
William Wilberforce
By Brittany Jones, Policy Manager
What does it take to shape the culture around you? Perseverance over many years. Utter commitment to see the cause through until it is completed. A firm reliance on the faithfulness and sovereignty of God. All of these attributes are necessary because culture does not change – for the better or the worse – overnight. Sudden events can cause it to seem like it has happened overnight, but when we examine history we normally find that the cataclysmic cultural event that changed the course of history really came on rather gradually. Men like William Wilberforce did not change Western culture in the blink of an eye. Rather it took years of steady commitment to seeing the cause they had dedicated their lives to come to fruition.
Wilberforce was a British Parliamentarian who in the late 18th century fought to bring an end to the slave trade in a world that had largely rejected true Christianity. For twenty years, he introduced a bill to abolish slavery, becoming the face and force behind the movement to change the way the British population viewed its fellow man. In the process, he sacrificed much of himself, including his health. Finally, in 1807 his bill was passed and the slave trade was ended in Britain. However, it was not until 1833, the year Wilberforce died, that slavery was finally and completely outlawed in Britain.
Sadly, in America the same generation that fought to ensure that the law would treat African Americans with respect is the generation that allowed children to be killed in the womb legally – stripping preborn babies of safety and dignity. The belief that all humans deserve dignity and respect was not lost, however.
There are many who are standing up and calling for respect and protection of all human life. One of these modern-day champions for life is David Fowler, president of Family Policy Alliance’s state ally, Family Action Council of Tennessee. He spearheaded a seventeen-year effort to pass a state Constitutional Amendment that reversed a state Supreme Court decision in 2000 holding that abortion was a fundamental right under Tennessee’s Constitution. This month, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ended all the petty litigation surrounding the process of the passage of the amendment, declaring that the process was constitutional and the amendment is good law in Tennessee.
“This was a victory seventeen years in the making, from when the resolution to amend the constitution was first filed to the date of the court’s decision. But it’s a also a testament to the value of perseverance by God’s people in the face of long odds and the faithfulness of a sovereign God to whom “odds” mean nothing when the vindication of His Truth and Justice for the defenseless unborn are at issue.” – David Fowler
This victory declares that Tennessee will not protect a vague right of privacy over the inalienable right to life that every person has. We need more men and women in our communities and states to embody the spirit of Wilberforce, who will continue to fight even when the going is hard.
Family Policy Alliance and our alliance of state-based family policy groups will continue to stand to uphold the truth of Scripture that all human life should be cherished. Will you be part of the generation that shapes our culture for the better and demands that every human created in the image of God be protected?
Family Action Council of Tennessee is moving forward with a lawsuit seeking to get clarity on the Supreme Court ruling that redefined marriage.
The Obergefell case of two years ago left many state marriage statutes in limbo and David Fowler, president of FACT, tells us that he’s calling out the court to, in Justice Antonin Scalia’s words, “remind the court of its impotence.”
Find an allied group in your state.
The Supreme Court’s Obergefell ruling last summer left many states in limbo concerning marriage law. Now, a Tennessee lawsuit is calling for much needed clarity.
David Fowler, president of Family Action Council of Tennessee, explains why the suit is needed and what he hopes the outcome will be.
A Tennessee House subcommittee held hearings today on bill that would protect the physical privacy of students in public school restrooms.
A Tennessee House subcommittee held hearings today on bill that would protect the physical privacy of students in public school restrooms. HB 2414 seeks to protect the privacy rights of all students, but especially those who have suffered sexual trauma.
Alliance Defending Freedom attorney Matt Sharp testified before the committee.
“Protecting students from inappropriate exposure to members of the opposite sex is not only legal, it’s an important duty of officials who watch over our children,” he said. “Letting boys into girls’ restrooms and changing areas, for example, is an invasion of privacy and a threat to student safety.”
The state Department of Education said they are simply following the guidelines laid out in the Title IX law that prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in any school that receives federal funds.
“That’s not what Title IX means,” said Sharp. “It’s deeply ironic that the Department of Education is using its lawless misinterpretation of Title IX to pressure schools to adopt policies that actually violate Title IX.”
Family Action Council of Tennessee President David Fowler said the state DOE claims it’s only trying to give the schools local control.
“The Tennessee Department of Education needs to stop hiding behind all these specious arguments and develop an ethical spine regarding human sexuality and biology,” he said. “It needs to say that there is something true about the nature of human biology or there is not, and then support policies accordingly.”