Prayer in the Nation’s Capital
Can you think of a better way to spend part of your weekend than praying for moms and babies with others?
Can you think of a better way to spend part of your weekend than praying for moms and babies with others?
See the joy on the faces of today’s youth as they give voice to the preborn.
A busy week of pro-life activities culminated in a march to honor aborted babies.
Marching is as simple as putting one foot in front of the other.
Hearings examining the evidence, voices telling the truth, and videos proving the depraved practices of America’s largest abortion chain should all serve to open hearts and minds—and to encourage us to make changes.
Come sing along to a song with a familiar tune, but with eye-opening lyrics.
Lies, lies, and more lies repeatedly come from the lips of Planned Parenthood staff, but one day soon, women will open up about the damage this organization has caused.
Though the atrocities at Planned Parenthood have weighed heavily upon our hearts and minds these past several weeks, the actions of brave souls who protest this organization should give us a lift.
Next week we honor the millions of children slaughtered needlessly at the hands of abortionists. It’;s the perfect time to remember the importance of actions and the necessity of speaking for those who have been silenced. And, as we look around us at the March and in our homes, may we be energized by the faces and actions of those who dedicate their lives to the sanctity of every human being.
By Rob Gasper
We are one week away from the 2015 March for Life. Thousands of pro-lifers make the trip each year to DC from all corners of the country, often braving snow and frigid temperatures, to give witness to the 57 million human lives killed by abortion.
By Walter Hoye II
SURELY not the least interesting of the varied war pictures which we present to our readers this week will be two sketches on page 428-one, the picture of a Negro slave, who fled from Montgomery, Alabama, to Chattanooga, for the express purpose of enlisting in the army of the Union
By Brendan Clowes
I live in Washington, D.C., and for those of you who don’t know, it’s not a very pro-life city.