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Tuesday, January 01, 2008 

Current mood:  determined
Category: Religion and Philosophy
A CHALLENGE TO CHURCHES
& YOUTH GROUPS


WE, THE SURVIVORS OF THE ABORTION HOLOCAUST IN AMERICA, CHALLENGE THE CHURCHES AND YOUTH GROUPS IN THE USA TO NOT TAKE ONE MORE
EXPENSIVE, LONG-DISTANCE MISSIONARY ADVENTURE UNTIL THEY HAVE SUCCEEDED IN SHUTTING DOWN THE BABY KILLING CENTERS IN THEIR OWN BACKYARD.



TO JOIN US IN CLOSING DOWN THESE KILLING CENTERS CONTACT US

      PHONE:   260-639-2295
      E-MAIL:   QUINNOLINGER@VERIZON.NET

     ONLINE:  WWW.MYSPACE.COM/SURVIVORSINDIANA



LIST OF KILLING CENTERS IN THE USA
SHUT DOWN THOSE IN YOUR AREA!!



ALABAMA
New Woman All Women Health - 205-933-1118
1001 17th St. S., Birmingham, AL 35205

Planned Parenthood of Alabama - 205-322-2121
1211 27th Place S., Birmingham, AL 35205

Alabama Women's Center for Reproductive Alternatives - 256-536-2231
612 Madison St. SE, Huntsville, AL 35801

Planned Parenthood - 256-539-2746
303 Williams Ave SW, Huntsville, AL 35801

Planned Parenthood - 251-342-6695
717 Downtowner Loop West, Mobile, AL 36609

Beacon Women's Center - 334-277-6212
1011 Monticello Ct., Montgomery, AL 36117

Reprod. Health Serv. Of Montgomery - 334-834-4988
811 South Perry St., Montgomery, AL 36109

West Alabama Women's Center - 205-556-2026
535 Jack Warner Pkwy. NE, # I, Tuscaloosa, AL 35404

ALASKA
Alaska Women's Health Services - 907-563-7228
4115 Lake Otis Pkwy., Anchorage, AK 99508

Planned Parenthood - 907-563-2229
4001 Lake Otis Parkway, Anchorage, AK 99508

Planned Parenthood - 907-455-7285
1867 Airport Way, Ste. 160B, Fairbanks, AK 99701

Dr. Merrick - 907-283-5487
416 Frontage Rd., Ste. 400, Kenai, AK 99611

ARIZONA
Planned Parenthood - 928-779-3653
1530 Riordan Ranch St., Flagstaff, AZ 86001

Planned Parenthood - 623-934-3244
8822 N. 43rd Ave., Glendale, AZ 85302

Abortion Services of Phoenix - 602-468-3847
3549 E. Cambridge Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85008

Acacia Women's Center - 602-462-5559
3417 N 32nd St., Phoenix, AZ 85018

Camelback Family Planning - 602-279-2337
5040 N. 15th Ave., # 303, Phoenix, AZ 85015

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 602-553-0440
1331 N. 7th St., # 225, Phoenix, AZ 85006

Planned Parenthood - 602-277-1168
5651 North 7th Street, Phoenix, AZ 85014

Woman's Choice - 602-266-7330
5040 N. 15th Ave., # 204A, Phoenix, AZ 85015

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 602-553-0440
2525 S. Rural Rd., # 6S, Tempe, AZ 85282

Planned Parenthood - 480-967-9414
1250 E. Apache Blvd., # 108, Tempe, AZ 85281

Old Pueblo Family Planning - 520-323-9682
5240 E. Knight Dr., # 112, Tucson, AZ 85712

The Tucson Woman's Clinic - 520-321-4345
1601 N. Tucson Blvd., # 35, Tucson, AZ 85716

ARKANSAS
Fayetteville Women's Clinic - 479-442-8166
1011 N College Ave, Fayetteville, AR 72701

Little Rock Fam. Planning Services - 501-225-3836
4 Office Park Dr., Little Rock, AR 72211

CALIFORNIA
Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 661-323-6023
2500 H Street, Ste.100, Bakersfield, CA 93301

Clinica Medica Para La Mujer - 626-856-3565
4215 Maine Ave., Baldwin Park, CA 91706

Brandeis Medical Center - 310-855-7504
239 S. La Cienega Blvd., # 101, Beverly Hills, CA 90211

Planned Parenthood - 530-342-8367
556 Vallombrosa Ave., Chico, CA 95926

Women's Health Specialists - 530-891-1911
1469 Humboldt Rd., # 200, Chico, CA 95928

Clinica Medica, Community Women's Med. - 619-425-3700
1550 Broadway, Ste. C, Chula Vista, CA 91911

My Choice Women's Medical Clinic - 619-427-2422
336 Oxford St., Ste. 205, Chula Vista, CA 91911

Planned Parenthood - 619-585-4779
1295 Broadway, # 201, Chula Vista, CA 91911

Choice Medical Group - 925-682-2131
2385 High School Ave., Concord, CA 94520

Planned Parenthood - 925-676-0300
2185 Pacheco St., Concord, CA 94520

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 562-862-5121
8635 Firestone Blvd., # 100, Downey, CA 90241

Center for Comprehensive Wms Hlth - 818-906-2496
16133 Ventura Blvd., # 310, Encino, CA 91436

Planned Parenthood - 760-738-7770
215 S. Hickory St., #112, Escondido, CA 92025

Planned Parenthood - 707-442-5709
2316 Harrison Ave., Eureka, CA 95501

Planned Parenthood - 707-429-8855
1325 Travis Blvd., # C, Fairfield, CA 94533

Women's Health Center - 707-964-0259
850 Sequoia Circle, Fort Bragg, CA 95437

Choice Medical Group Fremont - 510-792-3398
1895 Mowry Avenue, Suite 116, Fremont, CA 94538

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 559-233-8657
165 N. Clark St., Fresno, CA 93701

Planned Parenthood - 559-488-4900
650 North Fulton, Fresno, CA 93728

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 818-502-1341
372 Arden Ave., # 200, Glendale, CA 91203

A Pro-Choice Clinic - 510-582-3699
1290 B St., # 305, Hayward, CA 94541

Planned Parenthood - 800-967-7526
1866 B Street, Hayward, CA 94541

Community Women's Med Clinic - 310-539-3151
1511 Pacific Blvd., # 123, Huntington Park, CA 90255

Planned Parenthood - 310-219-0301
14623 Hawthorne Blvd., # 300, Lawndale, CA 90260

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 562-595-5653
2777 Long Beach Blvd., # 200, Long Beach, CA 90806

Alternatives Family Planning - 323-294-0066
3756 Santa Rosalia Dr., # 212, Los Angeles, CA 90008

Butterfly Medical Clinic - 213-466-3793
5300 Santa Monica Blvd., # 402, Los Angeles, CA 90029

Clinica Medica Femenia - 213-484-0100
2010 Wilshire Blvd., # 610, Los Angeles, CA 90057

Clinica Medica Para La Mujer - 213-365-8280
2140 W Olympia Blvd., # 241, Los Angeles, CA 90006

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 213-388-0077
601 S. Westmoreland Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90005

Her Medical Clinic - 213-747-4391
2700 S. Figueroa St., Los Angeles, CA 90007

La Costa Family Planning - 213-483-0644
2010 Wilshire Blvd., # 904, Los Angeles, CA 90057

Pacific Women's Health Care - 310-840-5757
11101 Venice Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90034

Pacific Women's Health Care - 213-383-2012
819 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90005

Planned Parenthood - 323-226-0800
1057 Kingston Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90033

Planned Parenthood-Main Admin. - 323-223-4462
1920 Marengo St., Los Angeles, CA 90033

Marina Women's Medical Group - 310-822-5066
4560 Admiralty Way, # 303, Marina Del Rey, CA 90292

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 818-893-6949
10200 Sepulveda Blvd., # 200, Mission Hills, CA 91345

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 209-578-0443
2030 Coffee Rd., # A1, Modesto, CA 95355

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 909-626-2463
5050 San Bernardino St., Montclair, CA 91763

Planned Parenthood - 650-948-0807
225 San Antonio Rd., Mountain View, CA 94040

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 949-851-1201
4501 Birch St., # 103, Newport Beach, CA 92660

Family Planning Specialists - 510-268-3720
200 Webster St., # 100, Oakland, CA 94607

Planned Parenthood - 800-967-7526
7200 Bancroft Ave., Ste. 210, Oakland, CA 94605

Women's Choice Clinic - 510-836-5676
431 30th St., # 3, Oakland, CA 94609

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 714-978-3391
2445 W. Chapman Ave., # 200, Orange, CA 92868

Planned Parenthood - 714-633-4550
700 S. Tustin St., Orange, CA 92866

Kasla Women's Medical Clinic - 619-426-7879
3rd & 4th Ave., Oxford, CA 91911

Simi Women's Center - 805-558-0026
Haywood, Oxnard, CA 93035

Her Medical Clinic - 818-896-1438
13309 Van Nuys Blvd., Pacoima, CA 91331

Abortion Services - 760-341-7777
72205 Painters Path, Palm Desert, CA 92260

Clinica Medica Para La Mujer - 818-893-4402
14673 Parthenia St., # 202, Panorama City, CA 91402

Planned Parenthood - 626-798-0706
1045 N. Lake Ave., Pasadena, CA 91104

Planned Parenthood - 909-620-4268
1550 N. Garey Ave., Pomona, CA 91767

Hygeia - 858-487-8855
12630 Monte Vista Rd., # 206, Poway, CA 92064

Planned Parenthood - 760-674-0040
71777 San Jacinto Dr., Ste.202, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270

Women's Health Specialists - 530-221-0193
1901 Victor Ave., Redding, CA 96002

Planned Parenthood - 800-967-7526
1230 Hopkins Ave., Redwood City, CA 94062

Abortion Counseling & Care - 818-343-1473
7601 Canby Ave., # 5, Reseda, CA 91335

Health Care Center for Women - 818-881-1213
18905 Sherman Way, # 201, Reseda, CA 91335

Planned Parenthood - 510-222-5290
2970 Hilltop Mall Rd., # 307, Richmond, CA 94806

Planned Parenthood - 510-232-1250
101 Broadway, Richmond, CA 94804

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 909-276-0231
3893 Mission Inn Ave., Riverside, CA 92501

Planned Parenthood - 909-682-8540
3772 Tibbetts St., Riverside, CA 92506

Planned Parenthood - 800-967-7526
1370 Medical Center Dr., Ste. E, Rohnert Park, CA 94928

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 626-572-8800
1280 San Gabriel Blvd., Rosemead, CA 91770

Planned Parenthood - 916-781-3310
729 Sunrise Ave., # 900, Roseville, CA 95661

Choice Medical Group - 916-483-4923
2322 Butano Dr., # 205, Sacramento, CA 95825

Planned Parenthood - 916-446-6921
201 29th St # B, Sacramento, CA 95814

Pregnancy Consultation Center - 916-446-0222
5301 F St., # 10, Sacramento, CA 95819

Sacramento B Street Health Center - 916-446-6921
201 29th Street, Suite B, Sacramento, CA 95816

Women's Health Specialists - 916-451-0621
1750 Wright St., Ste. 1, Sacramento, CA 95825

Choice Medical Group - 831-757-9300
945 Blanco Circle, # B, Salinas, CA 93901

Planned Parenthood - 831-758-8261
316 N Main St., Salinas, CA 93901

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 909-885-0282
165 W. Hospitality Ln., # 1, San Bernardino, CA 92408

Planned Parenthood - 909-890-5511
1873 Commercenter W., San Bernardino, CA 92408

Calif. Women's Med. Clinic, Dr. Wong - 858-268-0300
4282 Genesee Ave., San Diego, CA 92117

California Women's Medical Center - 619-265-0801
4134 Fairmont Ave., San Diego, CA 92105

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 619-698-6601
2850 6th Ave., Suite 401, San Diego, CA 92103

Mission Valley Planned Parenthood - 619-683-7538
1075 Camino Del Rio S., # 330, San Diego, CA 92108

Planned Parenthood - 619-286-6004
4575 College Ave., San Diego, CA 92115

Planned Parenthood - 619-881-4578
2017 First Ave., Ste. 301, San Diego, CA 92101

San Diego Women's Medical Clinic - 858-268-7324
4282 Genesee Ave., # 201, San Diego, CA 92117

Buena Vista Women's Surgery Center - 415-771-5000
815 Hyde Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, CA 94109

Choice Medical Group - 415-922-6656
2107 O'Farrell St., San Francisco, CA 94115

Planned Parenthood - 800-967-7526
815 Eddy Street, San Francisco, CA 94109

UCSF Women's Options Center - 415-353-7003
2356 Sutter St., San Francisco, CA 94115

Women's Options Center - 415-206-8476
1001 Potrero Ave., # 5 M, San Francisco, CA 94110

Choice Medical Group - 408-254-9096
2365 Montpelier Dr., San Jose, CA 95116

Planned Parenthood - 408-287-7526
1691 The Alameda, San Jose, CA 95126

Planned Parenthood - 408-729-7600
3131 Alum Rock Ave., San Jose, CA 95127

Planned Parenthood - 408-281-9777
5440 Thornwood Dr., # G, San Jose, CA 95123

Planned Parenthood - 805-549-9446
734 Pismo St., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

North County Women's Medical - 760-744-1400
120 Craven Rd., # 209, San Marcos, CA 92078

Planned Parenthood - 800-967-7526
2211 Palm Ave., San Mateo, CA 94403

Planned Parenthood San Mateo
2211 Palm Avenue, San Mateo, CA 94403

Planned Parenthood - 415-454-0476
2 H Street, San Rafael, CA 94901

Abortion Services - 714-972-2772
120 W. 5th St., Ste. 100, Santa Ana, CA 92701

Alfa Primary Care Medical - 714-541-5844
405 Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 92701

Commonwoman's Health Project - 707-578-1700
2200 County Center Dr., # H, Santa Ana, CA 95403

Family Planning Medical Clinic - 714-547-9495
1125 E. 17th St., # E, Santa Ana, CA 92701

Planned Parenthood - 805-963-5801
518 Garden St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101

Planned Parenthood - 831-426-5550
1119 Pacific Ave., # 200, Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Planned Parenthood - 805-922-8317
415 E. Chapel St., Santa Maria, CA 93454

Women's Health Specialists - 707-537-1171
4415 Sonoma Hwy., # D, Santa Rosa, CA 95409

Planned Parenthood of Monterey - 831-394-1691
625 Hilby Ave., Seaside, CA 93955

Simi Women's Center, Dr. Vahe Azizian - 805-584-1633
1687 Erringer Rd., Simi Valley, CA 93065

Family Planning Surg. Med Group - 209-473-0181
73 W. March Lane, # C, Stockton, CA 95207

North Planned Parenthood - 209-477-4103
415 W Benjamin Holt Dr., # D2, Stockton, CA 95207

Stockton Pregnancy Control - 209-465-5655
3209 N. California St., Stockton, CA 95204

Planned Parenthood - 408-739-5151
604 E. Evelyn Ave., Sunnyvale, CA 94086

Planned Parenthood - 805-777-3841
166 North Moorpark Rd., Thousand Oaks, CA 91360

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 310-373-1042
3655 Lomita Blvd., #400, Torrance, CA 90505

Women's Care Center - 310-715-2323
18051 Crenshaw Blvd., # C, Torrance, CA 90504

Planned Parenthood - 909-985-0065
918 W. Foothill Blvd., # A, Upland, CA 91786

Planned Parenthood - 707-643-4545
990 Broadway St., Vallejo, CA 94590

Planned Parenthood - 818-843-2009
7100 Van Nuys Blvd., # 108, Van Nuys, CA 91505

Van Nuys Women's Care - 818-785-1890
7232 Van Nuys Blvd., # 101, Van Nuys, CA 91405

Family Planning Medical Group
1570 E. thompson Blvd., Ventura, CA 93001

Planned Parenthood - 805-658-3232
5400 Ralston St., Ventura, CA 93003

Planned Parenthood - 925-935-3010
1357 Oakland Blvd., Walnut Creek, CA 94596

Planned Parenthood - 530-623-2386
100 Airport Rd., Weaverville, CA 96093

Family Planning Medical Clinic - 626-813-1141
1740 W. Cameron Ave., # 106, West Covina, CA 91790

Confidential Care - 818-346-5181
22110 Roscoe Blvd., # 203, West Hills, CA 91304

Westwind Women's Services - 818-704-6696
22110 Roscoe Blvd., # 104, West Hills, CA 91304

Family Planning Assoc. Med. Grp. - 310-820-8084
12304 Santa Monica, # 112, West Los Angeles, CA 90025

Pro-Choice Med. Ctr.- Dr. Seletz - 310-247-8745
10150 National Blvd., West Los Angeles, CA 90034

Planned Parenthood - 562-907-9071
7655 Greenleaf Ave., Whittier, CA 90602

COLORADO
Choice Woman Care - 303-671-0848
1550 S. Potomac, Aurora, CO 80012

Mayfair Women's Center - 303-696-9761
14446 E. Evans Ave., Aurora, CO 80014

Boulder Abortion Clinic, Dr. Hern - 303-447-1361
1130 Alpine Ave., Boulder, CO 80304

Boulder Valley Women's Health Ctr. - 303-442-5160
2855 Valmont Rd., Boulder, CO 80301

Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mtns. - 719-475-7162
1330 W. Colorado Ave., Colorado Springs, CO 80904

Abortion Access, Dr. Bernstein - 303-399-6120
1295 Colorado Blvd., Denver, CO 80206

Abortion Counseling Service - 303-320-8686
1340 Leyden St., Denver, CO 80220

Fertility & Family Planning - 303-595-4100
4500 E. 9th Ave., # 700, Denver, CO 80220

Ob/Gyn, Dr. O'Loughlin & Dr. Rosewater - 303-733-5511
850 E. Harvard Ave., Suite G-55, Denver, CO 80210

Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mtns. - 303-321-2458
2030 E. 20th Ave., Denver, CO 80205

Women's Care, Dr. Waldbaum - 303-298-0243
1860 Larimer St., # 280, Denver, CO 80202

Planned Parenthood - 970-259-4205
46 Suttle St., Durango, CO 81303

Rocky Mtn. Women's Health, Dr. Melmed - 303-788-8808
701 E. Hampden Ave., Englewood, CO 80113

Planned Parenthood - 970-493-0281
825 S. Shield St., Fort Collins, CO 80521

Planned Parenthood - 970-945-8503
410 20th St., #203, Glenwood Springs, CO 81601

Rocky Mtn. Women's Health, Dr. Melmed - 303-471-5050
9330 S. University Blvd., Highlands Ranch, CO 80126

Abortion Counseling Assoc. - 970-476-5695
181 W. Meadow Dr., # 200, Vail, CO 81657

CONNECTICUT
Summit Women's Center - 203-365-2660
3787 Main St., Bridgeport, CT 06606

Medical Options - 203-743-5064
135 Main St., Danbury, CT 06813

Womancare & Teencare - 203-798-0500
27 Hospital Ave., # 401, Danbury, CT 06810

Hartford GYN Center - 860-525-1900
1 Main St., # N1, Hartford, CT 06106

Summit Women's Center - 860-493-6575
360 Market St., Hartford, CT 06120

Planned Parenthood - 203-503-0450
345 Whitney Ave, New Haven, CT 06511

Women's Health Services - 203-777-9396
911 State St., New Haven, CT 06511

Planned Parenthood - 860-889-5211
12 Case St., # 213, Nowrich, CT 06360

Planned Parenthood - 203-327-2722
1039 E. Main St., Stamford, CT 06902

Planned Parenthood - 860-953-6201
1030 New Britain Ave., West Hartford, CT 06110

DELAWARE
Atlantic Women's Medical - 302-678-3383
1643 N. DuPont Hwy., Dover, DE 19901

Planned Parenthood - 302-678-5200
805 S. Governors Ave., Dover, DE 19904

Atlantic Women's Medical - 302-764-1900
2809 Baynard Blvd., Wilmington, DE 19802

National Women's Health - 302-992-7996
312 Mitch Rd., Wilmington, DE 19804

Planned Parenthood - 302-655-7293
625 N. Shipley St., Wilmington, DE 19801

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Dr. Bruno Chumpitazi - 202-829-0746
600 New York Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20001

