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For almost three
decades Calvin College professor Pete Tigchelaar (left) has had a three-month-old
fetus, encased in plastic, that he uses in his human biology classes.
He's always thought
of the tiny fetus as a good educational tool. But he's not thought of
it as a lifesaver.
Last year, however,
that changed when a student in one of his biology classes privately
inquired if he still had it.
Intrigued Tigchelaar
said that he did and invited the young woman to his office for further
conversation. There he asked why she was interested. She proceeded to
tell him an amazing story, one that he now is sharing more widely as
Christmas draws closer.
The young woman
told Tigchelaar that a generation earlier her mother had been a student
in one of Tigchelaar's biology classes. Unknown to Tigchelaar this student
was three months pregnant on a day he had shown the class the fetus
with its tiny fingers, facial features, eyes, outline of a liver and
other human features.
"She had already
visited a pregnancy center," Tigchelaar recalls the young woman
telling him, "and was told about the 'product of conception' and
'contents of the uterus' that she had within her. She was advised to
have an abortion."
But after Tigchelaar's
class she realized she had more within her than a "product of conception."
And she put aside any thoughts of an abortion, continued with her pregnancy
and eventually delivered a healthy baby girl.
"I am that
girl," the student then informed a stunned Tigchelaar. "Thanks
for my life."
Tigchelaar, at
the time, was amazed, speechless. He remembers in a halting voice telling
the girl simply that she was beautiful.
"Even now,"
he says, "I can barely tell the story without breaking up."
Yet tell it he
is. And for an important reason.
"In this season
when we celebrate the birth of someone who came to give each of us eternal
life," Tigchelaar says, "I am reminded that the unwed Mary
would have been the perfect candidate for a similar procedure. I am
thankful that her response was, 'I am the Lord's handmaid. Be it to
me as you say.'"
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