The Big Picture

Hope. Heritage. Legacy.

College age women experience the
highest rate of unintended pregnancy.

CDC/NCHS , Updated Methodology to Estimate Overall and Unintended Pregnancy Rates in the United States (2019 data) Guttmacher Institute, Pregnancies, Births and Abortions in the United States, 1973–2020

When Support is Lacking Young Women Feel Forced to Take Matters Into Their Own Hands.

When compassionate, practical support is absent, young women inexperienced vulnerable often turn inward and handle life-altering decisions alone. With abortion pills increasingly accessible, dorm rooms can quietly become the setting for private, pressured choices made without medical counsel, pastoral care, or emotional support. The issue is not secrecy alone—it is isolation. Where support is missing, crisis fills the void.

In 2023, medication abortions accounted for 63% of all abortions provided within the formal U.S. health system. This represents a significant increase from 53% in 2020 and 39% in 2017.

This procedure is sometimes much more traumatic that expected or explained.

The number of calls to the Abortion Pill Rescue Network for information on how to reverse the effects of the abortion pill has grown by more than 100% in the last five years.

Guttmacher Institute, State Policy Trends 2025.

National Right to Life, Abortion Pill Reversal Impact Report 2025.​

Maternal and Infant Mortality Rates Highest
among African-American population.

Our medical mobile units will serve not only college students but surrounding communities as well, free of charge.

State of Maternal Health Report by the Century Foundation.​
https://tcf.org/content/report/state-of-maternal-health-2025/​

Beyond the Crisis…

Beyond medical and financial realities, many women describe a sense of emotional complexity after abortion. Even in the cases that this never escalates to depression or substance use, there can be subtle echoes: feelings of loss, doubt of self-worth, resentment, or a sense that they have gone against their own deeply held values or beliefs.

This can show up in subtle ways – a hesitance to say “the word”, discomfort driving down the street of the clinic, or an unfulfilled desire for forgiveness. How do we make sure that our sisters and brothers or our children and mothers are not facing these feelings alone? 

What’s at Stake

Unless we intervene, these young women, their children, and ultimately our entire community will bear the cost.

The Solution:

Pro Abundant Life

In John 10:10, Jesus said, “I came that they might have life, and have it abundantly.” This promise extends to all life—born and preborn. In Scripture, two Greek words help us understand his meaning: bios, referring to biological life, and Zoe, the spiritual, flourishing life God desires for every person. Being pro-abundant life is more than a phrase. It is a posture—a compassionate, holistic way of responding to women and couples facing complex pregnancy decisions. The abundant life perspective widens the traditional pro-life lens. It recognizes that families need more than encouragement; they need practical support and spiritual restoration.

True and lasting change comes when we embrace the fullness of the Great Commission—making disciples—as the lived expression of the Great Commandment: to love our neighbor as ourselves.

Pro-abundant life means meeting needs, healing hearts, and walking with families so that every life has the opportunity to thrive—not just survive.