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                   To Find a Pregnancy Care Center in Your Area: 
                  (800) 395-HELP 
                  Please visit Ramah International: 
                  www.ramahinternational.org/ 
                  To email Sydna Masse: 
                  Sydna@aol.com 
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		HEALTH
		
		Hope for a Future: A Conversation 
  with Sydna Masse
		
		By Chris Carpenter 
  CBN.com Producer 
  
		
		 
		 
      CBN.com  Thirty-one 
        years ago today, abortion advocates told Americans that every woman has 
        a constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy. The Supreme Court agreed, 
        and in 1973, the landmark "Roe v. Wade" decision legalized abortion on 
        demand in the United States. But today, abortion is falling out of favor, 
        and more Americans are pro-life now than they have been in the last three 
        decades. 
      Within the last two weeks, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly 
        passed a bill banning partial birth abortion. The decision sets up a potential 
        show down in the Supreme Court from opponents of the legislation later 
        this year.  
      With this apparent ground swell of momentum from Congress it would appear 
    that legalized abortion may eventually be overturned.  
  In the interim, thousands of young women are still facing a dizzying array 
    of options when faced with a surprise pregnancy each and every day. Chief 
    among them is a womans right to choose between keeping her baby or the decision 
    to abort it. 
  Sydna Masse, president of Ramah International, was forced to make such a 
    powerful choice while a college student. Even though she was raised in a faith 
    based home and was a professing Christian, Masse opted to abort her baby. 
    Following many years of living with a tremendous sense of guilt, she realized 
    that God had forgiven her. The only problem was Masse had not forgiven herself. 
  CBN.com Producer Chris Carpenter had the opportunity to speak with Masse 
    recently to discuss her post-abortive ministry, how society has been impacted 
    by post-abortive individuals, and the future of the unparalleled Roe v. Wade 
    decision. The following is a portion of that interview. 
    
  CHRIS CARPENTER: Your organization is called Ramah International. 
    Ramah, that is an interesting name. What is the significance of it? 
  SYDNA MASSE: It is based on Jeremiah 31:15, the voices heard in Ramah, 
    mourning and great weeping. It is about Rachel weeping for her children and 
    refusing to be comforted because her children are no more. That is the beginning 
    part of why we are here, why we are doing what we are doing. The Guttmacher 
    Institute which is a research arm of Planned Parenthood says that 43 percent 
    of all American women will experience abortion at least once in their lifetime. 
   