Greater Washington Health Center - 202-561-5800
1328 Southern Ave. SE, # 205, Washington, DC 20032

Greater Washington Health Center - 202-561-5800
1012 6th St., Washington, DC 20001

Planned Parenthood - 202-347-8512
1108 16th St. NW, Washington, DC 20036

Potomac Family Planning Center - 202-583-2517
3230 Pennsylvania Ave. SE, #200, Washington, DC 20020

Southeast Women's Health Center - 202-563-1300
3794 M.L. King Jr. Ave SE, # 100, Washington, DC 20032

Washington Surgi-Center - 202-659-9403
1018 22nd St. NW, Washington, DC 20037

FLORIDA
All Women's Health Center - 407-834-2262
431 Maitland Ave, Altamonte Springs, FL 32701

Robert Livingston Medical Office - 561-368-3993
3350 NW 2nd Ave # A18, Boca Raton, FL 33431

Bread and Roses - 727-446-2690
1560 S Highland Ave, Clearwater, FL 33756

Women's OB/GYN of Countryside - 727-785-2525
28960 US Highway 19 N., Suite 110, Clearwater, FL 33761

Gynecologic Surgeons - 954-753-2860
2929 N University Dr. # 202, Coral Springs, FL 33065

Family Planning Inc - 386-253-1933
580 Mulberry St., Daytona Beach, FL 32114

Woman's Health/Birth Control Ctr Inc - 386-253-0008
1225 8th St., Daytona Beach, FL 32117

Aastra Clinic - 954-463-6739
1776 E. Sunrise Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33304

All Women's Center - 954-772-0933
2100 E. Commercial Blvd, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308

Dr. Benjamin - 954-726-7773
7700 N University Dr., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33321

Ft. Lauderdale Women's Center - 954-733-0121
2001 W. Oakland Park Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311

Today's Woman Medical Center - 954-792-9171
6971 W Sunrise Blvd. # 206, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33313

Women's Center - 954-772-6200
962 E Cypress Creek Rd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33334

Women's Clinic - 954-486-4300
2331 N. State Rd. 7, # 104, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33313

Ft. Myers Women's Health Center - 239-936-4494
3900 Broadway Blvd., Bldg. C, Fort Myers, FL 33901

Southwest Florida Women's Clinic - 239-995-1111
3979 Northside Circle, # 5, Fort Myers, FL 33903

A Woman's World Medical Center - 772-460-1506
503 S. 12th St., Fort Pierce, FL 34950

All Women's Health Center Inc - 352-378-9191
1135 NW 23rd Ave., Suite N, Gainesville, FL 32609

Bread and Roses Women's Health - 352-372-1664
1233 NW 10th Ave, Gainesville, FL 32601

A GYN Diagnostic Center - 305-824-8816
267 E. 49th St., Hialeah, FL 33013

A Gynecologists Diagnostic Center - 305-362-4611
3671 W. 16th Ave., Hialeah, FL 33012

A Woman's Choice - 305-558-4440
6406 NW 186th St., Hialeah, FL 33015

A Woman's Option Inc. - 305-824-1788
1933 W. 60th St., Hialeah, FL 33012

A Women's Care II - 305-836-9701
952 E. 25th St., Hialeah, FL 33013

Alba Medical Clinic - 305-827-3412
4210 Palm Ave., Hialeah, FL 33012

Abortion-Birth Control Services - 954-772-8261
6866 Sterling, Hollywood, FL 33024

Women's Awareness - 954-987-4400
6866 Stirling, Hollywood, FL 33024

A Jacksonville Women's Health - 904-448-8877
413 University Blvd. S., Build. # 2, Jacksonville, FL 32216

All Florida Women's Center - 904-398-8005
3599 University Blvd. S # 1200, Jacksonville, FL 32216

All Women's Clinic - 904-358-1996
4031 University Blvd., Jacksonville, FL 32204

All Women's Clinic - 904-731-2755
4331 University Blvd. S, Jacksonville, FL 32216

Planned Parenthood - 904-399-2800
3850 Beach Blvd., Jacksonville, FL 32207

Lakeland Women's Health Center - 863-644-7541
4444 S Florida Ave., Lakeland, FL 33813

A Choice for Women Inc. - 305-630-3363
6660 SW 117th Ave., Miami, FL 33183

A Eve Center - 305-591-2288
3900 NW 79th Ave., # 575, Miami, FL 33166

A Eve of Kendall - 305-670-9797
9350 S. Dadeland Blvd., #100, Miami, FL 33156

A Woman's Care - 305-947-0885
68 NE 167th St., # A, Miami, FL 33162

Able Cosmetic Care - 305-541-2346
2036 SW 1st St. Rear, Miami, FL 33135

Academy Women's Medical Center - 305-485-4044
8300 W Flager St. # 130, Miami, FL 33143

Advance Women's Care Center - 305-649-4599
2742 SW 8th St. # 20, Miami, FL 33135

Blue Coral Women's Care Inc - 305-264-4940
7360 SW 24th St., Miami, FL 33155

Orvi Medical Center - 305-573-3077
3212 NE 2nd Ave., Miami, FL 33137

Today's Women's Medical Center - 305-441-0304
3250 S Dixie HWY, Miami, FL 33133

Top-GYN Ladies Center - 305-446-9111
4391 W Flager St., Miami, FL 33134

Women's Health Care Inc - 305-325-1493
1250 SW 1st St., Miami, FL 33135

Women's Health Center - 305-595-4936
606 W Flager St., Miami, FL 33130

Gynecologists Diagnostic Center - 954-986-0030
6161 Miramar PKWY, Miramar, FL 33023

A Doctor's Office for Women - 305-899-9464
1100 NE 125th St., # 100, North Miami Beach, FL 33161

Today's Woman Medical Center - 305-944-4111
909 NE 163rd St. # 402, North Miami Beach, FL 33162

Women & Teens Community Health - 305-895-1274
16876 NE 19th Ave., North Miami Beach, FL 33162

Ocala Women's Center - 352-401-9288
108 NW Pine Ave., Ocala, FL 34475

EPOC Clinic - 407-898-2046
609 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803

Orlando Women's Center - 407-245-7999
1103 Lucerne Terrace, Orlando, FL 32806

Planned Parenthood of Greater Orlando - 407-246-1788
726 S. Tampa Ave. , Orlando, FL 32805

WomanCare / Abortion Center - 407-422-0606
4574 E. Michigan St., Orlando, FL 32812

Community Healthcare Center - 850-478-9660
6770 N. 9th Ave., Pensacola, FL 32504

Pensacola Medical Services - 850-478-2477
6115 Village Oaks Dr., Pensacola, FL 32504

Aastra - 954-792-9198
10 SW 44th Ave, Plantation, FL 33317

All Women's OB/GYN Group - 954-474-2500
817 S University Dr. # 101, Plantation, FL 33324

Venice Woman's Health Center - 941-484-5927
21178 Olean Blvd. # C, Port Charlotte, FL 33952

All Women's Clinic - 941-366-7066
2700 S. Tamiami Trail, # 5, Sarasota, FL 34239

Planned Parenthood - 941-953-4060
1958 Prospect St., Sarasota, FL 34239

Premier Institute for Women's Health - 941-923-3336
6122 S. Tamiami Trail, Sarasota, FL 34231

A Choice for Women - 305-667-6697
6660 S. West 117th Ave., South Miami, FL 33143

All Women's Center - 727-327-3300
4131 Central Ave, St. Petersburg, FL 33713

Women's Health Center - 727-381-6620
3401 66th St. N, St. Petersburg, FL 33710

N. FL Women's Hlth & Counseling - 850-877-3138
1345 Cross Creek Way, Tallahassee, FL 32301

BSSI - 954-726-7773
7707 N. University Dr., # 206, Tamarac, FL 33321

All Women's Clinic - 813-961-7907
14401 Bruce B Downs Blvd., Tampa, FL 33613

All Women's Health Center - 813-874-0505
3330 W Kennedy Blvd., Tampa, FL 33609

Tampa Women's Health Center - 813-977-6176
2010 E Fletcher Ave., Tampa, FL 33612

Women's Center of Hyde Park - 813-258-5995
502 S Magnolia Ave., Tampa, FL 33606

Presidential Women's Center - 561-686-3859
100 N Point Parkway, West Palm Beach, FL 33407

GEORGIA
Atlanta Surgi-Center - 404-892-8608
1113 Spring St. NW, Atlanta, GA 30309

Atlanta Women's Medical Center - 404-257-0057
235 W. Wieuca Rd. NE, Atlanta, GA 30342

Dunwoody Women's Medical Group - 770-396-4748
3114 Mercer University St. # 100, Atlanta, GA 30341

Feminist Women's Health Center - 404-728-7900
1924 Cliff Valley Way NE, Atlanta, GA 30329

Northside Women's Clinic - 770-455-4210
3543 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Atlanta, GA 30341

Old National Gynecology - 404-762-7936
2227 Godby Rd. # 110, Atlanta, GA 30349

Summit Medical Assoc. - 404-607-0042
1874 Piedmont Rd. NE, # 500 E, Atlanta, GA 30324

A Preferred Women's Health Center - 706-228-4545
2903 Professional PKWY, Augusta, GA 30907

Planned Parenthood - 706-724-5557
1289 Broad St., Augusta, GA 30901

National Women's Health - 706-323-8363
3850 Rosemont Dr., Columbus, GA 31904

Dekalb Gynecology Assoc. - 404-288-0746
4229 Snapfinger Woods Dr., Decatur, GA 30035

Atlanta Women's Health Clinic - 770-457-5675
5269 Buford HWY NE # 8, Doraville, GA 30340

AB Services - 770-984-2522
1640 Powers Ferry Rd. SE, Marietta, GA 30067

Abortion Clinic of Savannah - 912-236-1603
120 E. 34th St., Savannah, GA 31401

HAWAII
Planned Parenthood of Hawaii - 808-589-1149
1350 S King St. # 310, Honolulu, HI 96814

Family Planning Center of Hawaii - 808-329-8211
75-184 Hualalai Rd. # 205, Kailua Kona, HI 96740

IDAHO
Dr. Anthony Keys - 208-336-4825
222 N 2nd St., Boise, ID 83702

Dr. Glenn Weyhrich - 208-342-2516
222 N 2nd St., Boise, ID 83702

Women's Health Care Inc - 208-424-5051
813 La Cassia Dr., Boise, ID 83705

ILLINOIS
Dr. Jakubowski - 630-892-4444
523 W Galena Blvd., Aurora, IL 60506

Planned Parenthood - 217-359-8022
302 E Stoughton St., Champaign, IL 61820

Women's Health Practice - 217-356-3736
2125 N Neil St., Champaign, IL 61820

American Women's Center - 773-772-7727
2744 N Western Ave., Chicago, IL 60647

Fam. Planning Assoc. Med. Group - 312-707-8988
659 W Washington Blvd., Chicago, IL 60661

Fam. Planning Assoc. Med. Group - 773-725-0200
5086 N Elston Ave., Chicago, IL 60630

Medical Group - 773-874-7513
7845 S Cottage Grove Ave. #104, Chicago, IL 60619

Medical Group Treatment Center - 773-375-9709
9011 S. Commercial Ave., Chicago, IL 60617

Planned Parenthood - 312-266-1033
1200 N La Salle Dr., Chicago, IL 60610

Women's Health Center - 773-561-6602
5787 N Lincoln Ave., Chicago, IL 60659

American Women's Center - 847-296-9330
110 S River Rd Suite 7, Des Plaines, IL 60016

Dimensions Medical Center Ltd. - 847-390-9300
1455 E Golf Rd. # 108, Des Plaines, IL 60016

Forest View Medical Center - (866) 484-5600
2750 South River Road, Des Plaines, IL 60018

Access Health Center - 630-964-0000
1700 75th St., Downers Grove, IL 60516

Aanchor Health Center Ltd. - Dr. Goyal - 630-495-4400
1186 Roosevelt Rd., Glen Ellyn, IL 60137

The Hope Clinic for Women - 618-451-5722
1602 21st St., Granite City, IL 62040

ACU Health Center Ltd. - 630-794-0645
736 N. York Rd., Hinsdale, IL 60521

Women's Aid Clinic - 847-676-2428
4751 W Touhy Ave. #101, Lincolnwood, IL 60646

National Health Care - 309-691-9073
7405 N University St., Peoria, IL 61614

Northern IL Women's Center - 815-863-4101
1400 Broadway # 201, Rockford, IL 61104

Advantage Health Care Ltd. - 630-595-1515
203 E Irving Park Rd., Wood Dale, IL 60191

INDIANA
Planned Parenthood - 317-272-2042
7487 E US Highway 36, Avon, IN 46123

Planned Parenthood - 812-336-0219
421 S College Ave., Bloomington, IN 47403

Ft. Wayne Women's Health Center - 260-424-5005
827 Webster St., Ft. Wayne, IN 46802

Friendship Family Planning - 219-887-4900
3700 Broadway, Gary, IN 46408

Affiliated Women's Services - 317-241-0215
2215 Distributors Dr., Indianapolis, IN 46242

Clinic for Women - 317-545-2288
3607 W 16th St. # 2 B, Indianapolis, IN 46218

Indianapolis Women's Center - 317-353-9371
1201 N Arlington Ave. # D, Indianapolis, IN 46219

Planned Parenthood - 317-872-3115
8590 Georgetown Road, Indianapolis, IN 46268

Planned Parenthood of Greater Indiana - 219-769-3500
8645 Connecticut St., Merrillville, IN 46410

Women's Pavilion - 574-272-1010
2010 Ironwood Circle, South Bend, IN 46635

IOWA
Planned Parenthood - 563-449-1000
2751 Tech Dr., Bettendorf, IA 52722

Cedar Rapids Clinic for Women - 319-390-4342
4089 21st Avenue Southwest, Cedar Rapids, IA 52404

Planned Parenthood - 712-322-6650
1604 2nd Ave., Council Bluff, IA 51501

Planned Parenthood - 515-280-7002
1000 East Army Post Road, Des Moines, IA 50315

Emma Goldman Clinic - 319-337-2111
227 N. Dubuque St., Iowa City, IA 52245

Planned Parenthood - 319-354-8000
850 Orchard St., Iowa City, IA 52246

Planned Parenthood - 712-276-6290
4409 Stone Ave., Sioux City, IA 51106

KANSAS
Abortion Access For Women - 913-621-0808
720 Central Ave., Kansas City, KS 66101

Anthony Taliaferro, MD - 913-321-4000
2211 N. 13th St., Kansas City, KS 66104

Ctr. for Women's Hlth. - Dr. Herbert Hodes - 913-491-6878
4840 College Blvd., Overland Park, KS 66211

Planned Parenthood Comprehensive Hlth. - 913-345-1400
4401 W. 109th St., Overland Park, KS 66211

Women's Hlth. Srvc. - Dr.Tiller - 316-684-5108
5107 E. Kellogg Dr., Wichita, KS 67218

KENTUCKY
EMW Women's Clinic - 859-278-0331
161 Burt Rd., Lexington, KY 40503

Pregnancy Options- Dr. Sheikh - 859-278-0214
1725 Harrodsburg Rd. # H2, Lexington, KY 40504

EMW Women's Surgical Center - 502-589-2124
138 W Market St., Louisville, KY 40202

LOUISIANA
Acadian Women's Clinic - 225-355-8811
1820 N Acadian Thruway W, Baton Rouge, LA 70802

Delta Clinic - 225-923-3242
756 Colonial Dr # B , Baton Rouge, LA 70806

Abortion Assistance - 318-747-0330
1505 Doctors Dr., Bossier City, LA 71111

Causeway Medical Suite - 504-837-1272
3040 Ridgelake Drive, Metairie, LA 70002

East Women's Clinic - 504-244-9681
10555 Lake Forest Blvd. # 7A, New Orleans, LA 70127

Gentilly Medical Clinic - 504-943-2423
3030 Gentilly Blvd., New Orleans, LA 70122

Orleans Women's Clinic - 504-561-1183
2111 Banks. St., New Orleans, LA 70112

Hope Medical Group for Women - 318-221-5500
210 Kings HWY, Shreveport, LA 71104

MAINE
Family Planning Assn. Of Maine - 207-626-3243
43 Gabriel Dr., Augusta, ME 04332

Mabel Wadsworth Women's Hlth Ctr - 207-942-9660
362 Harlow St., Bangor, ME 04401

Planned Parenthood - 207-797-8881
970 Forest Ave., Portland, ME 04104

Women's Community Health Center - 207-773-7247
92 Darling Ave., South Portland, ME 04106

MARYLAND
Planned Parenthood - 410-269-1020
929 West St., Annapolis, MD 21401

American Health Care Services - 410-889-5252
3506 N. Calvert St., Ste. 110, Baltimore, MD 21218

Baltimore Women's Medical Center - 410-661-2900
7648 Belair Rd., Baltimore, MD 21236

Gynemed Surgi-Center - 410-391-1000
17 Fontana Lane # 201, Baltimore, MD 21237

Hillcrest Clinic of Baltimore - 410-788-4400
5602 Baltimore National Pike # 600, Baltimore, MD 21228

Planned Parenthood - 410-576-1414
610 N Howard St., Baltimore, MD 21201

Seneca Women's Health Care - 410-464-9100
1900 E. Northern Pkwy., #103, Baltimore, MD 21239

Wisconsin Ave Women's Center - 301-654-5225
8311 Wisconsin Ave. # C14, Bethesda, MD 20814

American Women's Services - 301-345-9006
4700 Berwin House Rd., Ste. 203, College Park, MD 20740

Metropolitan Fam. Planning Institute - 301-474-5300
5915 Greenbelt Rd., College Park, MD 20740

American Women's Services - 800-951-1180
801 Toll House Ave., Unit H6, Fredrick, MD 21701

Metropolitan Fam. Planning Institute - 301-921-0077
9063 Shady Grove Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877

Germantown Reprod. Hlth Srvcs - 301-353-9200
13233 Executive Park Terrace, Germantown, MD 20874

Hagerstown Reproductive Hlth Srvcs - 301-733-2400
160 W Washington St. FL 1, Hagerstown, MD 21740

Prince George's Repro. Hlth. Srvcs. - 301-434-2300
7411 Riggs Rd. # 300, Hyattsville, MD 20783

Metropolitan Fam. Planning Institute - 301-498-2103
9811 Mallard Dr. # 115, Laurel, MD 20708

Femi-Care Surgery Center - 443-394-0523
66 Painters Mill Rd., Owings Mills, MD 21117

Potomac Family Planning Center - 301-251-9124
966 Hungerford Dr. # 24, Rockville, MD 20850

Gyncare Center - 410-315-8855
650 Richie HWY, Severna Park, MD 21146

Planned Parenthood of Metropolitian DC - 301-608-3448
1400 Spring St., Silver Spring, MD 20910

Metropolitan Fam. Planning Institute - 301-423-3313
5625 Allentown Rd. # 203, Suitland, MD 20746

MASSACHUSETTS
Four Women - 508-222-7555
152 Emory St., Attleboro, MA 02703

Planned Parenthood League of MA - 617-616-1600
1055 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, MA 02215

Women's' Health Services - 617-277-0009
822 Boylston St. # 109, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467

Atlanticare OB/GYN - 781-592-5622
9 Boston St. FL 3, Lynn, MA 01904

North Shore Women's Center - 781-595-4800
480 Lynnfield St. FL 2, Lynn, MA 01904

Merrimack Valley Women's Health
9 Branch Street, Methuen, MA 01844

Planned Parenthood of Western MA - 413-732-1620
3550 Main Street, Springfield, MA 01107

Suburban Women's Health - 617-776-6660
241 Boston Post Rd, Wayland, MA 02144

Planned Parenthood - 508-854-3300
631 Lincoln St., Worcester, MA 01605

MICHIGAN
Planned Parenthood - 734-973-0710
3100 Professional Dr., Ann Arbor, MI 48104

Women's Advisory Center - 248-338-9859
43700 Woodward Ave/ # 104, Bloomfield TWP, MI 48302

Planned Parenthood
7900 Grand River, Brighton, MI 48114

Northland Family Planning Center - 586-263-7880
41700 Hayes Rd. # B, Clinton TWP, MI 48038

