"It's the beginning of the next campaign, to change the make up of Parliament, and bring in MPs like Nadine Dorries and Daniel Kawczynski who actually vote for life and for family, and yes, for cures and compassion and the things that really matter.
"Every church, whatever denomination, needs to speak the message of the times. And the message of the times is for the church leaders to call out their churches and to speak out on behalf of life not death, truth not falsehood."
Around 200,000 abortions were carried out in Britain in 2006, of which about 3,000 were conducted after 20 weeks -1.5 percent of the total.
Alan Craig, of the Christian People's Alliance, said, "The situation right now is intolerable for a humane, compassionate society...For us to slaughter so many unborn children at the rate they are being slaughtered is unacceptable."We live in a society that is almost honouring death. But how we treat our unborn, our children, our elderly is the sign of a civilised society. It's just being blind to say that foetuses are not children. It's sheer nonsense and I think it is desperately sad."
The abortion vote was the final contentious issue in an overhaul of fertility and embryology laws dating from 1990 being debated by Parliament.
Ade Omooba of Coherent and Cohesive Voice, was outside Parliament advocating for a complete ban on abortion, unless in exceptional circumstances.
"What are we saying to society? What are we saying to the young people? That life at the conceptual stages is nothing, you can just do away with it. At the moment, we use abortion as a form of contraception. It's become a lifestyle in this society."
He said that private sector clinics should follow NHS clinics and hospitals in only offering abortion up to 16 weeks.
"If the state hospitals will not allow abortion under 16 weeks, why should anyone else have it? Why should the private sector have it? The private sector is making money by distorting women's choice...Women's choice is just an angle for them to propagate their own exploitation."
Earlier, lawmakers voted to remove the need for a father for children created through IVF treatment.
Conservative lawmaker Iain Duncan Smith defended the need for a father, saying that the rights of a child had to come before the human rights of adults to have children.
The Bill, he argues, sent out the message that "fathers are less important than mothers".
On Monday, Parliament voted to allow the creation of human-animal hybrid embryos for scientific research and "saviour siblings" to be used as donors for their sick brothers and sisters.

















