Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Tim ReidyDecember 12, 2008

Drew Christiansen, S.J., America’s editor in chief, has written a special commentary on the Vatican’s new instruction on bioethics, Dignitas Personae. Among the topics taken up in the instruction are in vitro fertilization, cloning and stem cell research.

You can read it here.

The full text of Dignitasis here. You may need to scroll down to view the English translation.

Tim Reidy

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
16 years 5 months ago
I don't think we would ever have considered in vitro, mostly because we could not have afforded it. We were blessed with a child conceived the natural way. To get to that point, we did need invasive testing and therapies and frankly, there is little difference between the degree of clinical involvement required for that and full scale in vitro therapy. If egalitarianism in access to such therapies is of concern, the proper course is not to denounce them, but to call for insurance coverage for all who require them to have a child. While I agree that eugenics is a slippery slope, I do not share the life concerns for the blastocyst propounded by the Congregation. I would suspect that embryologists would agree with me on this issue, as prior to implantation and gastrulation, the blastocyst shows no directed development or organization beyond cleavage into many cells and the separation of the stem cells from the chorion, which will become the afterbirth. Stem cells in the blastocyst and the eventual adult stem cells are not ontologically different. There is no organism to protect at this stage. While there are practical concerns to stem cell research, owing mostly to the poor quality of most embryonic stem cells (many of which would never be viable in the normal course), the moral concerns are overblown. Until the Congregation deals honestly with the status of the blastocyst, instead of starting with the goal of affirming prior doctrine, its other concerns will not be given serious weight by professionals or Catholics in search of alternate therapies.

The latest from america

Pope Leo XIV picked one of the most common names in history for a pope. But it is a name with great resonance in modern church history, and one whose selection suggests quite a bit about what the reign of the new pontiff might be like.
James T. KeaneMay 09, 2025
A scene from the episode on Joan of Arc on ‘Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints’ (Fox Nation/AP)
Dedication to fostering a personal relationship with Christ and embracing the unique callings of faith permeates each episode of "Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints’
Alli BobzienMay 09, 2025
A photo of people outside in a city protesting
In 'We Have Never Been Woke,' Musa al-Gharbi seeks to untangle competing threads of discourse around identity and social justice.
Stephen G. AdubatoMay 09, 2025
People react at the Cathedral of St. Mary in Chiclayo, Peru, May 8, 2025, the day Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost was elected pope. He chose the papal name Leo XIV. As an Augustinian priest, then-Father Prevost spent many years as a missionary in Peru. (OSV News photo//Sebastian Castaneda, Reuters)
The late pope’s attention to geographic detail led to what was described as the most diverse conclave in the history of the church.
Kevin ClarkeMay 09, 2025