Women's Center - 586-412-1000
42500 Hayes Rd., Clinton TWP, MI 48038

American Family Planning Inc - 313-581-1661
4132 Schaefer Rd., Dearborn, MI 48126

East GYN Women's Center - 313-526-3600
15650 E 8 Mile Rd., Detroit, MI 48205

Keemer Clinic - 313-961-9779
1150 Griswold St. # 1300, Detroit, MI 48226

Midwest Medical Mgmt. Inc. - 313-272-5845
16401 Grand River Ave., Detroit, MI 48227

Scottsdale Women's Center - 313-538-2020
19305 W 7 Mile Rd., Detroit, MI 48216

Summit Medical Center - 313-272-8450
15801 W McNichols Rd., Detroit, MI 48235

Eastland Women's Clinic - 810-774-4190
15921 E 8 Mile Rd., Eastpointe, MI 48021

AAA Abortion Counseling Inc - 810-787-2266
4250 N Saginaw St., Flint, MI 48505

Feminine Health Care Clinic - 810-232-8071
2032 S Saginaw St., Flint, MI 48503

Women's Health Center - 810-230-1300
3422 Flushing Rd., Flint, MI 48504

Heritage Clinic for Women - 616-458-369
320 E Fulton, Grand Rapids, MI 49503

Women's Medical Center - 616-361-8800
2666 Alpine Ave. NW # 5, Grand Rapids, MI 49544

Planned Parenthood - 616-372-1200
4201 W Michigan Ave., Kalamazoo, MI 49006

Womancare of Lansing - 517-337-7350
3401 E Saginaw St. # 107, Lansing, MI 48912

WomansChoice - 517-332-7191
815 Coolidge Rd., # 303, Lansing, MI 48912

Womancare of Livonia - 734-261-4500
27634 5 Mile Rd., Livonia, MI 48154

Women's Advisory Center - 248-476-2772
27549 6 Mile Rd., Livonia, MI 48152

Women's Medical Services - 231-773-7666
863 E Apple Ave., Muskegon, MI 49442

Michigan Abortion Clinic - 616-683-6100
703 E Main St., Niles, MI 49120

WomansChoice - 989-791-2152
3141 Cabaret Trail S., # 400, Saginaw, MI 48603

Women's Health Center - 800-660-6234
3141 Cabaret Trail S # 100, Saginaw, MI 48603

Northland Fam. Plan. Ctr. West - 248-559-0590
20755 Greenfield Rd. # 1104, Southfield, MI 48075

Physician's Abortion Services - 248-353-9467
29425 Northwestern HWY # 125, Southfield, MI 48034

Womancare of Southfield - 248-569-7010
28505 Southfield Rd., Southfield, MI 48076

Womancare of Downriver - 734-281-2445
14523 Northline Rd., Southgate, MI 48195

Birth Control Center - 586-939-4000
2791 E 14 Mile Rd., Sterling Heights, MI 48310

Northland Family Planning - 586-268-1700
37300 Dequindre, Suite 102, Sterling Heights, MI 48310

Womancare Inc. - 586-979-4961
11474 15 Mile Rd., Sterling Heights, MI 48312

Women's Center - 586-751-7070
28477 Hoover Road, Warren, MI 48093

Womens Clinic Group - 248-681-1008
2665 Elizabeth Lake Rd., # 104, Waterford, MI 48328

Women's Center - 248-355-9020
6765 Orchard Lake Rd., West Bloomfield, MI 48322

Northland Fam. Plan. Ctr. West - 734-721-4700
35000 Ford Rd., Westland, MI 48185

Woman's Choice - 734-971-1970
9 Washington St., Ypsilanti, MI 48197

MINNESOTA
Women's Health Center - 218-727-3352
32 E. 1st # 300, Duluth, MN 55802

Dr. Mildred Hanson-Medical Aids - 612-870-1334
710 E 24th St. # 403, Minneapolis, MN 55404

Meadowbrook Women's Clinic - 612-376-7708
825 S 8th St. # 1018, Minneapolis, MN 55404

Midwest Health Center For Women - 612-332-2311
33 S 5th St. FL 4, Minneapolis, MN 55402

Robbinsdale Clinic - 763-533-2534
3819 W Broadway Ave., Robbinsdale, MN 55422

GYN Special Services - 651-254-9091
640 Jackson Street, St. Paul, MN 55101

Highland Park Planned Parenthood - 651-698-2406
1965 Ford Pkwy., St. Paul, MN 55116

MISSISSIPPI
Jackson Women's Health Org - 601-366-2261
32903 N. State St., Jackson, MS 39216

MISSOURI
Women's Care GYN Inc - 314-739-6441
3394 McElvey Rd. # 111, Bridgeton, MO 63044

Planned Parenthood - 573-443-0427
711 N Providence Rd., Columbia, MO 65203

Central West End P.P. - 314-531-7526
4251 Forest PKWY, St. Louis, MO 63108

MONTANA
Intermountain Planned Parenthood - 406-245-6075
721 N 29th St., Billings, MT 59101

Planned Parenthood - 406-443-7676
1500 Cannon St., Helena, MT 59601

Dr. James Armstrong - 406-752-8104
795 Sunset Blvd., Kaispell, MT 59901

Blue Mountain Clinic - 406-721-1646
610 N California St., Missoula, MT 59802

Planned Parenthood - 406-728-5490
219 E Main St., Missoula, MT 59802

NEBRASKA
Abortion Contraception Clinic of NE - 402-291-4797
1002 W Mission Ave., Bellevue, NE 68005

Planned Parenthood - 402-441-3333
3705 South St., Lincoln, NE 68506

NEVADA
A to Z Women's Center - 702-892-0660
1670 E Flamingo Rd. # C, Las Vegas, NV 89119

Birth Control Care Ctr/Dr. Meeger - 702-733-7889
872 E Sahara Ave., Las Vegas, NV 89104

Lake Mead OB/GYN - Dr. Silver - 702-228-4004
341 N Buffalo Dr., Las Vegas, NV 89145

Pecos-McLeod Center - 702-796-7660
3626 Pecos McLeod #4, Las Vegas, NV 89121

Summit Family Planning - 702-382-0303
2900 E. Desert Inn Rd., # 209, Las Vegas, NV 89121

Abortion Services - 702-642-4091
2031 McDaniel St., # 240, North Las Vegas, NV 89030

West End Women's Medical Group - 775-827-0616
5915 Tyrone Rd., Reno, NV 89502

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Concord Feminist Health Center - 603-225-2739
38 S Main St., Concord, NH 03301

Feminist Health Ctr of Portsmouth - 603-436-7588
559 Portsmouth Ave., Greenland, NH 03840

Planned Parenthood - 603-298-7766
89 S. Main St., West Lebanon, NH 03784

NEW JERSEY
Alternatives - 609-344-4554
1616 Pacific Ave., # 316, Atlantic City, NJ 08401

Cherry Hill Women's Center - 856-667-5910
502 Kings Hwy. N., Cherry Hill, NJ 08034

South Jersey Women's Center - 856-662-5282
1014 Haddonfield Rd., Cherry Hill, NJ 08002

East Brunswick Women's Center - 732-238-4500
5 Cornwall Court, # B4, East Brunswick, NJ 08816

Women's Services - 973-674-0053
122 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, NJ 07018

Associates in Ob. & Gyn. - 908-352-2992
700 N. Broad Street, Elizabeth, NJ 07208

Abortion Services - 201-871-0740
401 S. Van Brunt St., Englewood, NJ 07631

Metropolitan Medical Assoc. - 201-567-0522
40 Engle St., Englewood, NJ 07631

Abortion Service of Fort Lee - 201-944-1008
2231 Lemoine Ave., Fort Lee, NJ 07024

Women's Choice - 201-489-2266
10 Zabriskie St., Hackensack, NJ 07601

Options - 732-367-6200
600 Candlewood Commons, Bldg. 6, Howell, NJ 07731

Options Gynesurgical Assoc. - 732-634-6700
200 Middlesex Essex Tpke., # 307, Iselin, NJ 08830

Dr. Kenneth Chang - 201-792-9339
3144 John F. Kennedy Blvd., Jersey City, NJ 07305

Pleasant Woman's Pavilion - 732-905-0017
535 East Countyline Road, Lakewood, NJ 08701

Pilgrim Medical Center Inc. - 973-746-1500
393 Bloomfield Ave., Montclair, NJ 07042

Newark Mini-Surgi-Site Inc. - 973-485-3300
145 Roseville Ave., Newark, NJ 07107

American Women's Services - 201-843-9280
3 Winslow Pl., Fl. 2, Paramus, NJ 07652

Women's Services - 973-345-4077
707 Broadway, Paterson, NJ 07514

Dr. Mohammad Imran - 856-678-6474
21 Carroll Ave., Pennsville, NJ 08070

American Women's Services - 908-213-1010
157 S Main St., Phillipsburg, NJ 08865

A Princeton Women's Center - 609-514-9191
29 Emmons Dr., # E, Princeton, NJ 08540

Planned Parenthood - 732-842-9300
69 Newman Springs Rd., Shresbury, NJ 07702

GYN Choices Center of NJ - 732-214-1500
1527 State Route 27, # 100, Somerset, NJ 08873

South Orange Women's Care - 973-763-8500
349 Valley St., South Orange, NJ 07079

Abortion Center Of Englewood - 201-567-7600
2 Dean Drive, Suite 3, Tenafly, NJ 07670

Planned Parenthood - 609-599-4881
437 E State St., Trenton, NJ 08608

GYN Associates - 201-569-9293
1323 Stuyvesant Ave., Union, NJ 07083

Women's Medical Center - 201-869-9293
2406 Bergenline, Union, NJ 07087

American Women's Services - 856-427-6245
1 Alpha Ave., Ste. 27, Voorhees, NJ 08043

American Women's Services - 800-366-0023
228 Main St., Woodbridge, NJ 07095

NEW MEXICO
Abortion Acceptance - Dr. Boyd - 505-242-7512
801 Encino Pl. NE, # C2, Albuquerque, NM 87102

Dr. Bruce Ferguson - 505-242-1700
1101 Medical Arts Ave. NE, # B, Albuquerque, NM 87102

Planned Parenthood of New Mexico - 505-265-9511
702 San Mateo Blvd. NE, Albuquerque, NM 87108

Dr. Lucia Cies - 505-983-1213
465 Saint Michaels Dr., # 106, Santa Fe, NM 87505

NEW YORK
Planned Parenthood - 518-434-5678
259 Lark St., Albany, NY 12210

Planned Parenthood - 845-831-0130
395 Main St., Beacon, NY 12508

Abortions WE Care - 718-466-4772
1749 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY 10453

Bronx Women's Medical Services - 718-585-0306
2901 3rd Ave. FL 2, Bronx, NY 10455

Gynecological Surgical Services - 718-829-7000
2070 Eastchester Rd., Bronx, NY 10461

Lincoln Medical Center - 718-579-5806
234 East 149 St., Bronx, NY 10451

Metropolitan Health Center - 718-220-0020
2330 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY 10461

Planned Parenthood - 212-965-7000
349 E. 149th St., Bronx, NY 10451

Women's Health Resource - 718-863-8402
1100 Pelham Pkwy. S., Bronx, NY 10461

A Brooklyn Woman's Medical - 718-222-0123
44 Court St. # 322, Brooklyn, NY 11201

Ambulatory Surgery Center - 718-369-4800
313 43rd St., Brooklyn, NY 11232

Brooklyn Women's Services - 718-531-6969
6910 Avenue U # LE, Brooklyn, NY 11234

Early Options - 718-638-3805
178 Flatbrush Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11217

Parkway Birth Control Clinic - 718-436-9020
309 Ocean PKWY, Brooklyn, NY 11218

Parkway Birth Control Clinic - 718-434-6827
3120 Glenwood Rd., Brooklyn, NY 11210

Professional Medical Services - 718-875-4848
81 Willoughby St. Fl 6, Brooklyn, NY 11201

Wyckoff Heights Medical Center - 718-486-4165
374 Stockholm St., Brooklyn, NY 11237

Buffalo GYN Women's Services - 716-835-2510
2500 Main St., Buffalo, NY 14214

Dr. Shalom Press - 716-691-1414
2550 Sweet Home Rd., Buffalo, NY 14226

Planned Parenthood - 518-234-3325
23 Main St., Cobleskill, NY 12043

Begum Firoza - 516-599-2019
123 Grant Ave, East Rockaway, NY 11518

Abortion Information & Services - 315-432-1048
6602 Franklin Park Dr., East Syracuse, NY 13057

Abortion Women's Medical - 718-672-4844
3713 85th St. FL 1, Flushing, NY 11372

Doctor's Office for Women - 718-459-5939
6326 99th St. #100, Flushing, NY 11374

Forest Hill Woman's Services - 718-897-5331
10816 63rd Rd., Flushing, NY 11375

Liberty Women's Health Care - 718-888-0018
3701 Main St. # 500, Flushing, NY 11354

New York OB/GYN Assoc - 718-575-5500
9229 Queens Blvd. # CA, Flushing, NY 11374

Professional Women's Services Inc. - 718-205-3400
8926 Roosevelt Ave., Flushing, NY 11217

Queens Women's Services - 718-651-0300
9211 Roosevelt Ave., Flushing, NY 11372

R & N Management Corp Inc - 718-458-8182
8020 Roosevelt Ave., Flushing, NY 11372

All Women's Medical Pavilion - 718-793-1943
6930 Austin St., Forest Hills, NY 11375

Glen Cove Planned Parenthood - 516-750-2500
110 School Street, Glen Cove, NY 11542

Planned Parenthood - 518-792-0994
135 Warren St., Glen Falls, NY 12801

Planned Parenthood of Nassau - 516-750-2500
540 Fulton Ave., Hempstead, NY 11550

Long Island Gyn. Services (LIGS) - 516-822-6661
250 W. Old Country Road Ste. 244-A, Hicksville, NY 11801

Planned Parenthood - 518-828-4675
190 Fairview Ave., Hudson, NY 12534

Medical Offices of P.P. - 607-273-1513
314 W State St., Ithaca, NY 14850

All Private Women's Services - 718-468-8400
19105 Hillside Ave., Jamaica, NY 11423

Dr. Sohan Mahendra - 718-322-1188
10612 Liberty Ave., Jamaica, NY 11417

Choices Women's Medical Center - 718-275-6020
2928 41st Ave., Long Island, NY 11101

All Womens Care - 516-365-1600
444 Community Dr., Manhasset, NY 11030

Family Planning Center - 516-294-0580
156 Mineola Blvd., Mineola, NY 11501

South Orange GYN - 845-782-4420
600 Route 208, Monroe, NY 10950

Abortion Services - 845-425-1020
200 E. Eckerson Rd. # 2-9, New City, NY 10956

Planned Parenthood - 914-632-4442
247 North Ave., New Rochelle, NY 10801

Planned Parenthood - 845-562-7800
532 Blooming Grove Tpke., New Windsor, NY 12553

Adolescent & Pediatric Care - 212-243-2777
160 7th Ave. S, New York, NY 10014

All Women's Health & Medical - 212-650-9191
184 E. 70th St., Level B2, New York, NY 10021

Choice with Dignity - 212-877-3120
211 Central Park W., New York, NY 10024

Dr. Wong's Women's Health - 212-966-4001
110 Lafayette St. #502, New York, NY 10013

Eastside Gynecology Assoc - 212-308-4988
225 E. 64th St. # C, New York, NY 10001

Empire Women's Care - 212-714-0014
38 W. 32nd St. # 601, New York, NY 10001

Lexington Women's Services - 212-967-7955
18 W. 33rd St., FL. 6, New York, NY 10001

Manhattan Woman's Medical Ctr - 212-473-6500
115 E. 23rd St., FL. 2, New York, NY 10010

Mid-Manhattan Physician Grp. - 800-208-0926
38 E. 30th Street, New York, NY 10016

Midtown Medical Services - 212-684-6586
30 E. 40th St., # 705, New York, NY 10016

Parkmed Eastern Women's Center - 212-686-6066
800 Second Avenue - 7th Floor , New York, NY 10017

Planned Parenthood - 212-965-7000
26 Bleecker St., New York, NY 10012

Westside Women's Medical Center - 212-333-5000
1841 Broadway # 1011, New York, NY 10023

Planned Parenthood - 716-205-0708
6951 Williams Road, Niagara Falls, NY 14304

Northern Adirondack P.P. - 518-561-4430
66 Brinkerhoff St., Plattsburgh, NY 12901

Planned Parenthood - 845-471-1540
17 Noxon St., Poughkeepsie, NY 12601

Center-Menstrual & Reproductive - 585-473-5162
2020 S. Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY 14618

Planned Parenthood - 585-546-2595
114 University Ave., Rochester, NY 14605

Reproductive Ctr-Highland Hospital - 585-341-6568
1000 South Ave. (Highland Hospital), Rochester, NY 14607

Reproductive Health Program - 585-341-6568
1000 South Ave., Rochester, NY 14620

Planned Parenthood - 518-374-5353
1040 State St., Schenectady, NY 12307

Planned Parenthood - 631-361-7526
70 Maple Ave., Smithtown, NY 11787

Stony Brook Women's Health Svc - 631-751-2222
2500 Nesconset HWY # 8C, Stony Brook, NY 11790

Women's Choice - 516-682-8100
175 Jericho TPKE, Syosset, NY 11791

Planned Parenthood - 315-475-5525
1120 E Genesee St., Syracuse, NY 13210

Planned Parenthood - 518-274-5640
200 Broadway, 3rd Flr., Troy, NY 12180

Planned Parenthood - 315-724-6146
1424 Genesee St., Utica, NY 13502

Southern Tier Women's Services - 607-785-4171
149 Vestal PKWY W, Vestal, NY 13851

All Women's Health & Medical Srvcs. - 914-946-0050
222 Mamaroneck Ave., White Plains, NY 10605

Eastland Women's/All Women's Hlth - 914-997-7990
185 Maple Ave. # 111, White Plains, NY 10601

Planned Parenthood - 914-761-6566
175 Tarrytown Rd., White Plains, NY 10601

Planned Parenthood - 914-965-1912
20 South Broadway, Yonkers, NY 10701

Women's Health Resource - 914-793-5588
1990 Central Park Ave., Yonkers, NY 10710

NORTH CAROLINA
Femcare - 828-255-8400
62 Orange St., Asheville, NC 28801

Eastowne OB-GYN & Infertility - 919-493-8466
180 Providence Rd. # 3, Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Planned Parenthood - 919-942-7762
1765 Dobbins Dr., Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Triangle Women's Health Clinic - 919-942-0011
101 Connor Dr. # 402, Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Carolina Center For Women - 704-367-2255
421 N Wendover Rd., Charlotte, NC 28211

Family Reproductive Health - 704-551-0808
700 E. Hebron St., Charlotte, NC 28273

Preferred Women's Health Center - 704-752-3838
3220 Latrobe Dr., Charlotte, NC 28211

Carolina Women's Medical Clinic - 910-483-3068
1919 Gillespie St., Fayetteville, NC 29306

A Woman's Choice - 336-272-1723
201 Pomona Dr. # E, Greensboro, NC 27407

Abortion Services - 3336-273-9485
2425 Randleman Rd., Greensboro, NC 27406

A Preferred Health Center - 919-854-9009
1604 Jones Franklin Rd., Raleigh, NC 27606

A Woman's Choice - 919-781-6811
3305 Drake Circle, Raleigh, NC 27607

Raleigh Women's Center - 919-783-0444
3613 Haworth Dr., Raleigh, NC 27609

Women's Center of Wilmington - 910-762-0613
1925 Tradd Ct., Wilmington, NC 28401

Planned Parenthood - 336-761-1052
3000 Maplewood Ave., Winston Salem, NC 27103

NORTH DAKOTA
Red River Women's Clinic - 888-928-9009
512 1st Ave. North, North Fargo, ND 58102

OHIO
Akron Center for Choice - 330-867-3400
88 S. Portage Path # 106, Akron, OH 44303

Akron Women's Medical Group - 330-535-9191
839 E Market St., Akron, OH 44305

Medical Planning Services - 330-773-6811
692 E. Market St., Akron, OH 44306

Women's Medical Center - 513-751-6000
3219 Jefferson Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220

