Who Needs God, IVF and the Gift of Life

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Who Needs God, IVF and the Gift of Life Barbara Freres Quaestiones Disputatae, Volume 5, Number 1, Fall 2014, pp. 148-160 (Article) Published by The Catholic University of America Press For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/578497 Accessed 25 Dec 2017 11:36 GMT

Who Needs God, IVF and the Gift of Life Barbara Freres - tigated the farthest recesses of his being, he has deciphered the components of the human being, and now he is able, so to speak, world, no longer as a gift of the Creator, but as the product of of the fact that he is the image of God no longer shines upon this man; his only splendor is the power of human capabilities. 1 To consider the question of whether morality must be grounded in God in a more particular and concrete way, I focus in this paper on the moral in vitro 2 in those cases where embryonic human life is not intentionally what ethicist Peter Singer has referred to as the simple case. 3 This simple case is not complicated by the ethical problems surrounding donor gametes, for the sperm and egg come from husband and wife. It is uncomplicated, too, in - one can focus solely on the morality of creating what are commonly called 1 Pope Benedict XVI, Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures Ignatius Press, 2006), 26. 2 cessed February 19, 2013, - - 3 Biomedical Ethics - Barbara Freres, Quaestiones Disputatae, Vol. 5, No. 1 (Fall 2014) 148

BARBARA FRERES 149 for IVF as it is commonly practiced. It presents a special challenge to the the immorality of the simple case is accessible to reason, but that the default - opinion and moral reasoning regarding IVF. Secondly, I look to Dignitas Personae and the writings of William May and Martin Rhonheimer for natural law arguments showing why reproduction via IVF is contrary to the natural sense of reasonableness respecting moral truth. Part I: Peter Singer and the Simple Case In his 1985 work, Making Babies: The New Science and Ethics of Conception, Peter Singer lists among the most frequently heard objections to the simple case and the conjugal aspects of marriage and so damages the marital relation- 4 And secondly, it is blatant paternalism on the part of certain religious groups to suggest that anyone but the couple should decide what will damage their marriage. The only criticism that makes sense to him is that the cost of IVF is great and that money make the procedure immmoral. 5 In his January 2009 article in the Guardian, in which he commemo- 4 Ibid., 545. 5 Ibid., 546.

150 WHO NEEDS GOD, IVF AND THE GIFT OF LIFE Dignitas Personae - often is, the result of a much more deliberate and reciprocally 6 - regarding the manner in which this new child comes to be, and here the consequentialist rendering of morality. And to be honest, this is likely the Part II: Natural Law Arguments Against IVF tributed to a lack of faith. The Church and those who argue in support of the The instruction Dignitas Personae is addressed to the faithful as well as to those of good will that is, to physicians and researchers 7 6 Guardian, January 14, 2009, ics. 7 Dignitas Personae, On Certain Bioethical Questions, Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, issued by CDF, September 8, 2008, accessed -

BARBARA FRERES 151 that this instruction be comprehensible to all people and I will argue that it is indeed comprehensible to all people. In fact, the nature of this teaching as one which is based upon reason and enlightened by faith seems to be an important theme of Part I of the instruction. According to that section of the document the source that inspires the relationship between the spouses in their responsibility for begetting new children. The transmission of life is inscribed in nature and its laws stand as an unwritten norm to which all must refer. 8 What marriage is and what responsible parenthood is inhere as part of the natural law. and respected by faith 9 Man and 10 and also requires, is further enhanced and strengthened in the light of these truths of the dignity sacredness of human life. 11 The docu- procreation, while also attributing to faith the power to more fully illuminate faith can illuminate human sacredness. Dignitas Personae declares IVF to be at odds with the natural law; it - - husband and wife with the corresponding right to bear children only with that the procreation of a human person be brought about as the 12 is a good not The document speaks of responsible parenthood in terms of the gifts of love and life. How- 8 DP 6. 9 DP 7. 10 DP 7 references the Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 22. 11 DP 7. 12 DP 12.

152 WHO NEEDS GOD, IVF AND THE GIFT OF LIFE fundamental good is so fundamental. Martin Rhonheimer and William May consider the nature of the relation between parent and child when IVF is deeply upon the gift of life and its relation to conjugal love. - 13 14 What is not conform to man s nature that which is good for man. 15 - via the conjugal act, but technologies and the actions that correspond to them oppose two principles 16 17 between the parents and - 13 Martin Rhonheimer, Ethics of Procreation and the Defense of Human Life, ed. Donum vitae AAS 14 Rhonheimer, Ethics of Procreation, 155. 15 Ibid., 155. 16 Ibid., 176. 17 Ibid., 157.

BARBARA FRERES 153 lation between parents and baby when the child is generated through natural that human beings are not entitiled to ordain the beginning and the ending - different from the way they were desired. 18 the attitude felt by parents who use IVF. The fact that IVF is more often than not unsuccessful, the fact that parents deeply desire a child, could translate into a deep appreciation for their child and the recognition of the child as a gift. 19 procedure that brings about a kind of formal degradation. With no chance of generating a child, the actions would not make sense and would not take place. 20 Because the means, in the form of concrete actions, are chosen to wanted 21 This Golden Rule is broken 22 by none other than those who ardently desired his chosen with the purpose (intention) of generating a child. Rather, the child 18 Ibid., 159. 19 Ibid., 160. 20 Ibid., 162. 21 Ibid., 166. 22 Ibid., 168.

