Friday, September 15, 2006

 

Letters Needed: An Opportunity to Educate

Evangelicals and Embryo Adoption – A Pro-Life Conundrum

By Stephen J. Grabill
Christian Post Contributor
Fri, Sep. 15 2006 06:14 AM ET

Infertile couples desperate to conceive children are increasingly turning to fertility specialists for help. But widespread use of assisted reproductive technology (ART) has led to an unintended consequence: the creation of a large population of frozen human embryos. That reality has ignited a vigorous moral debate among scientists, politicians, theologians, and parents about what should be done with the surplus store of nascent human life.

The most common ART technique is in vitro fertilization with embryo transfer (IVF-ET), in which a woman is induced to produce multiple eggs. Four to six of the most viable eggs are retrieved and then fertilized in the laboratory, with the resulting embryos transferred to the woman’s uterus. To decrease the probability of complications associated with higher order multiple pregnancies only two to three embryos are usually transferred to the uterus in each in vitro attempt.

At the best clinics, the success rate for each in vitro attempt is between 25 and 50 percent. ART doctors typically respond to the costs and mortality rates by producing more embryos than are feasible to implant at a single time. This overproduction of embryos requires the surplus to be stored for later possible use. Currently, in the United States alone, nearly 500,000 human embryos are being cryopreserved at some 430 fertility clinics.

With this routine overproduction of embryos in IVF-ET questions arise that science alone cannot answer. Technology, it seems, has outpaced our understanding of the fundamental legal, political, theological, and moral issues in the creation and management of human embryos.

Christians and defenders of human dignity who acknowledge embryos to be preborn persons have a dual responsibility to protect the innocent and also to do no harm. One response to these responsibilities has been the practice of embryo adoption. The stakes are high because, as Ron Stoddart founder of Nightlight Christian Adoptions stresses, "An embryo is not a potential human life—it is human life with potential."

Four U.S. adoption programs facilitate embryo adoption: Nightlight Christian Adoptions, the Center for Human Reproduction, Bethany Christian Services, and the National Embryo Donation Center. The goal of each is to transfer frozen donor embryos to infertile recipients who intend to use them to procreate.

At first glance, embryo adoption appears to be a life-affirming response to the vast number of frozen embryos being stored at fertility clinics. Yet it is not without problems. In embryo adoption, as in IVF-ET, it often takes repeated attempts before a successful pregnancy is achieved with frozen donor embryos.

These realities point to a moral conundrum for Christians who support both IVF-ET and embryo adoption. Embryo adoption is, at best, a response to the embryo surplus created by IVF-ET, which itself raises fundamental moral questions that Protestant ethicists have not yet probed in sufficient depth.

Routine overproduction of embryos and high mortality rates suggest that IVF-ET degrades and instrumentalizes the very life it seeks to create. The fundamental purpose of every embryo is to realize its own life: to fulfill its divine purpose of achieving life as a rational, social, creative, spiritual, and morally free and responsible person. In assisted reproduction and cryopreservation—unlike in normal conception and gestation—the natural progression of an embryo’s life from potential to actual can be temporarily interrupted, stalled for a time, or worse, permanently thwarted from achieving its purpose.

Among Protestants in general, there is an absence of critical moral discernment on bioethical issues outside the scope of abortion debate. This stems, in part, from Protestant skepticism toward natural law (God’s will as expressed in creation, imprinted on the conscience, and known through reason). The challenge for pro-life evangelicals is to develop systematic moral reasoning that can be applied to a range of issues including embryo adoption, human embryonic stem cell research, ART, "therapeutic cloning," genetic engineering, and birth control.

Evangelicals tend to be pragmatic, wedding political activism with biblical appeals, but this has resulted in moral reflection operating on a mostly private and intuitive plane. The tragic pitfall with this style of ethical decision-making is that adverse spiritual and moral consequences often go undetected.

Aside from the issue of what to do with surplus embryos, the more fundamental question remains: How will pro-life Christian supporters of IVF-ET and embryo adoption resolve the moral Catch-22 brought to light by the vast stores of nascent human life? Protestants need to think seriously about this moral paradox and to retrieve older, more sophisticated traditions in ethics—such as natural law—to provide assistance.


Letters to the Editor should be addressed to letters@christianpost.com. Due to space considerations, only letters of less than 250 words will be considered for publication. Please provide your name and telephone number along with your letter. You will be called if your letter is being considered for publication. To write to the editorial page editor, send to editor@christianpost.com


MY LETTER:

It is morally reprehensible to use the word adoption regarding human tissue that is not viable as it is being sold by these companies. Adoption is the process of caring for children who need care because their families are nbor able to provide it for them.
There are between 150-160,000 children in foster care. Of those 134,000 can never be reunited with their families. Is it “Christian” to be playing God and “creating” life to meet the needs of those allegedly “desperate” to be parents, while these children go without families. Is that what Jesus would have wanted us to do? Is it moral, ethical, loving, caring…or just plain selfish and uncaring?
Clearly, not all seeking to adopt are capable or qualified to parent older children or sibling groups, typically the children who are in need of permanent homes. However, the astounding fact is that if just one in 500 of those seeking to adopt were willing to do so, all of the 134,000 children in foster care waiting for adoption would have permanent, loving families.

Comments:
HUH? "reute" HUH????
 
How do I refute the first embryo bank? Same way I just did - go back and re-read my letter. I added it to my post.
 
Mirah: "It is morally reprehensible to use the word adoption regarding human tissue that is not viable as it is being sold by these companies."

Why? That's precisely what it is - adoption at conception instead of at birth.
 
Why is it morally reprehensible? Because the purpose of adoption is to provide homes for children who have no families. Children! Living, breathing, real live human beings! To turn your back on them and create a test tube creature for one's own statisfaction is creepy and playing God.

It is NOT adoption because it is not a viable human being. Could a man or a gay couple adopt one of these embryos? And do what with it - watch it in the freezer??? Guess you don't care. Your form of "Christianity" probably doesn't see gay people as human anyhow, or at least not capable of being parents. But what about a woman without a womb or simply the inability to carry a pregnancy? Could she adopt one of these embryos???

NO! So it is NOT adoption!

It is NOT adoption because they are being SOLD and THEN need to be medically transplanted into a woman's womb! Like BUYING a kidney! That is NOT adoption! If they are human beings then selling them is illegal. if they are not human beings - selling organs is illgela!
They call it adoption simplt to get around those two laws which otherwise make selling them illegal!


If you cannot see the difference, you have a real problem with reality and a need to bend it to meet your own personal needs, desires and SELFISHNESS. Adoption is intended to be an altruistic act of findng a home for a child who NEEDS a home - not meeting the needs of infertile couples to become pregnant. That's a medical issue, not adoption!

This is a solution for medcial problem: infertility, it is NOT adoption! Words do not make it so. You can call an apple a tree but it doesn't take root and grow, unless the seeds are removed, treated properly, planted correctly watered etc. An apple is an apple and a tree is a tree. And this is not adoption because it is beign called adoption.

Buying Cabbage Patch dolls was also called adoption! So is cleaning up a stretcth of road.
 
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