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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary - 
http://www.crosswalk.com/news/weblogs/mohler/


Friday, September 10, 2004

Welcome to the Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary, a free newsletter from
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>>  Christian Morality and Test Tube Babies, Part Two

The usual practice in IVF calls for the fertilization of numerous
embryos, which are then frozen until needed for implantation in the
womb. The high costs involved in these procedures, along with the risk
of embryos failing to implant and thrive, means that doctors usually
insist on fertilizing and implanting several embryos at a time. Though
several embryos are implanted in most procedures, several more generally
remain frozen and in a state of biological suspension.

This may be the most devastating moral reality of the IVF technology.
These embryos--fully human in chromosomal development--are treated as
human "seedlings." Sometimes euphemistically called "Embryo Eskimos,"
these embryos are denied human dignity and are reduced to a frozen
existence, awaiting either implantation, indefinite storage, or willful
destruction. In recent years thousands of human embryos have been
destroyed in Great Britain and the United States, as they were no longer
needed or wanted for implantation. The argument for this destruction is
often couched in "humane" language, implying that it is better to be
destroyed than indefinitely frozen.

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How does a couple (or an individual) deal with the knowledge that their
genetic offspring are suspended in a state of frozen non-existence? This
horrible knowledge is a reminder that violating limits always promises
great gain, but it also comes at a great (and even greater) cost.

The legal status of the embryos is now the subject of legal actions and
judicial determination. In the case of a divorce, who "owns" the
embryos? When a genetic "parent" dies, who inherits the embryos? The
case of Steven and Maureen Kass illustrates the dilemma. Five fertilized
embryos remained after the couple's divorce. Later, Maureen wanted to
have the embryos implanted and to raise the children. Steven did not
want to have children, especially with his ex-wife, and wanted to donate
the embryos to medical research. A New York judge ruled for Maureen,
declaring that fertilized embryos were the possession of the woman. An
appellate court ruled that both "parents" must give consent to
implantation. Other cases are pending across the nation.

These questions underline another problem with the IVF technologies. It
is now possible for an embryo to be implanted years after fertilization,
opening the opportunity for a woman to give birth to her aunt, or even
the genetic sibling of her grandmother. For that matter, an embryo can
be implanted in a woman of advanced years, pushing the limits of
reproductive capacity. Do we adjust our understanding of family and
generational transfer to this new reality? This further undermines the
integrity of the family and God's order of creation.

Finally, the use of embryos in medical research brings a new threat to
the sanctity of human life. Restrictions on experimentation with embryos
are being progressively lifted, with some arguing that the thousands of
"unused" frozen embryos represent an invaluable resource for biomedical
experimentation and genetic research. This is hauntingly reminiscent of
Nazi medical research. These embryos are human life worthy of full legal
and ethical protection.  Current debates over the use of embryos in
human stem cell research are often fueled by these arguments, with
proponents of embryonic stem cell research arguing that it would be
immoral to "waste" these human embryos that will never be implanted in
any womb.  This is the moral reasoning of the Culture of Death.

The embryos "produced" by IVF technologies face danger in the womb, as
well as in the laboratory. Multiple implantations--done for the sake of
maximum effectiveness and minimum financial cost--lead regularly to
multiple pregnancies. As with the use of fertility drugs, these multiple
pregnancies can result in the fertilization and implantation of several
embryos.

The reality of "selective reduction" came to the attention of most
Americans through the media interest in the McCaughey septuplets in
1997. Doctors and medical ethicists debated the morality of allowing so
many fetuses to remain in the womb, progressing toward full development.
Many doctors argued for the moral imperative of selective reduction,
which means the removal and destruction of selected embryos or fetuses.

Dr. Ezekiel J. Emanuel, chairman of the department of clinical bioethics
at the National Institutes of Health, explained, "Many people believe
couples who agree to infertility treatments must not only be informed
about--but must consent to--the potential need for selective reduction
even before beginning the treatments."

This abhorrent argument reveals the casual disrespect in which the
embryo is held by so many who are ready and willing to destroy innocent
life in the name of life-giving technology. IVF technologies destroy
even as they claim to create, and the termination and disposal of human
embryos is a reminder that the gruesome reality of the Third Reich is
never far from us. A society that will destroy human life and discard
unwanted frozen embryos has lost the vital sense of human dignity which
is foundational to civilized society. A culture comfortable with the
knowledge that fetuses are destroyed in the name of life can rationalize
itself into arguments identifying some humans--born and unborn--as "life
unworthy of life." The abortion culture hangs over the IVF laboratory.

In early 1999, advertisements appeared in newspapers of the Ivy League
schools and other leading national universities offering $50,000 for an
egg donor. The statement stipulated that the donor must be a healthy
woman who had scored at least 1400 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)
and was at least five-foot-ten in height. The woman would be required to
undergo thorough genetic screening and to offer several useable eggs for
fertilization and transfer. Within a few days, over 200 women applied to
be the donor.

"I think we are moving to children as consumer products," said Lori
Andrews, a Chicago law professor. Nonsense, argued Norman Fost, head of
the medical ethics program at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. He
asserted that "whether children are valued and how they are treated has
very little to do with how they are conceived."

Given a Christian worldview commitment, based in a biblical
understanding of the integrity of the marital bond, the integrity of the
family, and the sanctity of human life--from the moment of chromosomal
exchange to the moment of natural death--we cannot agree that all this
has little to do with how children are conceived.

The excruciating pain of a married couple unable to achieve conception
is understandable, but this does not mean that all technologies are
therefore allowable or morally acceptable. Christian couples must not
embrace the new reproductive technologies without clear biblical and
theological reflection. At a bare minimum, Christian couples must commit
to the implantation of all embryos, and the selective reduction of none.
But this does not alter the fundamentally artificial character of the
technology or the moral status of the embryos, and thus IVF presents
grave moral issues to the Christian conscience. For these reasons, it
cannot be encouraged.

We must oppose the denial of human dignity to the unborn and often
forgotten frozen embryos. We must oppose the use of these technologies
by those who would subvert the family, the marital covenant, and the
Creator's gift of sexual union and procreation. We must deny that what
is technologically possible is therefore morally acceptable. We must
affirm our creaturely limits and trust our gracious Creator as the Lord
of Life, who imposed those limits for our good. And we must learn to
count the costs before those limitations are denied.

____________________________________

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
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