'...not just the premier
Christian bioethics institute in Britain,
but one of the finest in the
world, Christian or secular'
Most Rev. Anthony Fisher O.P., Auxiliary Bishop of Sydney
Theologians'
Brief
On the place of the human embryo within the Christian tradition and the theological principles for evaluating its moral status
Submitted to the House of
Lords Select Committee on Stem Cell Research by
an ad hoc group of Christian theologians from the Anglican, Catholic, Orthodox
and Reformed traditions*
Basis of this submission
1. In a multi-cultural
and multi-religious society, it is appropriate to take account not only
of secular arguments concerning the place of the human embryo but also of
arguments expressed in the religious language of some sections of the community.
It is particularly important to understand the Christian tradition
in this regard because of the place Christianity has had in shaping the
moral understanding of many citizens in this country, and because this tradition
has already been invoked in the context of public debate.1
2. The Human Fertilisation
and Embryology (Research Purposes) Regulations 2001 greatly expand the purposes
for which research using human embryos can take place, and thus, if implemented,
will inevitably lead to a massive increase in the use and destruction of
embryos. The Select Committee has expressed its wish not `to review the
underlying basis of the 1990 Act';2 however,
the ethical and legal issues surrounding `the Regulations as they now stand'
cannot adequately be addressed without considering the moral status
of the human embryo. Similarly, the `regulatory framework established by
the 1990 Act' cannot operate effectively if it is flawed in principle.
3. Adding more purposes for which human embryos
can be created for destructive use builds upon a mistake that has already
been made in the existing legislation. By far the most important ethical
issue involved in the Regulations `as they now stand' relates to the ethical
significance of embryonic human individuals whether produced by cloning
or by the ordinary process of fertilization. The spectacle of thousands
of stock-piled frozen human embryos being destroyed at the behest of this
legislation bore witness that, even in the area of fertility treatment,
too little consideration had been given to regulating the initial production
of human embryos, as opposed to their subsequent disposal. The Regulations
2001 make the situation even worse in this regard.
The Christian
tradition
4. Some scholars,
considering the prospective benefits to be derived from experimenting on
human embryos, have alleged that the Christian tradition had already set
a precedent for treating the early human embryo with `graded status and
protection'.3 In support
of this it has been noted that there were seventh century books of penance
(`Penitentials') which graded the level of penance for abortion according
to whether the foetus was `formed' or `unformed'. The same distinction was invoked in Roman Catholic canon
law which, from 1591 to 1869, imposed excommunication only for the abortion
of a `formed' foetus. Furthermore, St Thomas Aquinas, one of the most authoritative
theologians of the Middle Ages, explicitly held that the human embryo did
not possess a spiritual soul and was not a human being (homo) until
forty days in the case of males or ninety in the case of females.4 Texts from the Fathers of the
Church could easily be found to support a similar conclusion.
5. Nevertheless, the contention that for most
of Christian history (until 1869) the human embryo has been considered to
possess only a relative value - such as might be outweighed by considerations
of the general good - relies on a misreading of the tradition. Even in the Middle Ages, when most Western
Christians held that the early embryo was not yet fully human, it was held
that the human embryo should never be attacked deliberately, however extreme
the circumstances. To gain the proper historical
perspective it is necessary to supply a wider context by incorporating other
elements of that tradition.
