift: the elevation of personal experience over divine revelation. Personal stories are valuable in the Church--they can inspire empathy, understanding, and pastoral care. But no story, however compelling, can override the authority of God's Word. When experience becomes the lens through which Jesus is interpreted, the Church stops proclaiming Christ--it begins to proclaim human desire.
Furthermore, framing opposition to abortion as "violence" and celebrating abortion as "kindness" is not compassionate theology. It is moral inversion. The consistent Christian witness to protect the unborn is not cruelty; it is a reflection of God's justice, love, and care for the weakest among us. The unborn, entirely dependent on human stewardship, are precisely those whom the Church is called to protect.
This issue is not denominational or political--it is spiritual. It is a question of whether the Church continues to preach the Christ of Scripture or a Christ molded to fit cultural preference. The Apostle Paul warned against teachers who tell listeners what their "itching ears" want to hear (2 Timothy 4:3). Here, that warning rings alarmingly true: a Jesus who affirms every choice without confronting sin is far more palatable--but He is not the Christ of the Bible.
The tragedy is not simply the sermon itself; it is the surrender it represents. Surrender of biblical authority. Surrender of moral clarity. Surrender of the Church's prophetic voice. When pastors start rewriting Jesus, the Church must choose: follow the Christ who spoke from the mount, or the Christ reinvented at the podium.
For those who still believe that Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever, this is a call to vigilance, courage, and unwavering fidelity to the Word. Christianity is not a platform for human ideology--it is the proclamation of a Savior whose truth does not bend with public opinion. And the Church must not bend with it.