154 WHO NEEDS GOD, IVF AND THE GIFT OF LIFE is generated on the occasion of this act the child arises from this act, which is, in its personal structure, not an act or a means for the generation of a child, 23 Rhonheimer argues that since the conjugal act is by - domination or control. A human life is not made; it is begotten. In natural procreation, parents (and doctors) are not in a position of ultimate control, and so the attitude of unconditional acceptance and of equality of persons naturally follows. 24 tionally accepted and equal to all persons because of the way he came into William May offers a similar analysis, distinguishing between tran- by him or her or them. 25 do not measure up are discarded. The object made is what is intended to be perfected, not the agent that is bringing the product into being. 26 27 result from this act is begotten, not made, says May, and husband and wife gift of human life. 28 The human life that may result gift 23 Ibid., 164. Rhonheimer mentions that such a mentality could occur in the - 24 Ibid., 169ff. 25 William May, Catholic Bioethics and the Gift of Human Life, 2nd ed. (Hunting- 26 Ibid., 72. 27 Ibid., 72. 28 Ibid., 72.

BARBARA FRERES 155 29 so to speak, without the gift, without the new life, in a way that the actions required by IVF do not. making acts, rather than doing acts. Of course, making requires doing, but it is clear that the intended object of these acts is outside the actors them- 30 May also lends theological support to this natural law position. The human person is made in the image and likeness of God. A human person 31 Just as Christ is said in the Council of Nicea to - of spouses. Marriage, the marital act itself, says May, structures the relationship between child and parent so that the equal dignity of each human life is maintained. 32 Both Rhonheimer and May consider IVF an offense against the equality of persons, whether this equality be established naturally, through the Golden Rule as Rhonheimer assumes or theologically, in imitation of the personhood of the blessed Trinity as May ultimately suggests. Part III: Giftedness olic philosphers and theologians are not the only thinkers who harbor moral The problem with eugenics and genetic engineering is that they - 29 on Bioethical Issues, In Vitro Fertilization: Morality and Public Policy 30 Ibid., 83. 31 Ibid., 87. 32

156 WHO NEEDS GOD, IVF AND THE GIFT OF LIFE ers are wholly our own doing is to misunderstand our place in only source of reasons to care about giftedness. The moral stakes erodes our appreciation for the gifted character of human pow- moral landscape humility, responsibility, and solidarity. Genetically enhanced children would of course remain indebted rather than responsible for their traits, though their debt would run more to their parents and less to nature, chance, or God. 33 What Sandel says here regarding genetic enhancement appllies equally to the - - are not a result of pure will and technological manipulation, but rather nature or chance or God, one understands oneself as gift. Sandel suggests that a healthy humility follows therefrom. When no such giftedness is present, plishments grows. 34 Sandel notes the mindset of athletes in the age of performance enhancing drugs, in which one feels pressured by teammates or others not to - 35 These drugs tempt 36 33 Biomedical Ethics The Case Against Perfection: Ethics in the Age of Genetic Engineering 34 35 Ibid. 36 Contemporary Bioethics, A Reader with

BARBARA FRERES 157 Sandel also suggests that when humility subsides and responsibility 37 When this grace and this others. We are no longer all in the same boat. If we are parents or reproduc- Social solidarity disappears. - - ing which is as innate as knowledge of the natural law. We know that we are in the way that we know that there is a moral law that is not our own making. - understand that to allow one of us to produce another one of us will destroy hubris and of a need to ly when that couple has the opportunity to produce something they long to to an understanding and protection of the dignity of human nature, but it of creation. We can argue that giftedness must be maintained at the risk of denigrating human dignity, but in such an argument we must place our con- Cases The Mother Machine: Reproductive Technol- 37

158 WHO NEEDS GOD, IVF AND THE GIFT OF LIFE Part IV: Faith and Reason is a distinction to be made, and Martin Rhonheimer articulates this distinction. 38 A moral truth may be known via the natural law, through the light of natural reason. It may be accessible to reason. At the same time, this truth may not be seen to be reasonable. to be contrary to the natural law. It can be shown to be an act which offends against justice and the dignity of the human person, against human equality - beings coming to be as products of human will and desire is a contrast reasoned, for IVF is morally concerning for someone who thinks through the procedure and the corresponding intentional relation between child and parent. seem reasonable that is, a person may not think himself able to conform be- especially to a couple facing infertility. Why that couple should not do what plan and as a social policy seems utterly reasonable. Why should we be so 38 Martin Rhonheimer, The Perspective of the Acting Person, Essays in the Renewal of Thomistic Moral Philosophy sonable and there lays out the two senses of reasonableness which I discuss.

BARBARA FRERES 159 scrupulous regarding the manner of the coming to be of a human person - see the argument 39 cause of grace. It makes it seem reasonable, as well. There is an epistemological difference that comes with faith in the Christian God. The grounding of morality in faith in God brings to unaided natural reason a fullness and completion which makes a great difference. In this pragmatic, technological do is not easy to see. Rhonheimer - it seem reasonable to her, to her husband, to her physician, to forgo taking the truth appear reasonable. - Christian humanism which differs from the purely secular humanism of the ness through faith, hope, and charity. That is how faith in fact rescues reason 40 reasonable. 39 40 Rhonheimer, The Perspective of the Acting Person, 3.

160 WHO NEEDS GOD, IVF AND THE GIFT OF LIFE would seem to diminish. From within faith, the locus of morality is the human soul. From outside of faith, the locus of morality may reasonably be argument against Glaucon in the Republic regarding whether one should be just 41 Phaedo regarding the immortality and transcendance of the soul. 42 - Aristotle. Contemporary teleology seems to make a lot of sense, especially when the we are in possession of the means of attaining happiness. It seems moral life call these alluring prospects into question. For these reasons, God does not ground morality, if we mean by this Cardinal Stritch University 41 Plato, Republic Allan Bloom, trans., The Republic of Plato, 2nd 42 Plato, Phaedo 102b(ff.), in G.M.A. Grube, trans., Plato, Five Dialogues, 2nd ed.