Planned Parenthood - 513-287-6484
2314 Auburn Ave., Cincinnatti, OH 45219

Cleveland Surgi-Center - 216-295-3330
3535 Lee Rd., Cleveland, OH 44120

Ctr for Women's Health Ab. Access - 216-295-2500
11710 Shaker Rd., Cleveland, OH 44120

Planned Parenthood - 440-232-9732
19550 Rockside Rd., Cleveland, OH 44146

Preterm Cleveland - P.P. - 216-991-4000
12000 Shaker Blvd., Cleveland, OH 44120

A Abortion Tubal Ligation Services - 614-882-4944
5910 Cleveland Ave., Columbus, OH 43231

Capital Care Women's Center - 614-268-2273
3040 N High St., Columbus, OH 43202

Founder's Women's Health Center - 614-251-1800
1243 E. Broad St., Columbus, OH 43205

Mid Town Women's Center - 614-252-9400
254 Woodland Ave., Columbus, OH 43203

Planned Parenthood - 614-222-3531
3255 E. Main St., Columbus, OH 43213

Women's Medical Center - 937-293-3917
1401 E. Stroop Rd., Dayton, OH 45429

Center for Choice II - 419-255-7769
328 22nd St., Toledo, OH 43604

Toledo Women's Center - 419-407-4800
1160 W. Sylvania Ave., Toledo, OH 43612

Mahoning Women's Center - 330-782-2218
4025 Market St. FL 2, Youngstown, OH 44512

May We Help You - 330-758-6897
6640 Market St. # 22, Youngstown, OH 44512

OKLAHOMA
Abortion Surgery Center-Dr. Burns - 405-329-8120
2453 Wilcox Dr., Norman, OK 73069

Aaron Women's Clinic - 405-722-9500
6112 NW 63rd St., Oklahoma City, OK 73132

Reproductive Services of Tulsa - 918-665-6400
6136 E. 32nd PL, Tulsa, OK 74135

OREGON
Planned Parenthood - 503-646-8222
12220 SW 1st St., # 200, Beaverton, OR 97005

Planned Parenthood - 541-389-9973
2330 NE Division St., # 7, Bend, OR 97701

The Bours Health Center - 541-484-1223
539 E 11th Ave, Eugene, OR 97401

Dr. Bours Health Center - 503-357-6119
3303 19th Ave., Forest Grove, OR 97116

Downtown Women's Center Inc. - 503-224-3435
511 SW 10th Ave. # 905, Portland, OR 97205

Lovejoy Surgicenter - 503-221-1870
933 NW 25th St., Portland, OR 97210

Planned Parenthood - 503-775-0861
3231 SE 50th Ave., Portland, OR 97206

Planned Parenthood - 503-363-8732
3825 Wolverine Street NE, Salem, OR 97305

PENNSYLVANIA
Allentown Medical Services - 800-366-9604
2200 W. Hamilton Ave., Ste. 200, Allentown, PA 18104

Allentown Women's Center - 610-770-9077
1409 Union Blvd., Rear Entrance, Allentown, PA 18109

Dr. Joel Stein - 610-664-6004
301 E. City Ave., Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004

Abortion As An Alternative - 215-757-1881
5188 Neshaminy Blvd., Bensalem, PA 19020

Reproductive Health Center - 610-874-4361
15th & Upland Ave., Chester, PA 19013

American Women's Services- Erie - (814) 874-3500
1611 Peach Street Suite 335, Erie, PA 16501

Hillcrest Women's Medical Center - 717-234-4994
2709 N. Front Street, Harrisburg, PA 17110

Gynecological Surgical Consultants - 215-424-0222
1335 W. Tabor Rd., # 303, Philadelphia, PA 19141

Northeast Women's Center - 215-464-2225
2751 Comly Rd., Philadelphia, PA 19154

Philadelphia Women's Center - 215-546-2330
225 S. 15th St., # 301, Philadelphia, PA 19102

Planned Parenthood - 215-351-5560
1144 Locust St., Philadelphia, PA 19107

Women's Medical Society - 215-382-4300
3801 Lancaster Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19104

Allegheny Reproductive Health Ctr - 412-661-8811
200 North Highland FL 2, Pittsburgh, PA 15206

Allegheny Women's Center - 412-362-2920
121 North Highland, Pittsburgh, PA 15206

American Women's Services - 412-765-3660
320 Fort Duquesne Blvd., Ste. 325, Pittsburgh, PA 15222

Planned Parenthood Women's Hlth. Srvc. - 412-562-1900
933 Liberty Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15222

Planned Parenthood - 610-376-8061
48 S. 4th St., Reading, PA 19602

State College Medical Services - 814-867-1788
900 W. College Ave., State College, PA 16801

Planned Parenthood - 215-957-7980
610 Louis Dr., Warminster, PA 18974

P.P. of Chester County - 610-692-1770
8 S. Wayne St., West Chester, PA 19382

Women's Choice of Pittsburgh - 724-287-3100
10475 Perry HWY # 208, Wexford, PA 15090

Planned Parenthood - 717-845-9681
728 S. Beaver St., York, PA 17403

RHODE ISLAND
Women's Medical Center - 401-467-9111
1725 Broad St., Cranston, RI 02905

Planned Parenthood of Rhode Island - 401-421-9620
111 Point St., Providence, RI 02903

SOUTH CAROLINA
Charleston Women's Medical Center - 843-571-5161
1312 Ashley River Rd., Charleston, SC 29407

Planned Parenthood - 803-256-4908
2712 Middleburg Dr. # 107, Columbia, SC 29204

Greenville Women' s Clinic - (864) 232-1584
1142 Grove Rd, Greenville, SC 29605

SOUTH DAKOTA
Planned Parenthood - 605-361-5100
6511 W. 41st. St., Sioux Falls, SD 57106

TENNESSEE
Abortion Choice - 423-543-5888
401 Hudson Dr # 3, Elizabethton , TN 37643

Knoxville Ctr for Reproductive Hlth - 865-637-3861
1547 W. Clinch Ave., Knoxville, TN 37916

Physicians Reproductive Services - 865-525-4146
2011 Laurel Ave., Knoxville, TN 37916

Volunteer Medical Clinic - 865-522-5173
313 S. Concord St., Knoxville, TN 37916

Memphis Area Med. Ctr for Women - 901-722-8050
29 S. Bellevue Blvd., Memphis, TN 38104

Memphis Ctr for Reproductive Health - 901-274-3550
1462 Poplar Ave., Memphis, TN 38104

Planned Parenthood - 901-725-1717
1407 Union Ave. FL 3, Memphis, TN 38104

P.P. of Mid & East TN - 615-321-7216
412 Dr. D.B. Todd Jr. Blvd., Nashville, TN 37203

Women's Center - 615-331-1200
419 Welshwood Dr., Nashville, TN 37222

TEXAS
Austin Women's Health Center - 512-443-2888
1902 S. I.H. 35, Austin, TX 78704

Planned Parenthood South Austin - 512-276-8000
201 East Ben White Blvd., Austin, TX 78704

Reproductive Services of Austin - 512-458-8274
4804 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756

Whole Women's Health - 512-835-6403
8401 N. I.H. 35, Austin, TX 78753

Medical Care of Beaumont - 409-833-9207
3440 Fannin St. #A, Beaumont, TX 77701

Planned Parenthood - 979-846-1744
4112 E. 29th St., Bryan, TX 77802

Dr. Eduardo L Aquino & Dr. Keno - 361-888-7972
1901 Morgan Ave., Corpus Christi, TX 78404

AAA Healthcare Systems - 972-690-0169
8363 Meadow Rd., Dallas, TX 75231

Aaron Women's Health Center - 972-385-1333
6546 L.B.J. FWY # 200, Dallas, TX 75240

Abortion Advantage-Dr. Robinson - 214-630-3333
1929 Record Crossing Rd., Dallas, TX 75235

Fairmont Center - 214-742-9310
2921 Fairmont St., Dallas, TX 75201

Planned Parenthood - 214-373-1868
7424 Greenville Ave. # 211, Dallas, TX 75231

Routh Street Women's Clinic - 214-748-8611
4321 N. Central Expressway, Dallas, TX 75235

Abortion Advisors Agency - 915-542-2811
500 E. Schuster Ave. # B, El Paso, TX 79902

Reproductive Services - 915-544-2861
730 E. Yandell Dr., El Paso, TX 79902

Planned Parenthood - 817-332-9102
301 S. Henderson St., Fort Worth, TX 76104

Trinity Valley Women's Center - 817-335-6641
1325 S. Main St., Fort Worth, TX 76104

West Side Clinic - 817-246-7707
2011 Las Vegas Trail, Fort Worth, TX 76108

Reproductive Services - 956-428-6242
613 W. Sesame Dr., Harlingen, TX 78550

A Affordable Women's Medical Center - (713) 697-7723
7007 North Freeway, Houston, TX 77076

AAA Concerned Women's Center - 713-988-2200
8300 Bissonnet St. # 590, Houston, TX 77074

AAA Healthcare Systems - 713-692-5700
6430 Hillcroft # 115, Houston, TX 77081

Aaron Women's Medical Center - 713-774-9706
6440 Hillcroft St. # 500, Houston, TX 77081

Aaron Women's Surgical Center - 713-771-4357
2505 North Shepherd, Houston, TX 77008

Alto Women's Center - 713-662-3240
5851 Southwest FWY # 415, Houston, TX 77057

American Women's Clinic - 713-784-3333
5607 Schumacher Dr., Houston, TX 77057

Crescent City Women's Center - 713-659-5008
2101 Crawford St. # 312, Houston, TX 77002

Dr. Richard R Cunningham - 713-526-8585
2600 Southwest FWY # 1010, Houston, TX 77098

Houston Women's Clinic - 713-868-4483
4820 San Jacinto St., Houston, TX 77004

Planned Parenthood Surgical Srvcs - 713-535-2400
3601 Fannin St., Houston, TX 77004

Suburban Women's Clinic - 713-526-6500
3101 Richmond Ave. # 250, Houston, TX 77098

Women's Medical Center - 281-440-1796
17070 Red Oak # 505, Houston, TX 77090

Women's Services - 713-675-1749
4315 Lockwood Dr. # 7, Houston, TX 77026

Killeen Womens Health Center - 254-618-5095
3106 S. WS Young Dr., Ste. C-302, Killeen, TX 76542

New Women's Clinic - 956-722-9958
3710 Santa Ursula Ave., Laredo, TX 78041

Aaron Women's Health Center - 806-792-6331
3302 67th St., Lubbock, TX 79413

Confidential Abortion Services - 956-686-2137
802 S. Main St., McAllen, TX 78501

Planned Parenthood - 915-570-5184
307 E. Texas Ave., Midland, TX 79701

Alamo Women's Clinic - 210-614-4742
8600 Wurzbach Rd. # 900, San Antonio, TX 78240

All Women's Medical Center - 210-614-2277
8600 Wurzbach Rd. # 1206, San Antonio, TX 78240

Female Medical Center - 210-223-3031
403 W. Cypress St., San Antonio, TX 78212

New Women's Clinic - 210-225-5872
419 San Pedro Ave., San Antonio, TX 78212

Planned Parenthood - 210-736-2262
104 Babcock Rd., San Antonio, TX 78201

Private Office Procedures - 210-614-0108
4499 Medical Dr. # 156, San Antonio, TX 78229

Reproductive Services - 210-647-1135
5838 Joiner, San Antonio, TX 78238

San Antonio Gynecological Group - 210-615-7100
4499 Medical Dr. # 306, San Antonio, TX 78229

Woman's Choice Quality Health - 210-222-0351
920 San Pedro Ave. # 100, San Antonio, TX 78212

Planned Parenthood - 254-759-5772
1927 Columbus Ave., Waco, TX 76701

UTAH
Mountain View Women's Center - 801-272-5289
1345 E. 3900 S. # 104, Salt Lake, UT 84124

Utah Women's Clinic - 801-531-9192
515 S. 400 E., Salt Lake, UT 84111

Wasatch Women's Center - 801-263-2111
715 E. 3900 S # 203, Salt Lake, UT 84107

VERMONT
Planned Parenthood - 802-476-6696
90 Washington St., Barre, VT 05641

Northern New England P.P. - 802-863-6326
23 Mansfield Ave., Burlington, VT 05401

Planned Parenthood - 802-775-2333
6 Roberts Ave., Rutland, VT 05701

VIRGINIA
Alexandria Women's Health Clinic - 703-370-0550
101 S. Whiting St. # 15, Alexandria, VA 22304

Annandale Women & Family Center - 703-751-4702
2839 Duke St., Alexandria, VA 22314

Landmark Women's Center - 703-823-6500
5130 Duke St. # 9, Alexandria, VA 22304

Charlottesville Medical Center for Women - (434) 973-4888
2321 Commonwealth Drive, Charlottessville, VA 22901

Charlottesville Obstetrics - P.P. - 434-977-0200
105 South Pantops Dr., Charlottesville, VA 22911

Northern VA Women's Healthcare - 703-591-1999
10400 Eaton PL. # 515, Fairfax, VA 22030

Falls Church Health Care Center - 703-533-3700
900 S. Washington St., Ste. 300, Falls Church, VA 22046

Planned Parenthood - 703-533-5651
370 S. Washington St. # 3, Falls Church, VA 22046

Prince William Women's Center - 703-335-2779
9380 Forestwood Lane # B, Manassas, VA 20110

PA Medical Center for Women - 757-599-6389
10758 Jefferson Ave. # A, Newport News, VA 23601

A Tidewater Womens Health Clinic - 757-461-0011
891 Norfolk Square, Norfolk, VA 23502

Hillcrest Clinic - 757-480-2800
1600 E. Little Creek Rd. # 235, Norfolk, VA 23518

Norfolk Planned Parenthood - 757-624-9224
20th Street, Norfolk, VA 23517

A Capitol Women's Health - 804-754-1928
1511 Starling Dr., Richmond, VA 23229

Richmond Med. Ctr. For Women - 804-359-5066
118 N. Boulevard, Richmond, VA 23220

Virginia League for Planned Parenthood - 804-254-1760
3415 Floyd Ave., Richmond, VA 23220

Planned Parenthood - 540-562-3457
2207 Peters Creek Rd., Roanoke, VA 24017

Roanoke Medical Center for Women - 540-981-1246
1119 2nd St. SW, Roanoke, VA 24016

Virginia Women's Wellness - 757-306-4706
224 Groveland Rd., Virginia Beach, VA 23452

WASHINGTON
Planned Parenthood - 360-658-7871
3704 172nd St. NE # P2, Arlington, WA 98223

Mt. Baker Family Medicine - 360-714-1149
1530 Ellis St., Bellingham, WA 98225

Planned Parenthood - 360-373-6827
2817 Wheaton Way # 211, Bremerton, WA 98310

Planned Parenthood - 425-339-3389
1509 32nd St., Everett, WA 98206

Planned Parenthood - 253-661-7002
1105 S. 348th St. # B103, Federal Way, WA 98003

Planned Parenthood Issaquah - 425-369-0301
75 NW Dogwood St., Ste.B, Issaquah, WA 98027

Planned Parenthood - 425-482-1122
6610 NE 181st St. # 2, Kenmore, WA 98028

Planned Parenthood - 509-783-2859
7426 W. Bonnie PL., Kennewick, WA 99336

Sound Choice - 360-456-0291
8617 Martin Way E. #101, Lacey, WA 98516

Cascade Family Planning - 253-473-6031
7509 Custer Rd. W, Lakewood, WA 98467

Planned Parenthood - 360-863-9430
19705 Highway 2 # 200, Monroe, WA 98272

Cedar River Clinic - 425-255-0471
4300 Talbot Rd. S # 403, Renton, WA 98055

Aurora Medical Services - 206-546-8891
1001 Broadway, Ste. 320, Seattle, WA 98122

Clinic for Women, Anita Johnson Connell - 206-322-6865
1001 Broadway, # 301, Seattle, WA 98122

Seattle Medical Clinic, Eileen Gibbons - 206-625-0202
1325 4th Ave., Seattle, WA 98101

Western WA University - P.P. - 206-632-0345
4500 9th Ave. NE #324, Seattle, WA 98105

PP of Spokane & Whitman Counties - 509-326-2142
123 E. Indiana Ave., Spokane, WA 99205

All Women's Health Clinic - 253-471-3464
3711 Pacific Ave. # 200, Tacoma, WA 98418

Planned Parenthood - 253-779-3900
813 Martin Luther King Jr. Way #200, Tacoma, WA 98405

Westgate Family Medicine - 253-759-8331
2102 N. Pearl St. # 300, Tacoma, WA 98406

Planned Parenthood - 360-694-1188
5500 NE 109th Ct., # A, Vancouver, WA 98662

Cedar River Clinic - 509-575-6422
106 East "E" Street, Yakima, WA 98901

Planned Parenthood of Central Washington - 509-248-3624
1117 Tieton Drive, Yakima, WA 98902

WEST VIRGINIA
Abortion Acceptance - 304-344-9834
510 Washington St. W, Charleston, WV 25304

Kanawha Surgi-Center - 304-925-6390
48th St. 4803, Charleston, WV 25304

WISCONSIN
Planned Parenthood - 920-731-9534
3800 N. Gillette St., Appleton, WI 54913

OB/GYN Assoc. - 920-468-3444
704 S. Webster, Green Bay, WI 54301

OB/GYN Assoc. - 920-499-4855
124 Siegler St., Green Bay, WI 54303

Madison Abortion Clinic, Dr. Christensen - 608-251-7000
3706 Orin Road, Madison, WI 53704

Affiliated Medical Services - 414-278-0424
1428 N. Farwell Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53202

Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin - 414-276-8777
302 N. Jackson St., Milwaukee, WI 53202

WYOMING
Emerg-A-Care - 307-733-8002
982 W. Broadway, Jackson, WY 83001


Saturday, December 01, 2007 

Category: Religion and Philosophy

Youth and Religion
An Interview with Christian Smith

by Tony Jones

Christian Smith is one of the leading sociologists of American religion on the scene today. The Stuart Chapin Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Smith is the author or co-author of several acclaimed books, including American Evangelicalism: Embattled and Thriving and Christian America? What Evangelicals Really Want. His most recent project has been the massive National Study of Youth and Religion. Over the past five years, he and his team have conducted over 3,200 telephone surveys and over 250 in-depth, one-on-one interviews with American teenagers. Many of the findings, of extreme importance for youth workers, are available at www.youthandreligion.org.

Smith's book on the study, Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers (Oxford Press, 2005), is an invaluable resource, and YouthWorker Journal advisory board member Kenda Creasy Dean of Princeton Theological Seminary is currently working on a book about the implications of the study for the church. Tony Jones and Chris Smith corresponded after meeting at a recent conference at Princeton.

Tony Jones: Chris, yours is by far the largest study ever undertaken of the religious lives of American youth. Why do you suppose this area of study hasn't interested sociologists in the past enough to study it, and why did it interest you enough to spend several years of your life on it?

Chris Smith: Academic scholarship has in general, until the last decade or two, tended to ignore religious aspects of life. An old secularization theory predicting religion's demise with the advent of modernity had something to do with that. So it never may have dawned on serious adolescence scholars to look at teenagers' religious lives. Scholars of American religion have tended to be interested in adult religion and religious movements and organizations. Perhaps studying teenagers seemed like dealing with 'kid stuff'—below them somehow, not serious.

Anyway, around 2000, I was considering a new research project. This seemed to be something very interesting, potentially important, and definitely understudied. The Lilly Endowment was generous enough to give us a sizeable research grant to do this, and we've been having a great time with this project.

TJ: You had dozens of conversations with Christian teenagers over the past few years. Is there one that stands out as epitomizing the findings of the study?

CS: The story about youth and religion that comes out in our findings is complex, so there's no one teenager who epitomizes the larger findings. But there are a few who represent to me some key themes we heard repeatedly. Joy and Kristen in Chapter 1 of my book are two of those, as well as Raymond, the non-religious boy, in the next chapter, and John in the Catholic chapter. Each of these did capture an essence of some key stories from our project around the potentially positive influence of faith, the spiritual and theological impoverishment of some teenagers, and the real openness of many nonreligious youth to religious and spiritual matters.

TJ: How does a sociologist go about determining how religious a teenager is?