6. The earliest Christian
writings on the issue declared simply, `you shall not murder a child by
abortion'5: the embryo
was held to be inviolable at every stage of its existence.6 The first Christian writings to consider
the question of when human life began asserted that the spiritual soul was
present from conception.7
As one account puts it: `The Early Church adopted a critical attitude to
the widespread practice of abortion and infanticide. It did so on the basis
of a belief in the sanctity of human life; a belief which was in turn an
expression of its faith in the goodness of creation and of God's particular
care for humankind.'8
7. The earliest Church
legislation also contains no reference to the distinction of formed and
unformed,9 and St Basil
the Great, who did consider it, saw it as a sophistical exercise in splitting
hairs: `We do not consider the fine distinction between formed and unformed.'10
8. In the fourth and
fifth centuries some theologians argued that human life began at conception,11 some held that the spiritual
soul was `infused' at forty days or so12 (following Aristotle)13
and some held that the timing of the infusion of
the soul was a mystery known to God alone.14
However, whatever their views about the precise
moment when human life began, all Christians held that abortion was gravely
wrong,15 an offence
against God the Creator and either the killing of a child, or something
very like the killing of a child. If it was not regarded as homicide in
the strict sense, `it was looked upon as anticipated homicide, or interpretive
homicide, or homicide in intent, because it involved the destruction of
a future man. It was always closely related to homicide.'16
9. In the Anglo Saxon and Celtic `Penitentials'
(from the seventh century) and in the canon law of the Latin Church (from
the eleventh century) abortion of a formed foetus sometimes carried heavier
penalties than did abortion of an unformed foetus. Yet canon law has an
eye not just on objective harm done but also on subjective culpability and
on enforceability. The
decision of Gregory XIV in 1591 to limit the penalty of excommunication
to the abortion of a formed foetus was expressly due to problems enforcing
earlier legislation.17 Abortion
of an unformed foetus was sometimes regarded as, technically, a different
sin - and sometimes (though not universally) as a lesser sin - than abortion
of a formed foetus, but it continued to be regarded as a grave sin closely
akin to homicide.
10. From the twelfth century until the seventeenth
century, convinced by the anatomy of Galen and the philosophy of Aristotle,
most Christians in the West came to believe that the spiritual soul was
infused forty days or so after conception. Nevertheless, during this whole
period, there was no suggestion that the unformed foetus was expendable. The unformed foetus
continued to be regarded as sacrosanct. It was never seen as legitimate
to harm the embryo directly, only incidentally, and only then in the course
of trying to save the mother's life.18
11. The first theologian
to suggest explicitly that the embryo had a graded moral status, that is,
a relative value that could be outweighed by other values, was Thomas Sanchez
in the late sixteenth century.19 He
and other `laxists' proposed that a woman could legitimately abort an unformed
foetus to avoid public shame of a kind which might endanger her life. This suggestion constituted
a radical departure from the thinking of previous moralists such as St Raymond
of Penafort or St Antoninus of Florence and provoked the criticism of Sanchez's
contemporaries, the scandal of the faithful and, in 1679, the condemnation
of Pope Innocent XI.20
12. Between this discredited school of the seventeenth
century and the re-emergence of similar views in the late twentieth century,
there is no significant or continuous strand of Christian tradition - either
in the Catholic or the Reformed churches. The most balanced and representative
Catholic moralist of the eighteenth century, St Alphonsus Liguori, allowed
no exception to the prohibition on `direct' (intentional) abortion and allowed
`indirect' (unintentional) abortion only in the context of attempting to
save the mother's life. In
a statement reminiscent of St Basil he declared that the distinction of
formed and unformed made no practical difference.21
He is the last great moralist to consider the inviolability
of the `unformed' foetus as such, because, during his time, the prevailing
medical opinion moved away from the distinction between formed and unformed.
In his later writing (on baptism) St Alphonsus also became sympathetic to
the view that the spiritual soul was infused at conception.22
13. From
the seventeenth century the classical biology of Galen and Aristotle had
begun to be displaced by a variety of other theories. One, in particular,
gave a more equal role to the female and male elements in generation, and
therefore increased the significance of `fertilization', that is, the moment
of the union of male and female gametes.23 This theory was finally confirmed in 1827 with the first
observation of a mammalian ovum under the microscope, a scientific development
which informed the decision of Pius IX in 1869 to abolish the distinction
in legal penalties between early and late abortions. By the mid-nineteenth century the prevailing opinion,
among both Reformed and Roman Catholic Christians, was that, most probably,
the spiritual soul was infused at conception.24
14. In asserting that `life must be protected with
the utmost care from conception'25 and
rejecting `the killing of a life already conceived'26, twentieth century Christians were in continuity
with the belief of the Early Church that all human life is sacred from conception.
