From a Protestant Christian perspective, the Bible presents a consistent moral framework that stands against abortion by affirming the value of unborn human life and condemning the unjust killing of the innocent. Scripture does not treat moral worth as something that appears later in development; instead, it repeatedly recognizes children in the womb as members of the human family under God’s care.
Central to Christian belief is the doctrine of the Incarnation: God became truly human at conception, not at birth or adulthood. Jesus Christ was conceived in Mary’s womb, and from that moment was fully the Son of God. In Luke, Elizabeth addresses Mary as “the mother of my Lord” while Jesus is still unborn, and John the Baptist responds to Christ’s presence by leaping for joy and being filled with the Holy Spirit while still in his own mother’s womb. These accounts treat unborn children as personal subjects capable of relationship and divine action, not as morally insignificant life.
Other biblical passages reinforce this view by portraying God as actively involved with human beings before birth. Psalm 139 describes God knitting a person together in the womb and knowing them intimately. Isaiah speaks of God calling and naming his servant from the womb, while Jeremiah records God setting a prophet apart before birth. The apostle Paul similarly reflects on God’s purposes for his life originating prior to his birth. These texts consistently assume personal identity and divine intention during prenatal life.
This understanding is grounded more broadly in Genesis, which teaches that all human beings are created in the image of God. That image-bearing status is not tied to age, size, dependency, or level of development, but to being human. As a result, equal dignity applies across all stages of life, including from conception. When the commandment against murder forbids the wrongful killing of the innocent, it establishes a moral principle that extends to unborn human beings as well.
Objections that appeal to difficult or ambiguous biblical passages do not overturn this core teaching. When read in context, such texts do not authorize the elective killing of innocent human life and remain consistent with the broader biblical ethic that protects the vulnerable and condemns unjust violence.
Key Takeaways
The Bible consistently treats unborn children as personal members of the human family, not as expendable or morally neutral life.
The Incarnation affirms full human value from conception, since Christ himself became human at that stage.
Scripture repeatedly depicts God as knowing, forming, and calling individuals in the womb, implying personal identity before birth.
The commandment against murder, grounded in humanity’s creation in God’s image, applies equally to innocent human beings at every stage of development, including the unborn.