CS: We employ a variety of standard measures, such as religious beliefs, church attendance, importance of faith, and religious experiences. Our national survey included tons of religion questions, so we were able to angle in on the religion question from many different positions. Of course, these kinds of sociological measures never get at a person's true personal spiritual condition. They're useful but limited metrics of inner states that are hard to access directly.

TJ: You found that, contrary to much that's been written, American teenagers aren't particularly influenced by postmodern-pluralistic culture, that they don't claim to be 'spiritual but not religious.' If young people are really religiously conventional, why do you suppose many of us have this false perception of seeking?

CS: Good question. This view certainly seems to have created a major impression among many observers. This is probably partly a sampling problem: journalists, book authors, and other religion commentators often base their impressions and stories on small groups of 'convenience sampled' teenagers who may not well represent all of them.

Also, my observation is that many youth ministry practitioners and thinkers are rightly struggling to get others' attention to and investment in what they themselves are pouring their lives into, and semi-alarmist stories about a major postmodern turn and teen spiritual seeking is more likely to get this than a story about teen conventionality. Partly, too, the media is often interested in sexy stories that will sell and draw ratings, however inaccurate they may be. And some authors have a personal interest not only in describing an alleged postmodern or 'spiritual but not religious' cultural change among youth but also in positively promoting it—they don't just report, they advocate.

But it's the sociologists' job to represent social reality as accurately as possible, however boring or unfashionable their findings may be.

TJ: Do you suspect that young adults between 18 and 22 (even the college students that you teach) are more influenced by postmodern cultural shifts like pluralism and globalization than the teenagers seem to be?

CS: Yes, I suspect it increases as teenagers move into young adulthood, especially among those who go to college—though we're not sure yet how dramatic that change is. Still, it's important to know that this normally isn't the case among 13-17 year olds. In the summer of 2005, we'll be re-surveying all of our teen survey respondents three years later and will know what changed as they grew older.

TJ: Overall, the findings presented in your book are kind of a good-news-bad-news report for church youth workers. Let's start with the good news: you report that most American teenagers are religious; indeed, that the vast majority are Christian. Doesn't this contradict much that we read in the press, hear from the media, and see portrayed on MTV? You imply that there are ideological forces at work that tempt people to overstate the religious pluralism in the U.S.

CS: Yes, many Americans think the U.S. is more religiously pluralistic than it actually is. Some of my college students, for example, think that 25% of Americans are Jewish, and are shocked to find out that the actual number is 2%. Some advocate-scholars who evidently wish not only to describe but also to promote religious pluralism push the religious diversity story, which isn't really accurate. Minority religions do have a cultural importance and influence disproportionate to their numbers; but when it comes to actual numbers, the vast majority of Americans, including teenagers, are either Christian—practicing or nominal—or simply not religious at all.

TJ: You also write, 'Highly religious teenagers appear to be doing much better in life than less religious teenagers.' What do you mean by 'doing much better'?

CS: Social scientists have a variety of measures of different outcomes in teenagers' lives, from doing well in school to getting along well with parents, not abusing substances, not having sex, not engaging in risk behaviors, having strong subjective wellbeing, not watching a lot of trash TV, and so on. On all of these many measures, the most religious U.S. teenagers are significantly different from the non-religious teenagers, in what is normally considered the positive direction. Eight different tables in the book reporting on scores of such outcomes show this pattern clearly.

TJ: Now the bad news. Although most American teenagers are faithful, you say the faith they practice can best be described as 'Moralistic Therapeutic Deism.' Can you take a sentence or two to unpack each of these terms?

CS: Yes, I am suggesting that MTD is the actual de facto functional religious faith of the majority of teenagers, regardless of their official affiliation.

By 'moralistic' I mean oriented toward being good and nice, in ways that assert certain moral claims (for example, 'You should never have sex with someone you don't really care about.') in fairly arbitrary ways without their being integrated into any larger, coherent moral tradition.

By 'therapeutic' I mean being primarily concerned with one's own happiness, good feeling, personal comfortability, and emotional wellbeing—in contrast to, say, a focus on glorifying God, learning obedience, or serving others.

Finally, by 'deism' I mean a view of God as normally distant and not involved in one's life, except (as qualified by the 'therapeutic') if one has a problem one needs God to solve, one can call on God to fix it and make one feel better. In MTD, in other words, God functions as a combination divine butler and cosmic therapist.

TJ: Another way that American teen Christianity is described in the book is 'benign whateverism.' Some might suspect that teenagers are unable (or unwilling) to be articulate about anything—that rolling their eyes and grunting is the most you can often get out of them. In the book you seem almost shocked that these kids are generally able to talk quite articulately about STDs, drunk driving, and teen pregnancy, but when you asked them to talk about Jesus, they were stumped. Is that right?

CS: Right. Teenagers aren't universally inarticulate. In areas where the adult world has made a point to get their attention and educate them, where the young people can see that something really matters, like not diving drunk or getting pregnant, teenagers can be quite articulate.

But it hit us like a ton of bricks that most religious teenagers aren't being well educated in the faith or given much practice in articulating their beliefs and why and how they matter. For more than a few teenagers, in fact, it seems like ours was the first time any adult ever asked them what they believed. Some of them said exactly that.

TJ: If you're right about this—and I suspect that you are—it would seem that Christian parenting and Christian youth ministry have largely failed to inculcate or implant a distinctly Christian identity in our 13- to 17 year olds. Would you agree?

CS: Yes. In very many cases it seems that is so. Many parents come from a generation that has bent over backwards not to 'shove anything down anyone's throat.' Consequently, their kids aren't getting much direct theological substance to embrace, revise, or reject. If so, that's a real disservice to kids.

My sense is that most youth ministers are knocking themselves out to do their best. Many also tell me they're under pressure from all sides to entertain their teenagers, which isn't a great context for sustained, solid teaching in faith. But for whatever reasons, the bottom line is that the majority of teenagers, including many evangelicals, turn out to be pretty clueless and inarticulate about their own faith perspectives.

TJ: You surmise that this 'Moralistic Therapeutic Deism' isn't unique to young people, but that they're actually just reflecting the less-than-passionate faith of their parents. Many youth workers will agree with you on this; yet you caution church youth workers not to see parents as their adversaries. Why?

CS: One of the most powerful realizations I took from our research is how formative parents are in their teenagers' lives. They often don't realize it, but parents are the most significant influences on their teenage children's faith lives. I don't think it's an overstatement to say that normally the most important pastor a young person is going to have is his or her father and mother—for better or worse (often the latter).

If this were the case, youth ministers would be much more effective working with parents rather than against them. I realize not all parents want to work with the youth minister. I've picked up among youth ministers from many faith traditions a distinct sense of tremendous frustration with the parents of their teenagers—and I can understand why—but in the long run, an adversarial relationship with teenagers' parents is counterproductive. It seems to me that the more youth ministry can work with parents and be set in a larger context of family and church ministry, the more effective it will be.

TJ: In the book, you give some hints as to how you think youth workers and parents can remedy this. Help, then, to unravel this paradox. On the one hand, as you said, you found that parents are by far the most influential people in the religious lives of their teenagers; on the other hand, you write that congregations with full-time youth workers and active youth ministry programs are much better at developing young people who are decidedly religious. Yet many thriving youth ministries make a point of keeping the youth in activities that distance them from their parents. Can these two be reconciled?

CS: There's not a paradox here. Good and effective youth programs only distance youth from their families and parents for limited periods of time, which is entirely sensible and appropriate. But they don't entirely separate teenagers from parents. Surely what works best is a rhythm between youth-focused times and activities and family-and congregational-focused times and activities.

So, according to our findings, anyway, if they want the best outcomes for youth, churches should have strong, prioritized, well-funded youth ministry programs. But that in no way has to detract from the role that parents and families play. There's no reason why these shouldn't be complementary.

TJ: Have you seen this work in your own church, or in one that you've studied? If so, will you briefly describe what you've seen?

CS: Sure. Listen, young people may not broadcast this very much, but most really want to have parents they admire and are close to and model their lives on. They want strong relationships with lots of other adults whom they respect and who care for them. That's why they so often love a good youth pastor. Teenagers spend all of most days with other teenagers close to their age. They like that; but they also need, and actually want, more than that.

In my own (Anglican) church, the most committed, involved, and spiritually mature young people are also the ones who have committed, involved, and mature parents and have real relationships with other mature adult members of the congregation. This isn't rocket science—it's Basic Human Relationships 101.

The challenge, however, is what to do in cases when parents are simply out to lunch or don't care. I don't have all the answers, but I can't believe that the answer involves youth ministers being ticked off at and sustaining ongoing conflict with their teenagers' parents. There's got to be a more constructive approach.

TJ: You wrote an 'unscientific postscript' in the book for religious communities and youth workers. This seems extraordinary for a sociologist—what led you to include that?

CS: The potentially useful implications of our findings for parents, ministers, and communities of faith were too many and too juicy to simply draw the line at 'value-free' social-science description and analysis and then let readers figure out implications for themselves. Good sociology often has policy implications anyway. Why not be explicit about it? We make it clear in the book that we're not ministry consultants or anything.

In that postscript, we simply float some ideas that seem to flow from our results and let readers make of them what they will. Some readers may take offense over us being 'prescriptive' or 'biased toward religion.' Well, let them. You reach a point where you just do what you think you should do and let the chips fall where they may. If I wanted never to be criticized, I wouldn't be writing books in the first place. I mean, just cranking out more normal science is boring anyway, right?

TJ: Right. Actually, I hope that the postscript is one of the things that causes a lot of youth workers to buy the book and then read the whole thing. In that postscript, you warn against an instrumentalist view of faith, where kids should be Christian because it'll keep them out of trouble and get them into a good college. Again, most youth pastors will heartily agree with you on this, yet this is what many parents expect. Indeed, many youth pastors get in trouble with parents—at least I did—when they try to instill a more radical, demanding faith in their students. Any ideas on how to bridge that divide?

CS: Well, again, I'm not a ministry consultant, and I don't have lots of answers. But it would seem to me to be an elementary principle of any effective organization—religious or not—that the entire leadership be of one mind and vision about the organization's purpose, goals, and basic approach. So if I were a youth pastor, I'd want to make darn sure on the front end that I had a common mind with the other pastors and church staff members on key matters so I wouldn't be working at cross purposes with, or without the support of, the others. Then if parents got unhappy with me, my colleagues would back me up.

I realize this may be a luxury not all youth ministers can afford. But without such a common vision, youth ministers are often forced into 'stealth' or 'guerrilla' styles of ministry, which can only lead to frustration and conflict. The basic underlying question, then, is: What the heck are churches trying to be and do, anyway? Without having that figured out first, you'll only have problems.

TJ: You're now working on a video project that will accompany the book. How's it coming along, and how do you think you'll use it?

CS: Not everyone who could learn from our project will buy and read an Oxford Press book. So we're trying to package our stuff in video form. We're working with a great video company from California, and so far it's going great. Filming video is tremendous fun. And I think in certain ways there's a lot more potential for human impact than ink on pages, as much as I love books.

We're thinking the video will be the kind of thing that a youth minister could show parents and other key people in a congregation, hopefully as a catalyst to change priorities and generate some discussion and energy around teenagers. I expect the video to be available sometime in the fall of 2005. We'll announce it on our Web site: www.youthandreligion.org . People can sign up there for free notifications of such things.

TJ: Are you planning to run a sequel study of people in the next age group, what might be called 'late adolescence' or 'young adulthood'?

CS: Yes, we worked hard to keep in touch with all of our teen survey respondents and have been funded to conduct a second wave survey and interviews with them this summer, 2005. Ideally, we'd follow them into young adulthood and middle age, to get a solid picture of how faith and life evolves developmentally over time.

TJ: It seems to me that your larger, personal sociological project is to discern if and how religion can thrive in a postmodern-pluralistic context. In American Evangelicalism, you wrote that evangelicals have negotiated a love-hate relationship with American culture, and that this engaged, yet conflictual, relationship has allowed evangelicalism to develop a distinct sub-cultural identity within American culture. The study on American teenagers found something quite different about their religious identity, yet the 'benign whateverism' of American teen religion seems to be another way to be religious in a world of many religions. Can you comment on this?

CS: What is this, career psychotherapy analysis? It would be fair to say that most of my research and writing has focused on religion's viability and influence in the modern world. Different projects and different methods reveal different aspects of social life. The evangelical project tried, among other things, to understand and theorize how and why American evangelicals are relatively vibrant religiously (on sociological measures at least—I make no claim about how God actually views evangelicals!), despite the fact that academic secularization theory predicted their demise. Our methodology in that project focused us on the most self-conscious evangelical believers and churches, which are also the most religiously vibrant.

The current adolescent research, however, examines a cross-section of all U.S. teenagers. And the overall picture it portrays—despite our having met a minority of some very impressive religious teenagers—is rather one of religious mediocrity and debility, in some cases even pathetic bankruptcy. I viewed evangelicals as carving out a creative way to be Christians in a modern, pluralistic world. I'm afraid I view the majority of religious teenagers as engaged much more in passive accommodation to the surrounding culture. Yet, as I repeatedly emphasize throughout the book, it's not only teenagers—the teenagers merely reflect truths about our larger adult culture, institutions, and commitments. I confess that, as a result of this project, I'm more open to certain versions of secularization theory than I've ever been.

But this isn't a council of despair. After all, who would've ever thought that a mere Hobbit in the darkest of circumstances could have been used to destroy the power of Sauron? But there it is!

Wednesday, October 31, 2007 

Category: Life
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Those who rebuke the wicked will have delight, And a good blessing will come upon them. Prov 24:25


Currently listening:
As Daylight Dies
By Killswitch Engage
Release date: 21 November, 2006
Saturday, October 06, 2007 
From the LA Times October 1. Giuliani is concerned about security for who? Not for the 3,700 babies slaughtered each day in the USA, that's for sure!


Christian right is split over GOP field

Tough
Jeff Reinking / Associated Press
SECURITY FIRST: Concern over security could lead Christian conservatives to overlook disagreements with Rudolph Giuliani, shown at a campaign stop in a Kirkland, Wash., cafe last month.
Conservative evangelicals haven't found a perfect fit among the Republican presidential candidates — and that could benefit social liberal Giuliani.
By Michael Finnegan, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 1, 2007
WASHINGTON — Barely three months before the voting for a new president begins, the religious right has yet to unite behind a Republican candidate, heightening concerns among evangelical leaders that social liberal Rudolph W. Giuliani will capture the party's nomination.

The splintering of religious conservatives, if it endures, could ease the way for New York's former mayor to emerge as the party's first nominee to explicitly support abortion rights since the Supreme Court legalized the procedure in 1973.

But the lack of a consensus choice for president is only one of the troubles facing conservative evangelicals, a powerful force within the GOP for more than a generation.

"It's low tide right now for our movement," said Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Assn.

Opportunities for the religious right to press its agenda suffered a blow when Republicans lost control of both chambers of Congress in last year's midterm election.

Making matters worse are sex scandals besetting Republicans who have championed family values, most recently Sens. Larry E. Craig of Idaho and David Vitter of Louisiana. Their troubles -- after the sex scandal last fall involving then-Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) that contributed to the GOP's midterm losses -- have diminished enthusiasm for the party among many social conservatives.

Also hobbling the religious right is the decline of the Christian Coalition of America. A mobilizing force in the 1990s, the South Carolina-based group has suffered financial setbacks and now plays a marginal role in Republican politics.

At the same time, evangelical leaders are roiled in internal debate over whether to broaden their agenda beyond opposing abortion and same-sex marriage. Some argue that they have a responsibility to also fight poverty, AIDS and global warming.

"The old Christian right that automatically could be mobilized against a few issues -- that movement is being diluted," said the Rev. Joel C. Hunter, whose appointment as Christian Coalition president was cut short last year amid an outcry over his push to widen the group's focus.

In the presidential race, several of the lower-tier candidates have cast themselves as staunch supporters of the Christian right's priorities -- most obviously Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas. But few observers see those candidates' prospects as realistic. And many social conservatives have doubts about the higher-profile contenders vying with Giuliani.

"There's just no enthusiasm for this crop of first-tier candidates," said Richard Viguerie, a veteran conservative activist and author. "Not one of them is a principled conservative, so why support them?"

Leaders of Christian conservative groups are threatening to back a third-party candidate in an attempt to stop Giuliani from winning the nomination, the New York Times reported Sunday.

Some evangelical leaders hoped that former Sen. Fred Thompson of Tennessee could be their standard-bearer. But his early stumbles have raised doubts about his capacity to rally support. And some evangelical leaders have questioned his commitment to battling same-sex marriage and abortion.

James C. Dobson, one of the country's most influential evangelicals, told allies in a recent e-mail that Thompson could not "speak his way out of a paper bag."

"He has no passion, no zeal, and no apparent 'want to,' " the founder and chairman of Focus on the Family wrote. "And yet he is apparently the Great Hope that burns in the breasts of many conservative Christians? Well, not for me, my brothers. Not for me!"

Also vying for the backing of the evangelical community is Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts. His heavy spending on TV ads in Iowa, where religious conservatives dominate the GOP caucuses that traditionally launch the nomination contest, has vaulted him to the front-runner's spot in polls there.

But he is still struggling to surmount guardedness toward his Mormon faith and his switch to conservative stands on abortion, gay rights and other matters after campaigning in Massachusetts as a moderate on social issues.

"He's come to a lot of those positions late, and there's a lot of concern that he's come to those positions only for political convenience," said Danielle Vinson, associate professor of political science at Furman University in Greenville, S.C.

Another Republican, former Gov. Mike Huckabee of Arkansas, seems a natural fit for evangelicals: An ordained Southern Baptist minister, he has deep ties to the religious right. But Huckabee's lackluster fundraising so far has made it tough to convince many that he is a viable contender.

For Christian conservatives, a GOP loss of the White House would end eight years of advances under President Bush. He has put two conservatives on the Supreme Court, signed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, imposed restrictions on stem-cell research, and put political muscle to work for state bans on same-sex marriage.

Some evangelical leaders expect Christian conservatives to rally behind one Republican alternative to Giuliani once the field of candidates narrows.

Even if Democrats take the White House and keep control of Congress, the religious right is sure to maintain significant clout within the GOP. A Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll in June found that 31% of Republicans identified themselves as part of the religious right.

"This is not an auspicious historical moment for the Republican Party or social conservatives, but they will continue to be a formidable force," said political scientist Ted G. Jelen of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Giuliani has remained the leader in national polls of Republican voters in part by showing wider appeal than many anticipated, given his record on social issues (as well as his three marriages). A Gallup survey released Friday found he was the top choice among Republicans who attended church at least once a week.

As the race proceeds, a key question is whether concern among evangelicals over national security could lead many to overlook disagreements with Giuliani. Many have ranked national security as a priority since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and terrorism is the core issue in Giuliani's campaign.

Also in the mix: which candidate stands the best shot at defeating Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), should she win the Democratic nomination.

"Perhaps more than ever, electability is part of the thing that social conservatives are weighing, because the prospect of Hillary Clinton is so disturbing to them," said Gary Bauer, a conservative activist who ran for president in 2000. "They're looking for both the candidate who is closest to their views but also the candidate that they credibly think can win."

Giuliani argues that he fits that bill, even as Bauer and others continue scouting for someone else.

For now, some key evangelical leaders say religious conservatives must soon join forces to back Romney, Thompson or another candidate -- whatever his flaws -- to stop Giuliani.

Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, said the early caucuses and primaries in January would show whether conservative evangelicals understood "that politics is the art of the possible, and you don't make the perfect the enemy of the good."

"Sometimes," he said, "three-quarters of a loaf is better than none."

michael.finnegan@latimes.com

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Saturday, October 06, 2007 

Category: Religion and Philosophy

The Values Test

by James C. Dobson, Ph.D., founder and chairman
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Dr. Dobson says winning an election is important, but not at the expense of our core beliefs.

Reports have surfaced in the press about a meeting that occurred last Saturday in Salt Lake City involving more than 50 pro-family leaders. The purpose of the gathering was to discuss our response if both the Democratic and Republican Parties nominate standard-bearers who are supportive of abortion. Although I was neither the convener nor the moderator of the meeting, I'd like to offer several brief clarifications about its outcome and implications.

