crystal_waters
New member
Whats the vaticans latest opinion on adopting frozen embryos? Have you or anybody you know adopted a frozen embryo?
It has also been proposed, solely in order to allow human beings to be born who are otherwise condemned to destruction, that there could be a form of “prenatal adoption”. This proposal, praiseworthy with regard to the intention of respecting and defending human life, presents however various problems not dissimilar to those mentioned above.
The main conclusion of this part of the document is that, with regard to those frozen babies, there is no conclusion and that the existence of and what to do with these frozen embryos presents questions… But there are no answers proposed by the Church in this instance.All things considered, it needs to be recognized that the thousands of abandoned embryos represent a situation of injustice which in fact cannot be resolved. Therefore John Paul II made an “appeal to the conscience of the world’s scientific authorities and in particular to doctors, that the production of human embryos be halted, taking into account that there seems to be no morally licit solution regarding the human destiny of the thousands and thousands of ‘frozen’ embryos which are and remain the subjects of essential rights and should therefore be protected by law as human persons”
THIS!Please read Donum Vitae and Dignitas Personae.
Unfortunately, this is not a moral solution to the problem.
Are your sure that the artificial womb idea comes from the Vatican…I think it’s Father Tad’s personal opinion.I have to concur with DexUK. The Vatican’s response is a bit more than just “this should never have happened” but not much more. The full reply is that we should leave them frozen until such a time that it’s possible to create artificial wombs in order to allow these children to grow… and then adopt them.
I don’t see why this is the appropriate answer. Obviously the scientific feasibility of such a solution is a long ways away, and so we should just let this kids hang in limbo for hundreds of years… at which time they will likely die or not survive the implantation to an artificial womb process due to deterioration?! No, I don’t like that solution or understand why it’s the right answer.
I totally understand that children have the right to be formed by two loving parents through conjugal relations, but guess what? Many kids who are created through conjugal relations don’t have loving parents. The Church doesn’t teach, for instance, that we’re allowed to abort children conceived via rape or incest and for good reason! They’re already alive. Their dignity was violated, yes that’s true, but that’s no reason for them to be discarded. The same goes, in my book, for children created via artificial means. Their dignity was offended by the actions of their parents but I don’t see how trying to allow them to have life and have it more abundantly would be wrong.
I can, however, understand the Vatican’s concern that couples suffering from infertility problems would see embryo adoption as a “loophole” of sorts since they can’t use IVF themselves. It’s a tricky situation to say the least.
As for me, my answer would be “no” as to whether I would do it. Aside from being a man, my wife and I have no problems from a fertility standpoint but we do have problems from a delivery standpoint. We might adopt kids who are already born, but there’s no reason for us to adopt embryos even if the Church were to rule it licit.
ncbcenter.org/page.aspx?pid=478In my opinion, parents have an obligation to care for their children in this way until some other option becomes available in the future (maybe a sophisticated “embryo incubator” or “artificial womb” of some kind), or until there is a reasonable certainty that they have died on their own from decay or “freezer burn,” which may occur whenever frozen embryos are stored for extended periods. Perhaps after a few hundred years, all the stored embryos would have died on their own, and they could finally be thawed and given a decent burial. This approach would not involve us in the direct moral agency of ending their lives by withdrawing their life-sustaining liquid nitrogen.
I’m sorry, but I cannot agree with this. Deliberate inaction that ends in death is just as bad as deliberate action that ends in death, in particular if this death is avoidable.Perhaps after a few hundred years, all the stored embryos would have died on their own, and they could finally be thawed and given a decent burial. This approach would not involve us in the direct moral agency of ending their lives by withdrawing their life-sustaining liquid nitrogen.
Glad you posted this. I just took the “Catholic Sexual Ethics” class in 2011 at the TOB institute, taught by Dr. John Haas, the pres. of this bioethics center. We learned how to isolate clean cases, and we read the parts of the documents mentioned in this thread, and hashed through them carefully.There is no official church teaching yet on embryo adoption. The National Catholic Bioethics Center recently published an entire book (yes, with an imprimatur) containing 12 lengthy essays from various Catholic theologians and bioethicists about embryo adoption. Each essay was well-reasoned, and you could tell that each writer had put a lot of thought and prayer into the question of embryo adoption… and the essays reflected a wide variety of opinions. It’s a fascinating read, if anyone is interested.
store.ncbcenter.org/iHuman-Embryo-Adoption-Biotechnology-Marriage-and-the-Right-to-Lifei-P51.aspx
Right, but this is such a gray area. I think the Church would probably say “OK” to someone without fertility problems but hesitate to give approve to someone with fertility problems. Then it becomes kind of ridiculous where it’s OK for some people but not for others despite the fact that the actions are exactly the same and the intentions are actually the same… to bring a child to full gestation. The only difference is the circumstances.The church is saying, so far, that adopting embryos cannot be a means to treat infertility. This is a very nuanced wording, and is different than an intent solely for the person itself. All sorts of questions arise as to how to measure intent, etc. Dr. haas was leaning towards discouraging the practice, but it isn’t black and white at this time.
That’s approaching it backwards, and is actually very far fetched in its approach.Right, but this is such a gray area. I think the Church would probably say “OK” to someone without fertility problems but hesitate to give approve to someone with fertility problems. Then it becomes kind of ridiculous where it’s OK for some people but not for others despite the fact that the actions are exactly the same and the intentions are actually the same… to bring a child to full gestation. The only difference is the circumstances.
Thats true, to destroy the embryo would be just like abortion in a way, i think they should be allowed the chance to be bornThe babies are already created, they are just in suspended animation.
Yes, I would adopt a “Snowflake” as they have been termed. And I would do it regardless of what the Church hasn’t said. They are children who have already been made. They can’t be killed, can they? So what is the alternative? Give them to people who want babies!
Although I’m too old now to have a child, I’d have stepped up and said yes to implantation of an embryo and be a mother to him/her to keep the child from being destroyed.I’m pretty sure that there is no authoritative teaching on this one yet. Note that the opinions of respected theologians are NOT authoritative teaching!
There are two good competing arguments here:
I lean towards the latter. Unlike conventional adoption, embryo adoption puts the woman through the entire pregnancy experience. I think we’re arrogant and foolish to assume that this is merely a physical process with no deeper emotional meaning or potentially devastating effects on the marriage relationship.
- The frozen child bears no guilt for the sinful IVF procedure her parents procured. It is an act of mercy to rescue her if possible from imprisonment in frozen stasis even though the implantation procedure has a high mortality rate. It’s still better than certain death after a long freezer limbo!
- God designed the marital relationship such that pregnancy is meant to be an ongoing experience of intimacy between man and wife. The act of implanting another couple’s child in the womb of the mother is so disruptive to the right to intimacy between a man and wife as to make it impermissible. The ends don’t justify the means.