This had remained a constant feature of Christian tradition despite
a variety of beliefs about the origin of the soul and a similar variety
in what legal penalties were thought appropriate for early or late abortion.27
15. In the
tradition, the only precedents for attributing a ` graded
status and protection' to the
embryo can be found in the speculations of some of the Roman Catholic laxists
of the seventeenth century and the re-emergence of similar and even more
radical views among some Protestant and Roman Catholic writers in the late
twentieth century.28 The
great weight of the tradition, East and West, Orthodox, Catholic and Reformed,
from the apostolic age until the twentieth century, is firmly against any
sacrifice or destructive use of the early human embryo save, perhaps, `at
the dictate of strict and undeniable medical necessity';29 that is, in the context
of seeking to save the mother's life.
Some theological
principles
16. For a Christian,
the question of the status of the human embryo is directly related to the
mystery of creation. In the context of the creation of things `seen and
unseen'30 the human
being appears as the microcosm, reflecting in the unity of a single
creature both spiritual and corporeal realities.31
The beginning of each human being is therefore
a reflection of the coming to be of the world as a whole. It reveals the
creative act of God bringing about the reality of this person (of
me), in an analogous way to the creation of the entire cosmos. There is
a mystery involved in the existence of each person.
17. Often in the Scriptures
the forming of the child in the womb is described in ways that echo the
formation of Adam from the dust of the earth.32
This is why Psalm 139 describes the child in the
womb as being formed `in the depths of the earth'.33
The formation of the human embryo is archetypal
of the mysterious works of God.34 A
passage that is significant for uncovering the connections between Genesis
and embryogenesis is found in the deutero-canonical book of Maccabees, in
a mother's speech to her son:
I do not know how
you came into being in my womb. It was not I who gave you life and breath,
nor I who set in order the elements within each of you. Therefore the Creator
of the world, who shaped the beginning of man and devised the origin of
all things, will in his mercy give life and breath back to you again.35
18. The book of Genesis
marks out human beings from other creatures. Only human beings - male and
female - are described as being made in `the image and likeness of God';
only they are given dominion over creation; only Adam is portrayed as receiving
life from God's breath and as naming the animals.36
However, at the same time, it is clear that
human beings are earthly creatures, made on the same day as other land animals,
made from the dust of the earth, not descending out of heaven. Because they are earthly,
human beings are mortal: `Dust you are and to dust you will return'.37 There is no sign in these
stories of the dualism of body and soul that is found in Pythagoras or in
the ancient mystery religions. The soul is not a splinter of God that is
trapped in a body. The soul is the natural life of the body, given by the
life-giving God.
19. It was because
of the Jewish conviction of the unity of the human being that, when hope
was kindled within Israel for a life beyond the grave, it was expressed
as a hope for the resurrection of the body.38
The disembodied life of the shades in the gloomy
underworld of Sheol39 was
not an image of hope but an image of death. The resurrection of the body was presented as the triumph
of the Lord over death, the vindication of those who had been faithful to
the Lord, even unto death,40 and
for Christians was given new meaning and foundation in the resurrection
of Jesus.41 The story
of the empty tomb and the description of the resurrection appearances emphasized
the bodily reality of the life of the resurrection. Jesus walked with the disciples and ate with them and
invited them to touch his hands and his feet. `Handle me and see that I
am no bodiless phantom.'42
20. The Fathers of the Church attempted to do
justice to the scriptural truths of the bodily resurrection and of the mysterious
parallel between the origin of each human individual and the origin of the
entire cosmos. From
different competing beliefs, the doctrine which prevailed was that the spiritual
soul - what makes each individual human person unique, and gives
each one the ability to know and to love - is neither generated by the parents
nor does it pre-exist the body, but it is created directly by God with the
coming to be of each human being.43 Throughout
the history of the Church, Christians have used the language of `body and
soul' to understand the human being, but in such a way as not to deny the
unity of God's creation. In
the fourteenth century, in an attempt to defend this human unity, the Ecumenical
Council of Vienne defined the doctrine that the soul was `the form of the
body' (forma corporis),44 by
which it meant: what gives life to the body. Christians held, and continue to hold, that the spiritual
soul is present from the moment there is a living human body45 until the time that body dies.