After two hours of deliberation, we voted on a resolution that can be summarized as follows: If neither of the two major political parties nominates an individual who pledges himself or herself to the sanctity of human life, we will join others in voting for a minor-party candidate. Those agreeing with the proposition were invited to stand. The result was almost unanimous.

The other issue discussed at length concerned the advisability of creating a third party if Democrats and Republicans do indeed abandon the sanctity of human life and other traditional family values. Though there was some support for the proposal, no consensus emerged.

Speaking personally, and not for the organization I represent or the other leaders gathered in Salt Lake City, I firmly believe that the selection of a president should begin with a recommitment to traditional moral values and beliefs. Those include the sanctity of human life, the institution of marriage, and other inviolable pro-family principles. Only after that determination is made can the acceptability of a nominee be assessed.

The other approach, which I find problematic, is to choose a candidate according to the likelihood of electoral success or failure. Polls don't measure right and wrong; voting according to the possibility of winning or losing can lead directly to the compromise of one's principles. In the present political climate, it could result in the abandonment of cherished beliefs that conservative Christians have promoted and defended for decades. Winning the presidential election is vitally important, but not at the expense of what we hold most dear.

One other clarification is germane, even though unrelated to the meeting in Salt Lake City. The secular news media has been reporting in recent months that the conservative Christian movement is hopelessly fractured and internally antagonistic. The Los Angeles Times reported on Monday, for example, that supporters of traditional family values are rapidly "splintering." That is not true. The near unanimity in Salt Lake City is evidence of much greater harmony than supposed. Admittedly, differences of opinion exist among us about our choices for president.

That divergence is entirely reasonable, now just over a year before the national election. It is hardly indicative of a "splintering" of old alliances. If the major political parties decide to abandon conservative principles, the cohesion of pro-family advocates will be all too apparent in 2008.

(This piece originally appeared as an op-ed in today's New York Times.)
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Saturday, October 06, 2007 

Current mood:  excited
Category: Life

Planned Parenthood Will Close Five Michigan Clinics

--> -->

Planned Parenthood of West Michigan and Northern Michigan is facing a combined 40 percent cut in state and federal funding this year, prompting the closure of five clinics. Facilities in White Cloud and Hart closed Monday; centers in Grand Rapids, Muskegon and Mount Pleasant will close by the end of the year.

"It is good news because Planned Parenthood is America's No. 1 abortion provider and promoter," said Pam Sherstad, director of public information for Right to Life of Michigan. "Women deserve better than Planned Parenthood."

The reduction stems from changes in how the state allocates money. Under the new formula, funds are distributed according to the percentage of recipients below the poverty line. This year, Planned Parenthood will receive $1 million in state and federal funds, down from $1.7 million last year.

Sherstad said there are more than 100 pregnancy and adoption centers in Michigan serving women — centers that are not run by Planned Parenthood.

"We do have the resources in Michigan to help women who are faced with an unplanned pregnancy," she said.

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Saturday, October 06, 2007 

Current mood:  amused
Category: News and Politics

Giuliani thumbs his nose at God and also the Roman Catholic Church calling their specific requirements for receiving communion "their interpretation". Is it just me or does Giuliani's comments on the Christian faith remind you of something you'd hear from a mindless 9th grader?

Giuliani shrugs off archbishop's criticism, says he's not running for religious office

Some lowlights from the article:

"I'm not running for religious office," Giuliani told reporters during a brief appearance at a coffee bar in a St. Louis suburb.

"I'm not going to debate the opinion of an archbishop of the Catholic Church or an official of the Protestant Church or a rabbi," Giuliani said. "That's an interpretation of religion. They're entitled to their interpretation of religion."

Saturday, October 06, 2007 

Current mood:  amused
Category: News and Politics
When I first read this I thought it was some sort of joke from The Onion or some other comedic fake news website. Keep in mind, this is the presidential candidate that a lot of Republicans and alleged "conservatives" claim is the best pick for the Republican nominee in 2008. This is the best guy!?

Feel free to share comments on Giuliani's abuse of scripture here http://zeke1319.chatango.com


Giuliani cites Bible on personal life

- Associated Press Writer

Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani compared the scrutiny of his personal life marked by three marriages to the biblical story of how Jesus dealt with an adulterous woman.

Giuliani 2008 California Republican presidential hopeful and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani takes questions from the media about Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., not seen, outside The Original Pantry restaurant in downtown Los Angeles Friday, Sept. 28, 2007.

In an interview posted online Friday, Giuliani was questioned about his family and told the Christian Broadcasting Network, "I think there are some people that are very judgmental."

Giuliani has a daughter who indicated support for Democrat Barack Obama and a son who said he didn't speak to his father for some time. Giuliani's messy divorce from their mother, Donna Hanover, was waged publicly while Giuliani was mayor of New York.

"I'm guided very, very often about, 'Don't judge others, lest you be judged,'" Giuliani told CBN interviewer David Brody. "I'm guided a lot by the story of the woman that was going to be stoned, and Jesus put the stones down and said, 'He that hasn't sinned, cast the first stone,' and everybody disappeared.

"It seems like nowadays in America, we have people that think they could've passed that test," he said. "And I don't think anybody could've passed that test but Jesus."

In the New Testament story, related in the Gospel of John, Jesus does not actually hold stones. The Pharisees bring Jesus a woman charged with adultery, reminding him the punishment for adultery is stoning. They are testing Jesus in an effort to charge him with breaking the law.

The Gospel reads: "But when they continued asking him, he straightened up and said to them, 'Let the one among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.'

"... And in response, they went away one by one, beginning with the elders."

Giuliani has insisted his family relationships are private. In 1968, he married his cousin, Regina Peruggi. They divorced 14 years later, and Giuliani obtained an annulment from the Catholic Church on the grounds that as second cousins, they should have received a dispensation to marry.

Giuliani married Hanover in 1984 and they divorced in 2002. He has been married to Judith Nathan since 2003.

Likewise, he says his faith is private, although he evokes his Catholic upbringing on the campaign trail.

He told CBN he believes in God and prays to Jesus for guidance and help.

"I have very, very strong views on religion that come about from having wanted to be a priest when I was younger, having studied theology for four years in college," he said. "It's an area I know really, really well academically.

"... And my personal view of it is I need God's help for everything, and I probably feel that the most when I'm in crisis and under pressure, like Sept. 11, when I was dealing with prostate cancer, or (when) I'm trying to explain death to people, which unfortunately I've had to do so often.

"So it's a very, very important part of my life," he said. "But I think in a democracy and in a government like ours, my religion is my way of looking at God, and other people have other ways of doing it, and some people don't believe in God. I think that's unfortunate. I think their life would be a lot fuller if they did, but they have that right."

Giuliani also addressed a cell phone call he took from his wife, Judith, last week during his speech to the National Rifle Association, an important appearance because Giuliani clashed with the group when he argued for tougher gun control as mayor of New York.

"And quite honestly, since Sept. 11, most of the time when we get on a plane, we talk to each other and just reaffirm the fact that we love each other," he said.

"Sometimes if I'm in the middle of a very, very sensitive meeting, I don't take the call right then; I wait. But I thought it would be kind of nice if I took it at that point, and I'd done that before in engagements, and I didn't realize it would create any kind of controversy," he said.

Saturday, October 06, 2007 

Current mood:  happy
Category: News and Politics

Ann on Columbia University inviting Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to speak:

Columbia president Lee Bollinger claimed the Ahmadinejad invitation is in keeping with "Columbia's long-standing tradition of serving as a major forum for robust debate."

Except Columbia doesn't have that tradition. This is worse than saying "the dog ate my homework." It's like saying "the dog ate my homework" when you're Michael Vick and everyone knows you've killed your dog. --from Tase Him, Bro!

Ann on liberal's use of the word "hypocrite":

Liberals don't even know what they mean by "hypocrite" anymore. It's just a word they throw out in a moment of womanly pique, like "extremist" -- or, come to think of it, "gay." How is Craig a "hypocrite," much less a "blatant hypocrite"?

Assuming the worst about Craig, the Senate has not held a vote on outlawing homosexual impulses. It voted on gay marriage. Craig not only opposes gay marriage, he's in a heterosexual marriage with kids. Talk about walking the walk!

Did Craig propose marriage to the undercover cop? If not, I'm not seeing the "hypocrisy." -- from CRUISING WHILE REPUBLICAN

Tuesday, August 28, 2007 

Current mood:  contemplative
Category: Life
Second Thoughts Are Real
Little Voice That Says 'Stop' Found in Brain
By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Medical News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

Aug. 21, 2007 – The little voice in your head that warns you not to do something you were just about to do is real, brain researchers say.

Well, maybe not the voice. But researchers now say last-minute second thoughts come from a specific part of the brain.

A different area of the brain allows us to act voluntarily. That's free will. This is "free won't," suggest Marcel Brass, PhD of Germany's Max Planck Institute and Patrick Haggard, PhD, of England's University College London.

"Many people recognize the 'little voice inside the head' that stops you from doing something, like pressing the 'send' button on an angry email," Haggard says in a news release. "Our study identifies the brain processes involved in that last-minute rethink about what we are doing."

Brass and Haggard find that a brain region just above and between your eyes -- the dorsal fronto-median cortex or dFMC -- is specifically designed to let you pull back from doing something you were just about to do.

University of Pennsylvania researcher Martha Farah, PhD, says the findings have major implications. Farah was not involved in the study.

"It is very important to identify the circuits that enable 'free won't' because of the many psychiatric disorders for which self-control problems figure prominently -- from attention deficit disorder to substance dependence and various personality disorders," Farah says in a news release.

In their study, Brass and Haggard hooked up 15 healthy young adults to functional MRI machines that did real-time scans of their brain activity. The participants were asked to decide to push a button at times of their own choosing. Some of the time the participants were asked to decide at the last minute not to push the button.

Brain scans taken when the participants actually pushed the button were different from those taken when the subjects restrained themselves from pushing the button.

This self-control came at a cost. The subjects reported feeling frustrated when they did not push the button as they had intended to do. That fit with their brain scans; a part of the brain linked to feelings of frustration (the anterior ventral insula) lit up along with the dFMC "free-won't" brain region.

Interestingly, some of the study participants were less likely to refrain from pushing the button than others. These subjects had relatively weak dFMC activity, while those with better self-control had stronger dFMC activity.

"This could be a factor in why some individuals are impulsive, while others are reluctant to act," Haggard says.

Brass and Haggard report their findings in the Aug. 22 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007 

Current mood:  thoughtful
Category: News and Politics
TESTING THE FAITH
Obey? Bible says yes, if government's 'good'
'No civil rulers should be followed if orders inconsistent with God's'

Posted: August 26, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Bob Unruh

In Romans 13, the Bible instructs Christians to obey the government because God has placed it in power, but several experts and leaders, both historic and modern, have indicated that cannot be interpreted as an unqualified loyalty.

The issue arose after WND reported on a government program to train members of the clergy to be used to quell dissent in the case of a national emergency or disaster.

In the report, Durell Tuberville, chaplain of the Shreveport, La., Fire Department and the Caddo sheriff's office, said the mission of such Clergy Response Teams would be to express the sentiment: "Let's cooperate and get this thing over with and then we'll settle the differences once the crisis is over."

The Bible, he said, states "the government's established by the Lord, you know. And, that's what we believe in the Christian faith. That's what's stated in the Scripture."

Tony Perkins, chief of the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C., said it's certainly correct that Christians should obey the government, when the government is good.

But he said, "You have to realize the government has been undermining its very basis of support by trying to remove the Christian ethic, the Bible, the Ten Commandments from the public square.

"It is not unqualified obedience to the government," he said.

Perkins told WND he's familiar with emergency situations, such as the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina – he was there working with church organizations to provide help to victims while various government agencies still were wondering what happened.

"I was there during Hurricane Katrina," he said. "People are going to obey the government to the degree that the government is there to help."

"But you're going to see, as I saw, people disobeying the government when they were told they could not go into the city to help rescue people," he said.

An earlier report by reporter Jeff Ferrell of KSLA-TV in Shreveport, La., said the Clergy Response Teams already were operating then.

The station's video is available on a link on its website, and also available on YouTube. It speculated whether martial law ever could become reality in the United States, following a nuclear, biological or chemical attack.

"KSLA News 12 has discovered that the clergy would help the government with potentially their biggest problem: Us," the report said.

Sandy Davis, director of the Caddo-Bossier Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness said members of the "clergy would already be known in the neighborhoods in which they're helping to diffuse that situation."

So government orders to abandon homes, turn over guns, leave livestock behind, or whatever would come to the minds of various officials during an "emergency," would be easier for people to accept, the report indicated.

While the report said clergy could cite Romans 13 in encouragement for Christians to obey the government, civil rights advocates raised questions about the idea of using clergy in such a fashion, noting the balance clergy would have to maintain when asked to do what the government wants under color of their status as a religious leader.

A blogger for the Christian education site, Chalcedon noted that the training has been going on in secret for over a year already.

"The clergy are being advised to use Romans 13 to encourage parishioners to submit to the sudden and massive expansion of government control that takes place during martial law," the writer said.

WND already has documented a series of executive orders by the president, that so far give the government broad new powers to address private property if it's related to any one of several issues, all of which are foreign so far.

Perkins' perspective, however, is supported by leaders from America's history.

A sermon by Jonathan Mayhew, from more than 250 years ago, sets out the same perspective.

His sermon has the unwieldy title: "A Discourse Concerning Unlimited Submission and Non-Resistance to the Higher Powers." The work by the Harvard graduate and lifelong Congregationalist minister first was published in Boston in 1750.

The Scripture, he said, "urges the duty of obedience from this topic of argument, that civil rulers, as they are supposed to fulfill the pleasure of God, are the ordinance of God. But how is this an argument for obedience to such rulers as do not perform the pleasure of God, by doing good; but the pleasure of the devil, by doing evil; and such as are not, therefore, God's ministers, but the devil's!"

"Is resisting those who resist God's will, the same thing with resisting God?" he asks.

"'Wherefore ye must needs be subject not only for wrath, but also for conscience sake.' Here the apostle argues the duty of a cheerful and conscientious submission to civil government, from the nature and end of magistracy as he had before laid it down, i.e. as the design of it was to punish evildoers, and to support and encourage such as do well; and as it must, if so exercised, be agreeable to the will of God. But how does what he here says, prove the duty of a cheerful and conscientious subjection to those who forfeit the character of rulers?" he wrote.

"Thus, upon a careful review of the apostle's reasoning in this passage, it appears that his arguments to enforce submission, are of such a nature, as to conclude only in favor of submission to such rulers as he himself describes; i.e., such as rule for the good of society, which is the only end of their institution. Common tyrants, and public oppressors, are not [e]ntitled to obedience from their subjects, by virtue of any thing here laid down by the inspired apostle," he wrote.

"All civil rulers, as such, are the ordinance and ministers of God; and they are all, by the nature of their office, and in their respective spheres and stations, bound to consult the public welfare," he said.

He even went further.

"We may very safely assert these two things in general, without undermining government: One is, That no civil rulers are to be obeyed when they enjoin things that are inconsistent with the commands of God: All such disobedience is lawful and glorious; particularly, if persons refuse to comply with any legal establishment of religion, because it is a gross perversion and corruption (as to doctrine, worship and discipline) of a pure and divine religion, brought from heaven to earth by the Son of God, (the only King and Head of the Christian church) and propagated through the world by his inspired apostles," he said.

"All commands running counter to the declared will of the supreme legislator of heaven and earth, are null and void: And therefore disobedience to them is a duty, not a crime," he said.

Mayhew's comments were directed not at the U.S. government, which hadn't yet been formed, but the tyranny of King Charles of England, who had been beheaded after what Mayhew described as "illegal and despotic measures."

Columnist Chuck Baldwin wrote unbelievingly that, "in order to convince American citizens to surrender their firearms to the government during a time of martial law, DHS is enlisting the assistance of America's pastors. According to the DHS, my job as a church pastor, is to tell my congregation that, according to Romans 13, they must surrender their firearms when the government asks them to do so."

"Let me address the issue bluntly: According to Romans 13, every citizen is only bound to obey his or her governing official to the degree that the governing official does not violate the duty of the citizen to obey the 'higher powers' which, for Americans, are God and the U.S. Constitution," he said.

"Properly understood, Romans 13 teaches that each and every government official (including the President of the United States and all those under him) must submit to the U.S. Constitution," he said.

"Don't tell me that the Bible teaches pacifism, because it doesn't. I am a Christian, and I am a pastor. And I agree with Charlton Heston who said that they could have his guns 'over my cold, dead hands.'"

Pastor David R. Wills, of Miamisburg, Ohio, was concise in his assessment of the text for WND.

"God commands our obedience not to ungodly, despotic rulers, whose 'authority', according to God's Word, is illegitimate and unlawful by virtue of such persons' rebellion against GOD's Authority – from which all lawful authority must derive and be answerable to," he said.

"Mayhew's eloquent sermon brings out these very same points and issues. In fact, his sermon was singularly enlightening to my mind, in my early Christian life, regarding the questions herein addressed," Wills continued.

"Mayhew demonstrates that God ordained not this or that particular ruler (as many would have it), but God ordained the institution of civil government, for the stated purposes. God vested his authority not in this or that man (Stalin, Hitler, Ghengis Khan, Pol Pot, etc.) to rule over those for whom Christ died. Rather, God vested his authority, through his Word, in the principle, the ideal of civil government. Notwithstanding it has sometimes been the case that God has used wicked rulers to inflict punishments upon a rebellious people; nevertheless, even in such cases, the Word of God does not impose upon the godly (those who know and obey the Word of God) the duty to submit to and obey evil persons and/or their institutions of government, whatsoever they may be," he said.

Perkins noted the U.S. Congress and the government courts repeatedly have worked to eliminate the Bible, the Ten Commandments and prayer from any part of the formal proceedings of the government.

Further removing the government from the "good" side, he said, is the support from Congress for "hate crimes" legislation, which many Christian pastors fear eventually could be used to silence their exhortation of biblical condemnation of behaviors such as homosexuality.

"The government increasingly is pushing legislation such as 'hate crimes' which pastors see as targeting them. They're (the government) weakening that base of support among Christians."

"Romans 13 addresses a government as an authority of good, not evil," he said. "I saw this when I was coordinating relief efforts among churches, when the federal government came in and confiscated truckloads of supplies we had coming in."

"Romans chapter 13 by no means instructs – much less does it command – Christians to render unqualified submission to the dictates of secular government," a pastor wrote to WND. "I do perceive a real danger not only in the case at hand but, in a much wider sense, in the fact that contemporary societies, including the majority of churchgoers (I'm quite sure), are practically ignorant concerning the Bible's teaching regarding both the duties and the limitations imposed upon individuals, by God's Word, with respect to obedience – or resistance, as the case may be, to secular government."

Currently listening:
Growers of Mushroom
By Leaf Hound
Release date: 07 November, 2005
Thursday, August 16, 2007 

Current mood:  determined
Category: Life



League To Protest Pro-Abort Dems at Soldier Field, August 7

The Pro-Life Action League has already picketed Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama on separate occassions this election season. But on August 7, the League will picket the entire class of pro-abortion Democratic presidential candidates at once.

The candidates—who have been vying with one another to see who is really the most pro-abortion—will be at Soldier Field on Chicago's Lakefront, Tuesday August 7 for a televised forum hosted by the AFL-CIO.

Don't Forget the Real Little Guy!

"Both the unions and the Democratic party claim they look out for the little guy," commented League Communications Director Eric Scheidler, "but there's nobody littler or more defenseless than an unborn baby. We'll be there to tell them not to forget the real little guys.

The protest group will meet at 4 p.m. on the north side of Soldier Field at the sculpture pictured below, on McFetridge Drive, half a block east of Lake Shore Drive ( map). It is recommended that participants use public transportation to reach the site.


The protestors will meet here on McFetridge Dr. at 4.
Monday, August 13, 2007 

Current mood:  determined
Category: Life
Anti Abortion Activists Use Graphic Pics to Make a Point
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Controversial Pro Life Rally Today in Findlay

The pictures were quite graphic, so we did not include them here.
The pictures were quite graphic, so we did not include them here.
Some drivers stopped to complain that the pictures of aborted fetuses were too graphic.
Some drivers stopped to complain that the pictures of aborted fetuses were too graphic.
The protestors had been told last week to refrain from protesting.
The protestors had been told last week to refrain from protesting.

