US Southern Baptists condemn IVF procedure
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[June 13, 2024]
By Brad Brooks
(Reuters) -The Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant
denomination in the U.S., on Wednesday voted to condemn the use of in
vitro fertilization, signaling the campaign by evangelicals against
abortion is widening to include the popular fertility treatment.
Earlier at its annual meeting, a proposed amendment to the church's
constitution that would have banned women as pastors fell just short of
the two-thirds majority vote it needed to pass.
In its vote against in vitro fertilization, or IVF, the Southern
Baptists said the process routinely creates more embryos than can be
implanted and that leads to the destruction of hundreds of thousands of
frozen embryos, which the church considers human life.
IVF involves combining eggs and sperm in a laboratory dish to create an
embryo.
The move is the latest sign that U.S. evangelicals - a powerful voting
bloc that helped propel Donald Trump to victory in the 2016 presidential
election - are broadening their anti-abortion efforts, two years after
successfully helping to overturn Roe v. Wade.
Trump's challenger for the Nov. 5 election - President Joe Biden - in
turn has made access to abortion, contraception and fertility treatments
a centerpiece of his campaign, arguing that reproductive rights are at
risk if Trump were to be re-elected.
The Southern Baptist Convention includes 50,000 churches and over 14
million faithful and has become a political force in recent decades.
The IVF resolution before the thousands of leaders gathered in
Indianapolis noted the pain infertile couples encounter but said that
"not all technological means of assisting human reproduction are equally
God-honoring or morally justified."
Before the IVF vote, some Baptist leaders spoke about their own
experiences with IVF and urged a softening of the resolution's language
to put less emphasis on the frozen embryos involved in the medical
process.
Daniel Taylor, a deacon with Charity Baptist Church in Paris, Michigan,
spoke emotionally about his godson, who was born through IVF.
"Because of him, I thank God for IVF," Taylor said.
He added that the IVF resolution "would castigate and condemn the
entirely moral and ethical actions" of parents seeking to have a child
through IVF.
The resolution recommended members use alternative fertility therapies
or adopt frozen embryos.
The resolution called on "Southern Baptists to reaffirm the
unconditional value and right to life of every human being, including
those in an embryonic stage, and to only utilize reproductive
technologies consistent with that affirmation."
'STAND FOR LIFE'
In February, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos should
be considered children. The ruling arose from lawsuits by three families
against Alabama fertility procedure providers accused of failing to
properly safeguard frozen embryos, resulting in their destruction when a
patient improperly accessed them.
The court ruling was based on an amendment to the Alabama state
constitution approved by voters in 2018 that made it official policy to
uphold "the sanctity of unborn life and the rights of unborn children."
The court ruling left unclear how to legally store, transport and use
embryos.
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Congregants take part in an annual “Freedom Sunday” service at the
First Baptist evangelical Southern Baptist megachurch in Dallas,
Texas, U.S. June 26, 2022. REUTERS/Shelby Tauber/File Photo
Democrats portrayed Alabama's
all-Republican high court as bent on further restricting women's
ability to make choices about reproduction following the U.S.
Supreme Court ruling that toppled Roe, abolishing women's
constitutional right to abortion.
Republicans faced backlash nationwide, even as some
particularly conservative members of the party continued to question
IVF procedures.
In Alabama, the Republican-led state legislature passed measures
aimed at protecting IVF providers from both criminal charges and
civil lawsuits, and the Republican governor quickly signed them into
law, prompting Alabama providers who had halted the IVF procedure
following the court ruling to resume offering the treatment.
In Washington, Republican senators blocked Democrats' attempt to
guarantee access to IVF treatments, saying the proposal went too
far.
In May, Brent Leatherwood, head of the Southern Baptist Convention's
Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, wrote U.S. senators to urge
more robust oversight of the IVF process.
"A human embryo is a life. This life is as deserving of protection
and all the standards of care we would give to a child or an adult,"
Leatherwood wrote. "In the post-Roe moment we find ourselves in, we
must make the most of this opportunity to stand for life in all its
forms."
FEMALE PASTORS
The proposed constitutional change banning women pastors, known as
the Law Amendment, had been approved during last year's annual
meeting. By church rules, any such change must be approved at two
consecutive annual meetings, and this year it was approved by 61.45%
of church leaders who voted - short of the two-thirds majority
required.
The denomination has in recent annual meetings voted that individual
churches that have female leaders were no longer in "friendly
cooperation" with the organization, citing the denomination's
doctrine and scriptures as indicating that only men can lead a
church.
The over 10,000 church leaders - known as "messengers" - attending
the meeting and voting on an array of issues, fell just short of
officially changing the SBC's constitution to assert that a church
can only employ "men as any kind of pastor or elder as qualified by
the scripture."
Individual Baptist churches are largely autonomous, typically
locally own their own facilities and make their own decisions on how
to worship.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Longmont, Colorado; Editing by Donna
Bryson, David Gregorio, Nick Zieminski and Lisa Shumaker)
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