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westcoast
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What is the Church’s current teaching on the **unused **frozen embryos that were made for in vitro fertilization?
There is no teaching yet. The question of what to do with them is still being discussed.What is the Church’s current teaching on the **unused **frozen embryos that were made for in vitro fertilization?
I presume you are speaking of human embryos. They are fully human persons.What is the Church’s current teaching on the **unused **frozen embryos that were made for in vitro fertilization?
I agree that we can and should preserve them; they are human beings. This may be one area that certain in vitro situations can be allowed. We’ll have to wait, pray, and see.Well, we can probably say with certainty that the position would be that they shouldn’t be “discarded” like yesterdays news, nor should they be killed for research.
What to do with them seems to be under debate. If you implant them into a uterus, this goes against the immorality of artificial fertilization, no?
Yet if you discard them, it’s a sin against life.
It may take a while to figure out the morality of frozen embryos.
It would seem that to adopt a frozen embryo or to continue the life of one in a more natural sense (not keeping this human embryo frozen) through implantation would be no more approving of the action of the how the embryo was created (i.e. in-vitro technique initially used) than adopting a baby conceived via sex outside of marriage or continuing the pregnancy of such a baby.Well, we can probably say with certainty that the postion would be that they shouldn’t be “discarded” like yesterdays news, nor should they be killed for research.
What to do with them seems to be under debate. If you implant them into a uterus, this goes against the immorality of artificial fertilization, no?
Yet if you discard them, it’s a sin against life.
It may take a while to figure out the morality of frozen embryos.
I am praying that the Church will give us a more definitive answer so that there is an understanding for how these babies can have a true chance for life via adoption instead of being destroyed, kept in a limbo-state, or used for research purposes I don’t think the “it will just create more” is a solid rebuttal given this larger issue of the how do we perserve the dignity of those who are already here. This isn’t a go ahead to continue the market if the Church allows for embryo adoption, no more than it is a go ahead for a man to rape when the Church defends human life that has been conceived this way (it is not the preborn human’s fault).You also have to worry about would it create a market. If everyone keeps going out and having one implanted, they’ll just create more. Then what do you do?
I agree. Further, I think it misses the point. It is not a ‘seller’s market’. That is, IV fertilization requires the generation of extra embryos. There are hundreds of thousands of such embryo’s in existance now. Under current secular law, most will be incinerated as “biological waste”.I don’t think the “it will just create more” is a solid rebuttal given this larger issue of the how do we perserve the dignity of those who are already here.
There is a major difference between implantation to preserve the life of the human embryo and that of continuing an already existing pregnancy. Implantation involves the commission of an immoral act. Continuing a pregnancy does not. To directly perform an intrinsically immoral act for any reason is never justified.It would seem that to adopt a frozen embryo or to continue the life of one in a more natural sense (not keeping this human embryo frozen) through implantation would be no more approving of the action of the how the embryo was created (i.e. in-vitro technique initially used) than adopting a baby conceived via sex outside of marriage or continuing the pregnancy of such a baby.
But it does not give licensce to perform another immoral act.With the OP the initital way the co-creative act was done was outside the way it should be and goes against Church teahing (how the embryo is fertilized)
That these human lives have to suffer in ‘limbo’ due to our misdeeds is an injustice for which we must strive toward eliminating the cause. God in His mercy and justice hears their plight as he does that of the unborn. It is a false compassion to take these embryos’ suffering and relieve it through immoral means.BUT the human life that results should not have to suffer a life of true limbo (sitting in a frozen state) for the way the parents choose to conceive him/her.
Correct.The continuation of the life via implantation would not mean in-vitro is OK.
Of the presented options - being destroyed, kept in a limbo-state, used for research, or implanting into a female person, only one is absent of immoral action. It is not to our discretion to eliminate suffering using any means possible. We have to accept that many times God allows suffering to take place for purposes that may only be known to Him.I am praying that the Church will give us a more definitive answer so that there is an understanding for how these babies can have a true chance for life via adoption instead of being destroyed, kept in a limbo-state, or used for research purposes
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This is true. It must be rebutted on the morality of the intended act.I don’t think the “it will just create more” is a solid rebuttal given this larger issue of the how do we perserve the dignity of those who are already here.