FINDLAY -- Drivers were warned of what they were about to see. The sign read: "American Atrocities Display Ahead."

Despite the warning, drivers were upset.

"I've got kids in the car. Think I want to have them drive down the street and look at dismembered things?" one driver complained.

The problem? A group of protestors met at lunch to protest abortion. And the pictures they used to make their point were -- graphic.  

For one-half mile along Tiffin St. in Findlay, anti-abortion activists from Wisconsin displayed large graphic photos of aborted fetuses. Last week, Findlay officals had blocked the protestors, claiming the group needed a permit.

The group went to Toledo Federal Court, claiming their first amendments rights had been violated. Findlay officials backed off.

"It is a victory for free speech and that's one of the silver linings of what we can do. If you don't exercise your rights you tend to lose them," said Mark Trewhella, one of the protestors.

But drivers passing by the busy intersection could care less about free speech. They stop and confront the protestors, claiming the pictures are disgusting.

"You're absolutely right it's disgusting," said Mary Rivard to a driver. "You need to know what abortion is. You need to know what our country condones."

Protestors say they're used to the harassment but say it's worth it for a cause they believe in.

"This is what our country says is legal, and if it's disturbing, then there's a problem with that," Rivard said.

Posted by KO

Friday, August 10, 2007 

Current mood:  thoughtful
Category: Life





































Thursday, August 09, 2007 

Current mood:  thoughtful
Category: Religion and Philosophy
Thanks to Bob Hill for this helpful  explanation and chart.  CLICK HERE TO VIEW CHART

The Twelve Dispensations

    What is a dispensation? The Greek word for dispensation, oijkonomiva – oikonomia, is defined in two ways.
The first definition emphasizes the plan of management: "The management of a household or of household affairs;
specifically, the management, oversight, administration, of other's property. The second emphasizes the position
entrusted to the administrator: "The office of a manager or overseer, stewardship." We refer to the term of office
of an American president as an administration. We could refer to it as a dispensation.

Here is another way to understand the word.
Suppose you inherited an estate and hired an overseer,
oijkonovmo" – oikonomos, to manage it.
You gave him a written document of instructions, the dispensation, and gave him the authority to spend your money
to carry out your directions. Although a dispensation is not a period of time, we can see that the directions in the
dispensation are carried out over a period of time. If you wanted to, you could replace the old administrator with a
new one. You could also change the rules of the dispensation a little, keeping most of the rules from the last dispensation.
The employees the prior administrator had hired could adapt to the minor changes easily. But if you hired an
administrator and gave him instructions which totally conflicted with the previous dispensation, there would be confusion and
probably strong resistance from the employees. That's what happened in God's dispensational program after the last change.
God set aside His nation, Israel, and started a new dispensation with the Apostle Paul.

      How many dispensations are there? That is a much harder question to answer. I could settle for as few as three if I had to.
If we had to call it a new dispensation every time God changed the instructions at all, I suppose we could have, maybe even
thirty seven. I think we should recognize a new dispensation and call it a new dispensation every time there is a significant
difference. But there's a problem with this. What is a significant difference? I hope to show you the significant differences which
cause me to affirm that there are twelve dispensations. That's the reason for this booklet.

      Most Biblicists agree that man was created in a state of innocence. Adam and Eve did not know good from evil.
The serpent told Eve, "For God knows that in the day you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God,
knowing good and evil" (Gen 3:5).1 Therefore, because they were innocent, I believe it is right to call the first dispensation
The Dispensation of Innocence.

      The Dispensation of Innocence lasted until there was a significant change. That change happened when Adam and Eve
sinned. This is shown in Genesis 3:6-8:

      So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree desirable to make
one wise, she took of its fruit and ate. She also gave to her husband with her, and he ate. Then the eyes of both of them
were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves coverings.
And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and Adam and his wife hid
themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden.

They now had a conscience. Because their conscience made them aware of their sin, we call this second method of dealing
with man The Dispensation of Conscience. It appears that the conscience works in man in many different dispensations. I
believe this dispensation continues in effect for those on the earth until the end of the millennium.

      When God saw how evil man had become, He repented that He had made man and destroyed them in the flood
according to Genesis 6:5-7:

      Then the Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his
heart was only evil continually. And the Lord repented2 that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved
in His heart. So the Lord said, "I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth, both man and
beast, creeping thing and birds of the air, for I repent2 that I have made them."

After the flood, God changed His method of dealing with man. He instituted capital punishment and gave man every living
thing that moves for food in addition to the green plants (Gen 9:1-17). Most dispensational theologians refer to this as
The Dispensation of Human Government. This method of dealing with man will last until Jesus Christ rules in the millennium.
In the millennium, "He Himself will rule them with a rod of iron" (Rev 19:15).

      It is difficult to discern the method of salvation in the second and third of these first three dispensations. God seems to
demand sacrifices, but we do not find the instructions for the sacrifices. It appears that they would be saved if they believed
God and brought the required sacrifice. When we consider the fourth dispensation, The Dispensation of Promise, the doubt is
removed, and clearer instruction are given.

      In addition to the dispensations, God made a number of unconditional promises. We may call them unconditional
covenants. When we look at God's statement to Abraham in Genesis 15:6, we can see justification is by faith alone under
The Dispensation of Promise: "And he believed in the Lord, and He accounted it to him for righteousness."

      In addition, the details of a conditional or two party covenant are displayed in Jeremiah 34:18-20a:

      I will give the men who have transgressed My covenant, who have not performed the words of the covenant which
they made before Me, when they cut the calf in two and passed between the parts of it – the princes of Judah, the princes
of Jerusalem, the eunuchs, the priests, and all the people of the land who passed between the parts of the calf – I will give
them into the hand of their enemies and into the hand of those who seek their life.

They passed through the split animals as they covenanted with God. The split animals signified – "If I don't keep the covenant,
I will be split like these animals." In contrast to Jeremiah 34, when we look at the details of the unconditional covenant of
Genesis 15:7-18, we see that Abram was not allowed to pass through the animals. Only God did. He took the imprecation
upon himself.

      Then He said to him, "I am the Lord, who brought you out of Ur of the Chaldeans, to give you this land to inherit it."
And he said, "Lord God, how shall I know that I will inherit it?" So He said to him, "Bring Me a three-year-old heifer, a
three-year-old female goat, a three-year-old ram, a turtledove, and a young pigeon." Then he brought all these to Him
and cut them in two, down the middle, and placed each piece opposite the other; but he did not cut the birds in two.
And when the vultures came down on the carcasses, Abram drove them away. Now when the sun was going down,
a deep sleep fell upon Abram; and behold, horror and great darkness fell upon him. Then He said to Abram:
"Know certainly that your descendants will be strangers in a land that is not theirs, and will serve them, and they will
afflict them four hundred years. And also the nation whom they serve I will judge; afterward they shall come out with
great possessions. Now as for you, you shall go to your fathers in peace; you shall be buried at a good old age. But in the
fourth generation they shall return here, for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet complete." And it came to pass, when the
sun went down and it was dark, that behold, there appeared a smoking oven and a burning torch that passed between
those pieces. On the same day the Lord made a covenant with Abram, saying: "To your descendants I have given this
land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the River Euphrates."

Because God went through the covenant animals alone, we can see God's covenant with Abram was unconditional.
Abram was justified by grace through faith when He believed God in Genesis 15:6. Then, God made the unconditional
covenant with him confirming the promises of the covenant. We will call this the Abramic Covenant.

      We find the greatest change in God's method of salvation in the Hebrew Scriptures from the fourth, The Dispensation
of Promise, to the fifth dispensation, The Dispensation of Circumcision. This dispensation of circumcision was associated with
the second covenant God made with Abraham. Because Abram's name was changed to Abraham when this covenant was
made, it could be called the Abrahamic Covenant. However, it is called the Covenant of Circumcision in Acts 7:8. This is the
first conditional covenant. The promises of the Covenant of Promise were still certain, but conditions were added for Abraham
and his progeny to perform if they wanted to participate in the covenant blessings. Let's read these conditions in Genesis 17:1-14.

      When Abram was ninety-nine years old, the Lord appeared to Abram and said to him, "I am Almighty God; walk before
Me and be blameless. 2 And I will make My covenant between Me and you, and will multiply you exceedingly." 3 Then
Abram fell on his face, and God talked with him, saying: 4 "As for Me, behold, My covenant is with you, and you shall
be a father of many nations. 5 No longer shall your name be called Abram, but your name shall be Abraham; for I have
made you a father of many nations. 6 I will make you exceedingly fruitful; and I will make nations of you, and kings shall
come from you. 7 And I will establish My covenant between Me and you and your descendants after you in their
generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and your descendants after you. 8 Also I give to you
and your descendants after you the land in which you are a stranger, all the land of Canaan, as an everlasting possession;
and I will be their God." 9 And God said to Abraham: "As for you, you shall keep My covenant, you and your descendants
after you throughout their generations. 10 This is My covenant which you shall keep, between Me and you and your
descendants after you: Every male child among you shall be circumcised; 11 and you shall be circumcised in the flesh
of your foreskins, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between Me and you. 12 He who is eight days old among you
shall be circumcised, every male child in your generations, he who is born in your house or bought with money from any
foreigner who is not your descendant. 13 He who is born in your house and he who is bought with your money must be
circumcised, and My covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant. 14 And the uncircumcised male child,
who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, that person shall be cut off from his people; he has broken My covenant."

This is unquestionably a two way covenant. Even retribution (v. 14) is included in this conditional covenant. This, indeed, could
be called The Covenant of Works. Under this covenant, circumcision was absolutely necessary. A person's faith had to
be shown by his faith-works. We have an illustration of this in Genesis 22. After Abraham obeyed God and attempted to
offer his son, God said, "Do not lay your hand on the lad, or do anything to him; for now I know that you fear God, since
you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me" (22:12). When James referred to this event where God was the
only spectator, Abraham was justified before God. James wrote in 2:21-24,

      Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? 22 Do you see that faith was
working together with his works, and by works faith was made perfect? 23 And the Scripture was fulfilled which says,
"Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness." And he was called the friend of God. 24 You see
then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only.

Abraham was justified by his faith-work of offering up his son. That was God's method of salvation just as circumcision was
necessary. The faith-work did not provide the righteousness. Only Jesus Christ's faithfulness could do that. That is shown in
Romans, Galatians, and Philippians. Let's look at Romans 3:20-22,25,26 carefully.

      Therefore by the deeds of the law no flesh will be justified in His sight, for by the law is the knowledge of sin. 21 But
now the righteousness of God apart from the law is revealed, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, 22 even the
righteousness of God, through faithfulness in of Jesus Christ, to all and on all who believe. For there is no difference;
25 whom God set forth as a propitiation by His blood, through faithfulness, to demonstrate His righteousness, because
in His forbearance God had passed over the sins that were previously committed, 26 to demonstrate at the present
time His righteousness, that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.

      First, notice in verses 21 and 22, it is the righteousness of God which is revealed. How is it revealed?
It is revealed through the faithfulness of Jesus Christ. The phrase, "through faithfulness of Jesus Christ", is a
prepositional phrase which modifies the verb, "revealed." From this we can see that the righteousness of God is
revealed by Christ's faithfulness, not our belief. The word, "faith" (
pivstew", pivsti") means "faith, faithfulness,
pledge, fidelity, belief." It is translated faithfulness in Romans 3:3, "For what if some did not believe?
Will their unbelief make the faithfulness3 of God without effect? Next, in verse 25, how did God demonstrate His
righteousness? Since it is God's righteousness that is demonstrated, it must be by Christ's blood and faithfulness not ours.
We can't be justified by our works of the law. They result in death. But Christ made God's righteousness available.
Man acquires by faith that righteousness which Christ provided by dying. In each dispensation, man must do by faith
what God requires. Under circumcision, God required faith-works. Under The Dispensation of Grace, He requires
faith apart from works. No Scripture could sum it up better than Philippians 3:9, "And be found in Him, not having my
own righteousness, which is from the law, but that which is through the faithfulness of Christ, the righteousness which
is from God
by faith."

      Here was a profound dispensational change. God changed from the unconditional covenant of promise to the
conditional covenant of circumcision. We will see how consistently Paul steers away from a works oriented salvation.
We will also see how consistently Peter, James, and John emphasize faith-law-works in their messages and epistles.

      If you consult the chart at the middle of this booklet, you will see that seven of the twelve dispensations are under the
influence of the circumcision covenant. We must conclude that the circumcision covenant even includes the new covenant,
for Genesis 17:7,13, and 19 all say it is everlasting.

      And I will establish My covenant between Me and you and your descendants after you in their generations, for an
everlasting covenant, to be God to you and your descendants after you. 13 He who is born in your house and he
who is bought with your money must be circumcised, and My covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant.
19 Then God said: "No, Sarah your wife shall bear you a son, and you shall call his name Isaac; I will establish My
covenant with him for an everlasting covenant, and with his descendants after him.

      We have covered five dispensations, and we're still in Genesis. The sixth one is The Dispensation of Law.
Under this dispensation, God's method for having His righteousness imputed now includes faith-law-keeping. The works of
the law didn't provide anything. But when a man continuously kept God's law, by faith, he appropriated God's righteousness.
Romans 9:31,32 shows us Israel's problem: "But Israel, pursuing the law of righteousness, has not attained to the law of
righteousness. 32 Why? Because they did not seek it by faith, but as it were, by the works of the law. For they stumbled at
that stumbling stone." They were too busy trying to establish their own righteousness. Instead, the law produced
death (Rom 7:7-14). What they needed to do was recognize they could do nothing to produce righteousness. They
needed to submit only to God's righteousness as Romans 10:3,4 says: "For they being ignorant of God's righteousness,
and seeking to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted to the righteousness of God. 4 For Christ is the end
of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes."

      In contrast, we died to the law (Rom 7:6; Gal 2:19). We are not under the law in any way (Rom 6:14; Gal 5:18).
We have the indwelling Holy Spirit producing the law of the Spirit of life in us (Rom 8:2-4). We have a growing new
life in the Spirit as we meditate on God's word and seek to love Him with all our being (Eph 5:18-21). It is extremely
difficult to keep this focus. Most never even seem try. Many don't want to, but this is what God wants us to do
more than anything else. Loving God was the one thing that did not interest me for most of my Christian life, yet, from
Christ's lips, we hear that it is the most important commandment of all. Join me in striving to love God with our whole life.
I'm experiencing some of the blessings of my feeble efforts to allow the Holy Spirit to fill me with His love.

      The seventh dispensation is The Dispensation of the Kingdom Promised. How significant is this dispensation from the
previous one? There is no difference in the method of salvation. But there is a colossal eschatological difference. It is found
in 2 Samuel 7:12-13,16.

      When your days are fulfilled and you rest with your fathers, I will set up your seed after you, who will come from
your body, and I will establish his kingdom. 13 He shall build a house for My name, and I will establish the throne
of his kingdom forever. 16 And your house and your kingdom shall be established forever before you. Your
throne shall be established forever.

Messiah will sit on the throne of David. This kingdom promised to David will last forever. This became Israel's hope. This
promise is temporary, but this kingdom will be established on this earth forever.

      About a thousand years later, John the Baptist was sent. The eighth dispensation began, The Dispensation of
the Kingdom Proclaimed. Shortly after John's birth, his father, Zacharias, prophesied about Christ and John in
Luke 1:68-78:

      Blessed is the Lord God of Israel, for He has visited and redeemed His people, 69 and has raised up a horn of
salvation for us in the house of His servant David, 70 as He spoke by the mouth of His holy prophets, who have
been since the world began, 71 that we should be saved from our enemies and from the hand of all who hate us,
72 to perform the mercy promised to our fathers and to remember His holy covenant, 73 the oath which He swore
to our father Abraham: 74 To grant us that we, being delivered from the hand of our enemies, might serve Him without
fear, 75 in holiness and righteousness before Him all the days of our life. 76 And you, child, will be called the prophet
of the Highest; for you will go before the face of the Lord to prepare His ways, 77 to give knowledge of salvation to
His people by the remission of their sins, 78 through the tender mercy of our God, with which the Dayspring from on high
has visited us.

John's commission was to go before the Messiah and prepare the way for the Lord according to Luke 3:2-6,

      While Annas and Caiaphas were high priests, the word of God came to John the son of Zacharias in the wilderness.
3 And he went into all the region around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of repentance for the remission of sins,
4 as it is written in the book of the words of Isaiah the prophet, saying: "The voice of one crying in the wilderness:
'Prepare the way of the Lord; make His paths straight. 5 Every valley shall be filled and every mountain and hill brought
low; The crooked places shall be made straight and the rough ways smooth; 6 And all flesh shall see the salvation of God.'"

His ministry was to bring salvation to the nation.

      Because it was such an important part of his ministry, we must understand baptism and its relationship to Israel. Its history
is very important. This water rite was explained for Israel under the law in Num 19:9,10,17-21:

      Then a man who is clean shall gather up the ashes of the heifer, and store them outside the camp in a clean place;
and they shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Israel for the water of purification; it is for purifying
from sin. 10 And the one who gathers the ashes of the heifer shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until evening.
It shall be a statute forever to the children of Israel and to the stranger who dwells among them. . . . 17 And for
an unclean person they shall take some of the ashes of the heifer burnt for purification from sin, and running water
shall be put on them in a vessel. 18 A clean person shall take hyssop and dip it in the water, sprinkle it on the tent,
on all the vessels, on the persons who were there, or on the one who touched a bone, the slain, the dead, or a grave.
19 The clean person shall sprinkle the unclean on the third day and on the seventh day; and on the seventh day
he shall purify himself, wash his clothes, and bathe in water; and at evening he shall be clean. 20 But the man who is
unclean and does not purify himself, that person shall be cut off from among the assembly, because he has defiled the
sanctuary of the LORD. The water of purification has not been sprinkled on him; he is unclean. 21 It shall be a
perpetual statute for them.

Further, God told Israel in Ezekiel 36:24-27 that He would baptize them with water, cleanse them from all their filthiness
and establish the new covenant with them:

      For I will take you from among the nations, gather you out of all countries, and bring you into your own land.
25 Then I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be clean; I will cleanse you from all your filthiness
and from all your idols. 26 I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will take the heart of stone
out of your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. 27 I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My
statutes, and you will keep My judgments and do them.

When John started his ministry, he baptized great crowds for the Lord from all the tribes (Mat 3:5,6), not just from
the priestly tribe of Levi. Because John was baptizing with authority, the whole nation of Israel went out to him.
They were expecting the Messiah (Lk 3:15).

      When we look at the Hebrew Scriptures, it is interesting to see that the priests were baptized when they
were thirty years old (Num 4:2,3,23; 1 Ch 23:3). This was in preparation for their consecration as priests (Ex 28:41-29:9).
God had promised to make Israel a kingdom of priests in Exodus 19:5-6:

      Now therefore, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be a special treasure
to Me above all people; for all the earth is Mine. 6 And you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.
These are the words which you shall speak to the children of Israel.

Isaiah 61:6 also says they will be priests: "But you shall be named the priests of the Lord. They shall call you the
servants of our God. You shall eat the riches of the Gentiles, and in their glory you shall boast." Further, God
had promised to sprinkle them with water to make them clean in Ezekiel 36:22-28.

      Therefore say to the house of Israel, "Thus says the Lord God: 'I do not do this for your sake, O house of Israel,
but for My holy name's sake, which you have profaned among the nations wherever you went. 23 And I will
sanctify My great name, which has been profaned among the nations, which you have profaned in their midst;
and the nations shall know that I am the Lord,' says the Lord God, 'when I am hallowed in you before their eyes.
24 For I will take you from among the nations, gather you out of all countries, and bring you into your own land.
25 Then I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be clean; I will cleanse you from all your filthiness
and from all your idols. 26 I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will take the heart of
stone out of your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. 27 I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk
in My statutes, and you will keep My judgments and do them. 28 Then you shall dwell in the land that I gave to
your fathers; you shall be My people, and I will be your God."

Therefore, I believe, by his baptism, John the Baptist was preparing them to be a kingdom of priests. That's what
Revelation 1:5,6, shows:

      and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn from the dead, and the ruler over the kings of the earth.
To Him who loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood, 6 and has made us kings and priests to His
God and Father, to Him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.