  Rarely do you hear women talking about their abortions. They are very silent 
    yet they are a very large demographic. I, as a women who has experienced abortion 
    myself, I look at that verse and I see that we dont want to be comforted. 
    We feel like we have done the worst we could ever do. But the next part of 
    that verse says, "This is what the Lord says, restrain your voice from 
    weeping and your eyes from tears for your work will be rewarded declares the 
    Lord and your children will return from the land of the enemy." So, that 
    is kind of the second part of what we are here to do. We want to provide resources 
    through training people in how to run Bible studies, through generating awareness 
    that there is a hope of healing and educating people on the spiritual, emotional, 
    and psychological side effects of abortion. We hope we can reach these women 
    and men, help them go into a recovery class. Normally, they are held in churches 
    or pregnancy care centers. Cry the tears they have pent up inside of them, 
    in other words grieve this loss and come to the point where they can name 
    these children and mourn them. Hold them a memorial service and God doesnt 
    say that kids are going to be resurrected in that verse. He says they will 
    return from the land of the enemy. By naming these kids, grieving, going through 
    this whole process, they come out of Satans grasp and back into our own hearts 
    where they can live just like any of our other children. And our goal, from 
    the final part of that verse, the part where God says there is hope for your 
    future, is to stop abortion from devastating other lives pure and simple. 
  CARPENTER: We have gone past the 30th anniversary of Roe 
    vs. Wade. Do you see this law being overturned in the near future? I am hearing 
    a lot of reports and stories that it is heading that way, that this law will 
    be abolished. What are your thoughts on this concept? 
  MASSE: I think that it is heading that way. Again, with a "silent 
    no more" campaign which I was involved in, we saw a lot of post-abortive 
    women starting to appear in state capitals saying I regret my abortion. 
    Legislation is moving (the House voted to ban partial birth abortion after 
    this interview was conducted). People are starting through partial birth abortion 
    legislation understanding that abortion is a big evil. But you know, Chris, 
    once it is overturned our work doesnt stop there.  
  CARPENTER: Oh no. I agree. 
  MASSE: The pregnancy care movement really needs to beef up quite a 
    bit because of way more children. But there are still millions and millions 
    of women who have had abortions.  
  CARPENTER: The number is 40 million since 1973. 
  MASSE: You know, of the 43 percent who have abortions, 44 percent 
    will have multiple abortions. I have only had one but I know full well by 
    talking to a lot of different people that having multiple abortions is very 
    common.  
  CHRIS CARPENTER: What led you to create this post-abortive ministry 
    that you have? 
  SYDNA MASSE: I worked for Focus on the Family for five years and saw 
    the pregnancy care centers asking us what can we do?. We need to train people 
    in handling post-abortive mothers and there was really nothing, Chris. There 
    were a handful of programs that had some issues. There were one or two. I 
    tried to talk everyone else into doing what I felt God was telling me what 
    to do. That was to leave Focus on the Family and do post-abortive ministry 
    exclusively. And I was afraid of that. I had this nice safe job and after 
    you live there for awhile (Colorado) you kind of like it. It is comfortable. 
    Leaving Dr. (James) Dobson was hard but God basically shook me over the head 
    and said, "This is what I want you to do. You are in the belly of the 
    whale if you dont do what I want you to do." I wrote the book "Her 
    Choice to Heal, that was coming out so I had a platform and I had Dr. Dobsons 
    blessing so we just started. We didnt really know what we were doing. We 
    had a lot of help from other people that were jazzed by the idea and we started 
    our first training probably six months after my leaving. Since then we have 
    trained about 1,500 people to do post-abortion ministry. We have developed 
    many, many resources which are used to minister to the post-abortive or to 
    help those who are reaching them. We like to look at ourselves as helping 
    other people reach the world. The internet is how we function almost exclusively 
    as far as ministry is concerned. People write us all the time looking for 
    help. We are sort of a triage where we try to get them into their local programs. 
    It has just been God ever since. 
  CARPENTER: This is sort of a related question and I dont mean to 
    be super-philosophical, but how do you think society has been affected by 
    these post-abortive individuals? 
  MASSE: Greatly. When you look at the dynamics and the numbers, taking 
    into account multiple abortions, I would say you easily have 20 million women 
    who have had abortions living in the United States right now. You add 20 million 
    men, because men are affected, and they can be part of multiple abortions 
    as well. Grandparents are affected because their child changes. I became a 
    different person. I was dysfunctional. My grades were almost gone, I almost 
    flunked out of college. I did a lot of drugs. Promiscuity. I just became a 
    different individual. I hated my parents, hated my mother because she wasnt 
    emotionally able to (handle it). Not only when she found out about the abortion 
    did she go through deep grief, both my mother and father, they had a traumatized 
    daughter as well. They didnt know why and here I was going crazy. So, it 
    certainly has an effect on grandparents as well. If you have grandparents 
    on both sides of mothers and fathers  my boyfriends father eventually called 
    me and talk through his pain and grief at my abortion. I had a relationship 
    with him as well. Because I was so public (well known as a pro-life advocate) 
    I had to be real obvious that they knew about it. Then you consider my children. 
    They have been impacted by my abortion. For the first couple years of motherhood 
    with my oldest son, I had trouble bonding with him. How could I love him and 
    not love the other? I was still trying to avoid the abortion memories and 
    working to distance myself. But that kept me at a different mental state. 
    I was probably better than most. Many post-abortive women can become suicidal, 
    the subject of abuse, or self-abuse themselves. It impacts the kids deeply. 
    And these kids will go on to have abortions. 
  When you put together all the numbers of parents, grandparents, and siblings 
    affected by abortion, we are talking about 200 million people. Abortion affects 
    nearly everybody whether they realize it or not.  
  CARPENTER: That is mind boggling. There are approximately 250 million 
    people in this country and to think that 80 percent are directly affected. 
    It is mind boggling. Final question, what advice do you have for young women, 
    who are alone, who are contemplating having an abortion or have already had 
    one?  
  MASSE: First of all, to find out all the information you can. From 
    experience, I had no idea what the procedure was. I didnt know the risks 
    or the complications. Go to a pregnancy care center for your pregnancy test. 
    Find out what support organizations you have in your area. Many of you feel 
    like this is your only choice. You have all of these people giving you information 
    and they have something to gain from you aborting. For example, your boyfriend 
    or your parents. Abortion does not solve anything. It doesnt make your problems 
    go away. It only makes them bigger in other ways. You know the way you are 
    feeling right now probably isnt the way you are going to feel for the rest 
    of your life. I can guarantee you that by talking to tens of thousands of 
    post-abortive women over the years that it will eventually produce great grief 
    in your life and effect everything you do. It is not going to solve anything 
    so please just find out all the information you can on all of these topics. 
    Have an ultra-sound. See what your child looks like. Pregnancy care centers 
    offer this service for free. 
  CARPENTER: Thanks for you time to discuss this very critically important 
    issue. 
  MASSE: Thank you.  
    
  CBN News Reporter Andrea Garrett contributed to this story. 
  
  
  
		   
 
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