Yes, it may very well be outside of our realm to help those trapped in such an unnatural state due to someone refusing Church teaching. There are many other instances of situations where someone is left in an unjustly unnatural state due to another’s misdeeds.The Church already rejects the action of how the life is being co-created and the existent consumer market around human life (in this area and all areas). It already stands for an end to the practice. Yet, there is still the issue of what to do when people refuse the Church’s guidance and there is a human life that results. How do we help those human beings who are vulnerable & unable to help themselves because they are only in the early stages of their lives, trapped in an unnatural state of being?
Depends whether someone is performing an act which directly results in the death of a person. Disposing of these embryos is such an act. Ripping them apart for research is such an act. Maintaining them in a frozen state is not.This is a human being that deserves his/her life, it does not seem that in a Catholic pov that alternative which is a definite loss of human life would be acceptable simply do to the motives of those who have done the co-creative act (in or out of the womb).
What are you refering to? Maintaining them in a frozen state, thawing and disposing of, or implanting?This would seem to deny the respect of the human dignity of these embryos who are currently waiting in this frozen limbo. It also would simply keep up the with status quo of freeze, dispose, or research.
It is for just that reason of being illicit (actually intrinsically evil) that IVF is not allowed.Although the desire to procreate is understandable and, in of itself, a laudable goal. The IV fertilization procedure itself is seemingly illicit under Church teaching. The most recent Church document on this that I am aware of is DONUM VITAE (The Gift of Life) from 1987:
I am not aware of any such statement either. I am not sure what Mapleoak is relying on when he declares implantation itself prohibited.There is no direct (unless I am missing it) from the Church on the discussion of the singular actions of the implantation of an already existing IVF embryo.
Good point.It would seem that to adopt a frozen embryo or to continue the life of one in a more natural sense (not keeping this human embryo frozen) through implantation would be no more approving of the action of the how the embryo was created (i.e. in-vitro technique initially used) than adopting a baby conceived via sex outside of marriage or continuing the pregnancy of such a baby.
With the OP the initital way the co-creative act was done was outside the way it should be and goes against Church teahing (how the embryo is fertilized) BUT the human life that results should not have to suffer a life of true limbo (sitting in a frozen state) for the way the parents choose to conceive him/her.
From Dominum Vitae part II:I am not aware of any such statement either. I am not sure what Mapleoak is relying on when he declares implantation itself prohibited.
Notice that Surrogate Motherhood that is declared illicit, not the various technicalities invovled. Surrogate motherhood could involve implantation, artificial insemination, even consentual sex. Church teaching remains the same, it is the concept itself that is immoral.From Dominum Vitae part II:
"3. Is “Surrogate” Motherhood Morally Licit?
Morally illicit acts cannot ever be performed regardless of the good that may result.
Wouldn’t that also mean that the act of becoming a surrogate mother would be illicit?Notice that Surrogate Motherhood that is declared illicit, not the various technicalities invovled.
I am not sure what you are getting at here. If the concept of surrogate motherhood is immoral, in what way can it be not immoral then to implant an already existing embryo? Also how can surrogate motherhood be the result of consensual sex?Surrogate motherhood could involve implantation, artificial insemination, even consentual sex. Church teaching remains the same, it is the concept itself that is immoral.
Some concerns of moral and ethical significance which make it substantially different from natural adoption include the denial of husband and wife to have children of their own as a result of their unitive and procreative love. If someone else’s child is in the mother’s womb, their act of love making cannot possibly be open to the creation of new life. This differs from a couple who conceived naturally and has marital relations with each other while pregnant in that the unborn child is the result of their love-making.Implanation in the context of nuturing an unwanted embryo is a different moral situation. It would appear to be more akin to adoption.
A ‘surrogate mother’ is essentially a reproductive facilitator, who may or may not be a genetic contributor to the child. As noted, the Church considers this illicit.I am not sure what you are getting at here. If the concept of surrogate motherhood is immoral, in what way can it be not immoral then to implant an already existing embryo? Also how can surrogate motherhood be the result of consensual sex?
I am not arguing a position, I am simply noting that theologians are divided and the Church has not taken an official position. Though without giving it a lot of consideration, I find myself leaning towards licit.With natural adpotion their is no such denial of this procreative aspect. Additionally, there is the violation of the sacredness of the mother’s womb with ET among other things.