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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary - 
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Thursday, September 9, 2004

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>>  Christian Morality and Test Tube Babies, Part One

Questions of human reproduction inevitably define what it means to be
human, and the moral issues which arise in connection with sex and
reproduction are among the most divisive controversies of our time. The
development of "test tube baby" technologies presents us with moral
issues which demand answers, and require our most careful thought and
reflection.

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The German theologian Helmut Thielicke once argued that we learn more
about ourselves and our most fundamental convictions by considering
those "borderline" questions which resist easy answers. This is
certainly true in the case of the new reproductive technologies. One of
these "borderline" questions is raised by the development and spread of
in vitro fertilization techniques, known as IVF. This issue cannot be
understood apart from the foundational issues of human dignity, the
meaning of personhood, and the integrity of marriage and the family.

The reproductive revolution is upon us. The past half-century has seen
the development of reproductive technologies previous generations could
not even imagine, much less consider in moral perspective. These
technologies have radically expanded human control over the biological
process, and have been designed both to prevent and to achieve
successful pregnancy. Some legal theorists now argue for a new human
right--the right to complete "procreative liberty," ensuring an
individual's right to these new technologies.

The technological basics of in vitro fertilization technologies are easy
to understand. The moral issues are far more complex. In vitro literally
means "in glass," for the actual fertilization of the egg takes place in
a laboratory context [early on, in a petri dish], rather than in the
woman's reproductive system. While infants conceived by this method are
often called "test tube babies," this is a misnomer, as no test tube is
generally used. The phrase does, however, underline the technological
character of the conception, which takes place in the laboratory.

The moral issues are more complex. What does it mean to separate
conception from the act of sexual union? To whom should these
technologies be made available? What is the moral status of the
fertilized embryos? Those who dismiss these questions as irrelevant or
inconsequential show disrespect for human dignity and human life.

At one level, the moral and theological issues at stake in IVF are
identical to those related to artificial insemination. The insemination
may be done with sperm from the husband in a married couple (homologous
insemination) or with sperm from a donor (heterologous insemination).
Beyond this, a new set of issues emerges. In IVF, an egg is removed from
a woman, and is fertilized in a laboratory setting by the insertion of
sperm cells into the dish. Once the egg is fertilized and the exchange
of chromosomal material takes place, the embryo is implanted in the
uterus, with the hope that implantation will occur and a pregnancy will
continue to healthy birth.

Due to the high cost of each implantation and IVF sequence, multiple
eggs are usually fertilized, and multiple embryos are implanted, with
the remaining embryos kept frozen for possible future use. This practice
often leads to multiple pregnancies, and in some cases healthy implanted
embryos are then removed from the womb and destroyed--a process
inhumanely known as "selective reduction."

IVF technologies were developed as a means of assisting married couples
unable to achieve successful pregnancy through natural means. The
technologies are now widely available, however, and some clinics direct
and advertise their services especially to single women and lesbian
couples. Both heterosexual couples and homosexual male partners have
opted to "have" children by use of IVF with a surrogate "mother" hired
to carry the baby to term.

Clearly, these practices and technologies raise the most fundamental
questions about what it means to be human, and about God's intention for
marriage and the family.

In the first place, human dignity is compromised by the artificiality of
the IVF technology. The absolute separation of conjugal union and the
sex act from the process of conception creates a new and artificial
process of human reproduction--one that demands technological
intervention at virtually every stage, from the collection of the sperm
and eggs, to the actual fertilization, to the implantation of the embryo
in the uterus.

This puts human agents in control of human destiny in a manner that
overthrows natural limits. Theologians have debated this issue with
intensity. Karl Rahner, the most influential Roman Catholic theologian
of the century, believed that "there is really nothing possible for man
that he ought not to do." On the other hand, Protestantism's Karl Barth,
the father of "neo-orthodoxy," warned that this would lead to a
"dreadful, godless world;" one he could foresee in Aldous Huxley's Brave
New World.

Clearly, God has placed natural limits upon our creaturely power and
authority. Humans seem intent upon exceeding those limits in every
sphere, and the rapid developments in biotechnology threaten to
transform the understanding of what it means to be human. As Barth
argued, human identity has been inherently related to parenthood and the
conjugal bond. What does it mean to think of humanity severed from this
parental relatedness?

The new technologies of IVF underline the extent to which the modern
mind has reduced human reproduction to a technology rather than a divine
gift, mystery, and stewardship. As Oliver O'Donovan argues, the biblical
language reminds us that we are begotten, not merely made. This is not a
semantic irrelevancy. Our language betrays our understanding of the
meaning of human procreation.

Children are not the products of a technological process, like common
consumer commodities, but are the gifts of a loving God whose intention
it is that children should be born to a man and a woman united in the
bond of marriage, and as the fruit of that marital bond realized in the
conjugal act. They are neither by-products of the sex act nor mere
"products" of our technological innovations.

Paul Ramsey warned that we would be "de-biologizing" the human race by
the use of these technologies. While we sympathize with couples unable
to achieve conception by means within natural limits, these limits
remain. "We ought rather to live with charity amid the limits of a
biological and historical existence which God created for the good and
simple reason that, for all its corruption, it is now--and for the
temporal future will be--the good realm in which man and his welfare are
to be found and served."

Ramsey's warning against the "messianic positivism" of these new
technologies is a corrective to those who believe that this is merely a
Catholic concern. Protestants, too, have historically recognized the
intrinsic relatedness of parenthood to the conjugal bond and the act of
marital sex as the design of a loving and merciful Creator, who imposed
limits for our good.

IVF technologies threaten those limits in others ways as well. The IVF
revolution has opened unprecedented opportunities for eugenics and the
genetic manipulation of the embryo. Experiments on human embryos now
involve the transfer of genetic material and offer the potential for
genetic manipulation both before and after fertilization.

The technologies of IVF compromise the marital bond and threaten the
integrity of the family. The use of donor sperm is unacceptable, for it
brings a third party into the marital bond. The same is true for the use
of a donor egg. A married couple should not invite the biological
contribution of a third party--known or unknown. While the fertilization
of the egg occurs in a laboratory (thus avoiding adultery), the marital
bond is compromised by the use of another man's sperm or another woman's
egg.

Beyond this, the use of IVF to allow unmarried women and lesbian couples
to achieve pregnancy outside marriage and heterosexual relatedness is a
direct rejection of God's intention in the creation of humanity as male
and female, and the limitation of sexual relatedness and procreation to
a man and a woman united within the marital covenant. IVF is welcomed by
radical feminists and lesbian activists as a technological marvel which
promises freedom from male involvement, except as sperm donors. This is
one specter of the "godless world" against which Barth warned.

The link between IVF and surrogacy is also deeply problematic. This
allows a woman (or a couple) freedom from the burden and joys of
pregnancy, but it also severs the maternal bond and reduces parenthood
to genetic contribution. Again, the use of surrogates in connection with
IVF by homosexual males (singles or couples) violates both the conjugal
bond and the integrity of the family as the basis for parenthood.

By now, we all know couples who have been able to conceive and bear
children through IVF technologies.  Those babies--and growing
children--are to be welcomed with undiluted joy and thankfulness.  The
moral status of a child born through IVF technology is not in question. 

Yet, the Christian worldview requires that we consider means as well as
ends in a moral and theological frame, and a host of further questions
arises once the larger frame is considered.  What about the hundreds of
thousands of human embryos destroyed--and the hundreds of thousands now
frozen in laboratory freezers?  Who speaks for them?

Tomorrow:  Part Two

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


>>  Visit Crosswalk's News channel for more great articles and weblogs
on the latest news from a Christian worldview.
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