      They were called a royal priesthood by Peter in 1 Peter 2:5,9, in fulfillment of Ex 19:5,6. John preached that his baptism
was for the remission of sins (Mat 3:1-6; Lk 3:3,8). Therefore, we see water baptism was mandated for Israel, would
result in a whole nation of priests (1 Pe 2:5,9), accompanied true repentance displayed by works (Mat 3:8; Lk 3:8),
resulted in the forgiveness of sins for them at that time (Mk 1:4; Lk 3:3), and is associated with the Messianic kingdom
promised to Israel (Eze 36:22-28).

      John's ministry of proclaiming the kingdom was certified by Jesus Christ in Luke 16:16 when He said, "The law and
the prophets were until John. Since that time the kingdom of God has been preached, and everyone is pressing into it."
John was also certified by Peter as a minister of the circumcision according to Acts 10:36-38,

      The word which God sent to the children of Israel, preaching peace through Jesus Christ – He is Lord of all – 37
that word you know, which was proclaimed throughout all Judea, and began from Galilee after the baptism which
John preached: 38 how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power, who went about doing
good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with Him.

      Paul called Jesus Christ a circumcision minister in Romans 15:8, "Now I say that Jesus Christ has become a minister of
the circumcision for the truth of God, to confirm the promises made to the fathers." Because He was a minister of the
circumcision, water baptism was part of His program for salvation according. This is shown by at least two passages,
John 3:5, "Jesus answered, 'Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the
kingdom of God"; and Mark 16:15,16, "And He said to them, 'Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every
creature. 16 He who believes and is baptized will be saved; but he who does not believe will be condemned.'"

      Also, from Christ's earthly ministry, we see that endurance was expected in the believers if they were to receive salvation.
This requirement was in line with the other conditional aspects of the circumcision covenant. John 15:1-8 is the best example:

      I am the true vine, and My Father is the vinedresser. 2 Every branch in Me that does not bear fruit He takes away;
and every branch that bears fruit He prunes, that it may bear more fruit. 3 You are already clean because of the
word which I have spoken to you. 4 Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, unless
it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in Me. 5 I am the vine, you are the branches. He who abides in
Me, and I in him, bears much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing. 6 If anyone does not abide in Me, he is cast
out as a branch and is withered; and they gather them and throw them into the fire, and they are burned. 7 If you abide
in Me, and My words abide in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall be done for you. 8 By this My Father is
glorified, that you bear much fruit; so you will be My disciples.

When He said, "If anyone does not abide in Me, he is cast out as a branch", He was speaking to the apostles. Judas had
already left in John 13:30. Did He really mean that an apostle could be lost? Yes, they had to abide in Christ in order to be
saved. Otherwise "they gather them and throw them into the fire, and they are burned."

      Not only did they have to remain in Christ, they also had to forgive men in order to be saved according to Matthew 6:14,15:
"For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men their trespasses,
neither will your Father forgive your trespasses." We will see these conditional principles repeatedly as we continue to look at
dispensations under the circumcision covenant.

      The next dispensational boundary comes after the crucifixion of our wonderful Lord. The apostles did not understand the
significance of His death and resurrection. After His resurrection, Christ was with the apostles for forty days. What was He
doing? Acts 1:2,3 tells us, "He…had given commandments to the apostles…being seen by them during forty
days and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God." What were the apostles expecting? They had earlier
been sent to the twelve tribes of Israel (Mat 10:6). Christ also promised them they would sit in judgment over the nation of
Israel in Matthew 19:28. They were vitally interested in the establishment of the long promised Davidic Kingdom. By now, they
knew they had a wonderful part in it. It's no surprise that Acts 1:6 tells us they asked Him, "Lord, will You at this time restore
the kingdom to Israel?"

      The signs on the day of Pentecost were to show Israel that the kingdom promised to David was about to be established.
The apostles had heard that Christ would return after the tribulation (Mat 24:21,29,30). At the end of Christ's description
of the tribulation, He related the parables of the ten virgins and the talents. These were both parables about the kingdom. Then He
said Matthew 25:31, "When the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the holy angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of
His glory." Remember, He had promised the apostles authority over Israel (Mat 19:28). This is why we must conclude that these
were signs to show Israel that the kingdom was about to be established right after the "great and terrible day of the Lord" (Mat 24:29,30; 25:31,34).
The "great and terrible day of the Lord" of Joel 2:31 would take place right after the tribulation.

      The gift of tongues given on the day of Pentecost was a sign to Israel that the kingdom was very near. This gift of tongues
was a partial fulfillment of the Joel prophecy since other portions of the prophecy would be fulfilled after the tribulation.
When Peter offered the kingdom and many responded to his message and believed, Peter commanded that they be
baptized for the remission of sins. Water baptism continued as a requirement for salvation after Pentecost because God
continued to offer Israel the kingdom (Acts 3:19-26). We call this ninth dispensation The Dispensation of the Kingdom
Offered. If they had repented, God would have sent Christ back (Acts 3:20). Before Pentecost, Christ had commanded
belief and water baptism as requirements for salvation shortly after His resurrection. Mark 16:16 says, "He who
believes and is baptized will be saved; but he who does not believe will be condemned." Both "believes" and "is baptized"
represent aorist participles. According to Greek syntax4 , the action of these participles must precede the action of the main
verb, "will be saved." Therefore, a person had to believe and be baptized before he would be saved. When viewed in its setting
of the circumcision covenant, this is consistent with the purification rituals which were imposed on Israel.5

      After the Ascension of Christ and the outpouring of the Spirit in Acts 2, God still demanded water baptism for the remission
of sins. "Then Peter said to them, 'Repent, and let every one of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of
sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit'" (Acts 2:38). After Paul was seized in the temple by the Jewish mob and
taken into custody by the Roman commander, he was allowed to speak to the violent mob on the way into the barracks.
He used the opportunity to recount his conversion. He spoke of "a certain Ananias, a devout man according to the law,
having a good testimony with all the Jews who dwelt there." He related how Ananias had told him about his apostolic
commission from God. What method of salvation did Ananias present to Paul? Ananias commanded, "Now why are you
waiting? Arise and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on the name of the Lord" (Acts 22:16). Ananias told Paul
the only message that he knew, the message of Mark 16:16 and Acts 2:38, the circumcision gospel with its condition of
baptism. One of the most important facts of all should be highlighted. Water baptism would be imposed on Israel until
the time of reformation (Heb. 9:10-13) when Christ would establish the kingdom for Israel (Acts 3:21 with Acts 1:6).
Therefore, from the beginning of John's ministry, through the time of Christ's death and Ascension, to the time that Israel was
temporarily set aside in Acts 7, we find that water baptism was essential for salvation.

      However, the first dramatic change took place on Pentecost in Acts 2. There, after he submitted to water baptism, a believer
would receive the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38). So, for the first time, there were two baptisms, water baptism and Holy
Spirit baptism. As the nation began rejecting Christ, the persecution of the circumcision church which had started on
Pentecost increased. When Stephen was stoned, Christ stood in judgment upon the nation of Israel, and they were temporarily
set aside.

The tenth dispensation, The Dispensation of Grace, started with the conversion of Paul in Acts 9. A comparison of
Acts 22:13 and 26:18 indicates that Paul was saved when he received his sight, just as the Gentiles to whom he was sent would
be saved upon receiving spiritual sight. Paul received his sight before he was baptized at Ananias' command.

More sensational events followed the salvation of Paul. When God had separated Israel from the nations as His chosen
people, He imposed upon them a designation between clean and unclean animals (Lev. 20:23-26). Now, in a vision to Peter,
the first dramatic change was made. God abrogated the distinction between clean and unclean animals in order to show that He
had demoted Israel from their chosen people status (Acts 10:9-16). However, God did not reveal to Peter the unity and
equality of Jew and Gentile in the new man, the body of Christ. In fact, He didn't show him any of the aspects of the great
secret He would reveal to Paul. Most important of all, He did not show Peter the new method of salvation by faith alone
apart from works. Peter simply adapted the gospel of the circumcision to his Gentile audience: "But in every nation
whoever fears Him and works righteousness is accepted by Him" (Acts 10:35). This was the same gospel of faith plus works
and endurance for salvation which Christ taught (Acts 10:34-42; John 15:1-8). It conformed to the circumcision covenant.

The second change was even more startling. The Holy Spirit showed that water baptism was no longer necessary for
salvation after the body of Christ started with Paul's conversion in Acts 9. This was done dramatically when He fell on
all who heard the word while Peter was still preaching, before Peter would command them to be water baptized
(Acts 10:44,45). The Holy Spirit's gift, here, became the sign that would convince the circumcision believers that God had
opened the door of salvation to the Gentiles. The dispensational boundary was Paul's conversion in Acts 9. There, we
saw that Paul was sent to the Gentiles, kings and Israel.

Third, the order of the baptisms was reversed. Now, Peter commanded water baptism after Holy Spirit baptism.
Now, the Holy Spirit baptism was the one necessary for salvation. Water baptism became secondary for the first time.
We're not even sure that God wanted these new Christians baptized. Peter did a number of things here only because the
Lord had previously commanded him to do them. Why did these changes take place? When Paul was converted, God
committed to him a new stewardship, The Dispensation of the Mystery, and a new gospel, the uncircumcision gospel.
What must they now do to be saved? The answer was, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved" (Act 16:31).

During this time, there were some confusing events that happened. Paul circumcised Timothy shortly before he wrote
the epistle to the Galatians. Yet, he severely criticized those who were being influenced by the Judaizers who wanted them
to be circumcised for salvation. Later, he even became ceremonially purified and paid for the sacrifices for four men who had a
 Jewish vow as well as himself. Yet, Paul had already written Galatians, Thessalonians, Corinthians, and Romans. He
knew he was not under the law. There were other things Paul did, recorded in Acts, which passed away. These things had
to do with Israel. But Paul did not address each thing explicitly and say it passed away. Some of these things were: raising the
dead, exorcism, healing the sick, being bit by a viper without being harmed. They would cease just as baptism would cease.
These signs were related to Israel. God was in the process of showing Israel they had been set aside. God would issue a final
declaration showing Israel they had been set aside in Acts 28:28.

Soon, Paul learned that water baptism was not part of his commission (1 Cor. 1:17), and he no longer baptized. But we
must remember that baptism was an integral part of the circumcision apostles' commission (Mat. 28:18-20; Mk. 16:15-18).
After Paul's ministry began, he was inspired to write to the Corinthians, "By one Spirit we were all baptized into one body"
(1 Cor. 12:13). So, even in the dispensation of grace there were two baptisms for a while. Then, we see that as physical
circumcision gave way to spiritual circumcision, "made without hands," in spite of Acts 16:1-3, water baptism gave way to
spiritual baptism, "through the faithful operation of God" (Col. 2:11,12), in spite of Acts 16:15,31-34, and 1 Cor. 1:14-16.

Why did water baptism give way to spiritual baptism? It was because God set Israel aside in Acts 7 (Rom. 11:11,25;
Acts 28:28) when Christ stood in judgment (Isa. 3:13) at the stoning of Stephen. Part of Paul's ministry had been to show
Israel that they had been set aside. That is why the Corinthian church spoke in tongues. Their meeting place wall was
contiguous with the Jewish synagogue. They spoke in tongues in judgment upon the unbelieving Jews next door in fulfillment
of the prophecy in Isaiah 28 (1 Cor. 14:21,22).

God used Paul to pronounce to the Jews in Rome that Israel had been set aside. This occurred in Acts 28:28. After
this, the baptisms imposed on Israel, being fleshly ordinances (Heb. 9:10-13), were set aside until God would resume
dealing with Israel in the tribulation. For instance, baptism will be necessary for salvation when Peter's epistles are again
directly applicable in the tribulation period. We must look at 1 Peter 3:20,21 closely. Verse 20 shows us that the ark
and the flood of water were a type. Peter then wrote, "There is also an antitype which now saves us, namely baptism."
Yes, his message was, "Baptism 'now saves us.'" Then he explained away the possible confusion that the water baptism
would be for the removal of the outward filth of the body as in Mark 7:3-5.6 This outward ritual of 1 Peter 3 in obedience to
God, was essential to perform the inner cleansing of sin in accordance with the principles of the circumcision covenant (Numbers 19).

From the time of Israel's fall in Acts 7, the book of Acts relates how Israel was shown more and more that they had
been set aside by God. Let me reiterate. This is why the Corinthian church spoke in tongues so much. The church "bordered on,"
was "contiguous to,"7 the Jewish synagogue. The Gentiles' speaking in tongues was God's judgment upon unbelieving Jews
next door (Please read 1 Cor. 14:22 in light of Isaiah 28).

Although Paul baptized some in his early ministry, we must remember that Ananias had commanded him to be baptized
to wash away his sins. But God gave him further revelations. One was 1 Corinthians 1:17 "For Christ did not send me
to baptize, but to preach the gospel, not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of no effect." Sure, the
context shows there was a division because of baptism, but would Paul really let that affect him if baptism was still necessary and
he practiced it? Read 2 Thessalonians 3:6 again, "But we command you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,
that you withdraw from every brother who walks disorderly and not according to the tradition which he received from us." No,
Paul would tell them to withdraw from a person rather than deny a true teaching that was still in effect. Baptism was not part of
his message, and we have no Scripture which says he recommended it, encouraged it, taught it, or commanded it. Not one.

Finally, at the end of the book of Acts, Israel was shown for the final time that they had been set aside. This happened when
Paul spoke in judgment quoting Isaiah 6:9,10. After this judgment was pronounced, Paul was inspired to write Ephesians.
In it he wrote, "There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one
baptism" (Eph. 4:4,5). One baptism? If there is only one baptism, which one is it? Is it water or Holy Spirit? It is Holy Spirit! Why?
Because God has suspended the use of water baptism. It has been done away with because God is through with Israel for the
time being. Now there is only one program. It has to do with spiritual things, not carnal. So, for The Dispensation of Grace, there
is one baptism. We, who have trusted in Christ, are baptized into the body of Christ. The Holy Spirit baptizes us into Christ's
body. That baptism identifies us with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection (Rom. 6:3-8). This identification justifies and frees
us from all sin (Rom 6:7,18). Water baptism has been set aside because God has set aside Israel.

      Under The Dispensation of Grace, there are many new things. There are no law-works necessary for salvation. In fact that's
exactly what Titus 3:5,6 says. "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us,
through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit, whom He poured out on us abundantly through Jesus Christ
our Savior." We are the only ones who have eternal security. This is emphasized by Ephesians 1:4-14. We live the Christian life by
the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit. These are wonderful, awesome blessings. Let's revel in them.

      The eleventh dispensation, The Dispensation of the Tribulation, begins right after the rapture. In 2 Thessalonians 2:1-4,
Paul wrote about this time:

      Now, brethren, concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together to Him, we ask
you, not to be soon shaken in mind or troubled, either by spirit or by word or by letter, as if from us, as though
the day of Christ had come. Let no one deceive you by any means; for that Day will not come unless the departure
comes first, and the man of sin is revealed, the son of perdition, who opposes and exalts himself above all that is
called God or that is worshiped, so that he sits as God in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.

First we must notice that the departure takes place before this day of Christ, or day of the Lord, scenario takes place. That
means we will be delivered, rescued, saved from it. We will be gone when the tribulation starts. That's what 2 Th 2:13 says:
"But we are bound to give thanks to God always for you, brethren beloved by the Lord, because God from the beginning chose
you unto salvation [deliverance from the tribulation] through sanctification of the Spirit and belief in the truth." Similarly,
1 Thessalonians 5:9 states, "For God did not appoint us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ."

      We can be sure that we will be gone when the tribulation starts because of the nature of the mystery. Why? According
to Ephesians 3 and Colossians 1, nothing about the mystery and the new creation, the body of Christ, was ever revealed before.
That means the many prophecies about the tribulation apply only to Israel and the unsaved Gentiles. When the tribulation starts,
we will be with Christ in the heavenlies.

      We can see from the material in the book of Revelation, chapters 2 and 3, that endurance and works are again
necessary for salvation: Rev 2:5,7,10b,11,17 Remember therefore from where you have fallen; repent and do the first
works, or else I will come to you quickly and remove your lampstand from its place--unless you repent. 7 He who has
an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who overcomes I will give to eat from the tree of life, which
is in the midst of the Paradise of God . . . 10b Be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life. 11 He who has
an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. He who overcomes shall not be hurt by the second death. 17 He
who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who overcomes I will give some of the hidden
manna to eat. And I will give him a white stone, and on the stone a new name written which no one knows except him
who receives it. Rev 3:5,10,12 He who overcomes shall be clothed in white garments, and I will not blot out his name
from the Book of Life; but I will confess his name before My Father and before His angels. 10 Because you have kept My
command to persevere, I also will keep you from the hour of trial which shall come upon the whole world, to test those
who dwell on the earth. 12 He who overcomes, I will make him a pillar in the temple of My God, and he shall go out no more.

      In addition to Revelation, the conditional aspects found in the other circumcision epistles, Hebrews, James, 1,2 Peter,
1,2,3 John, and Jude, will apply at that time. All these epistles from Hebrews through Revelation will apply in the tribulation.
I will cite a few from the chart:

2 Pet 1:10,11 Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things
you will never stumble; for so an entrance will be supplied to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
1 Jo 5:16,17 If anyone sees his brother sinning a sin which does not lead to death, he will ask, and He will give him life for
those who commit sin not leading to death. There is sin leading to death. I do not say that he should pray about that. All
unrighteousness is sin, and there is sin not leading to death. 2 Jo 8,9 Look to yourselves, that we do not lose those things
we worked for
, but that we may receive a full reward. Everyone deviating and not abiding in the teaching of Christ does not
have God. He who abides in the doctrine of Christ has both the Father and the Son.

      The Dispensation of the Tribulation ends at the second coming. Christ will establish the millennial kingdom at that time.
We will call this twelfth dispensation The Dispensation of the Kingdom Established. He will rule the world with a rod
of iron (Rev 12:5; 19:5). We will be in the heavenlies. After the thousand years, satan will be loosed for a time.
Revelation 20:7-10 tells us what happens.

      Now when the thousand years have expired, satan will be released from his prison 8 and will go out to deceive
the nations which are in the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle,
whose number is as the sand of the sea. 9 They went up on the breadth of the earth and surrounded the camp
of the saints and the beloved city. And fire came down from God out of heaven and devoured them.
10 The devil, who deceived them, was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false
prophet are. And they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.

When everything is subjugated to Christ, He will in turn deliver it all to the Father according to 1 Corinthians 15:24-28:

      Then comes the end, when He delivers the kingdom to God the Father, when He puts an end to all rule and all
authority and power. 25 For He must reign till He has put all enemies under His feet. 26 The last enemy that
will be destroyed is death. 27 For He has put all things under His feet. But when He says all things are put
under Him, it is evident that He who put all things under Him is excepted. 28 Now when all things are made
subject to Him, then the Son Himself will also be subject to Him who put all things under Him, that God may
be all in all.

Then, we will be with Him forever.


1 I will use the New King James Version or my own translation in all references quoted.

2 µj,N:YIw", BDB, Niphal, to be sorry, be moved to pity, have compassion, to be sorry, rue, suffer grief, repent.

3 All bold italics are my emphasis.

4 A Grammar of New Testament Greek, Moulton, V. III, Syntax, Nigel Turner, p. 79, (T & T Clark, Edinburgh, G.B.), 1963.

5 It's interesting that none of the Baptist grammarians even comment on the syntax of Mark 16:16. The best that Robertson could say was, "So serious a sacramental doctrine would need stronger support anyhow than this disputed portion of Mark." A.T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament. Two manuscripts are used to dispute the inclusion of 16:9-20. They are Codices B and a. However, many very able scholars have shown that they are riddled with omissions. Textual criticism is not the topic of this article, but I want everyone to be aware that the manuscript evidence supporting the inclusion of this passage is overwhelming.

6 The word in Mark 7:4 is baptivswntai, baptize. "They do not eat unless they wash [baptize]."

7 sunomorevw, Moulton and Milligan, The Vocabulary of the Greek Testament, p. 611, (Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, MI), 1950.
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