21. The Scriptures
also emphasize how God's provident care for each person is present before
he or she is ever aware of it. The Lord called his prophets by name before
they were born: `The Lord called me from the womb, from the body of my mother
he named my name.'46 `Before
I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated
you.'47 It is possible
to understand these passages as referring not only to the prophets, but
to each one of God's children. The Lord calls each one from the womb, forms
each one, gives each one into the care of his or her mother, and will not
abandon his creature in times of trial.48
For it was you who created my being,
knit me together in my mother's womb.
I thank you for the wonder of my being,
for the wonders of all your creation.
Already you knew
my soul
my body held no secret from you
when I was being fashioned in secret
and moulded in the depths of the earth.49
22. Such passages do not establish when
human life begins, but they establish God's involvement and care from the
very beginning, a concern that is not diminished by our lack of awareness
of him.
23. `In reality it
is only in the mystery of the Word made flesh that the mystery of the human
being truly becomes clear.'50 To
illuminate the mystery of the origin of human persons it seems reasonable
to turn to the mystery of the Incarnation. In order to do justice to the
infancy narratives, especially that of the Gospel of Luke, one must believe
that, from the moment of the Annunciation to Mary of Jesus's birth, Mary
conceived by the Holy Spirit and carried the Saviour in her womb. This is
emphasized by the story of the Visitation - where one pregnant mother greets
another, and the unborn John bears witness to the unborn Jesus.
24. The Incarnation
was revealed to the world at the Nativity when Jesus was born, but the Incarnation
began at the Annunciation, when the Word took flesh and came to dwell
within the womb of the Virgin. This understanding of the text of Scripture
is confirmed by the witness of the Fathers of the Church,51 by the development of the feast
of the Annunciation and, not least, by the solemn declaration of the Fourth
Ecumenical Council, the Council of Chalcedon (451 CE ):
We profess the
holy Virgin to be Mother of God, for God the Word became flesh and was made
man and from the moment of conception ( ex auteis
teis sulleipseoes /
ex ipso conceptu) united himself to the temple he had taken from
her.52
25. In the Eastern
Church, St Maximus the Confessor turned to the Annunciation53 to illuminate the intractable problem
of when human life begins. Jesus is said to have been like to us in all
things but sin54 and
Christians believe that Jesus was a human being from the moment of conception:
therefore, it seems, every human being must come into existence at the moment
of conception.
26. In the West, Christians were more strongly
influenced by the biology of Galen and the philosophy of Aristotle and held
that the spiritual soul was only infused at the moment when the body was
perfectly formed, forty days after conception. The great medieval Christian thinkers all held that
the conception of Jesus was an exception, and that he was unlike us
in the womb.55 This
was an unhappy conclusion, forced upon theologians by an erroneous biology.
Is it really sustainable to argue that Jesus was unlike us in his humanity?
A more adequate vision was supplied by the seventeenth century Anglican
theologian Lancelot Andrewes, in a sermon on the Nativity:
For our conception
being the root as it were, the very groundsill of our nature; that he might
go to the root and repair our nature from the very foundation, thither he
went.56
27. The words of this sermon bring our attention,
not only to the work of the Redeemer from the beginning of his life, but
also to our need for redemption from beginning of our lives. It was this need that David
recognized in himself according to the psalm, `Behold, I was brought forth
in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me,'57
where these words refer not to his mother's sinfulness,
but to the complete extent of his own sinfulness. This psalm and the Eden
story were given a deeper sense by Christians in light of the redemption
accomplished by Jesus. As
Jesus had achieved a total transformation, so all human beings were in need
of a total transformation: total in the sense of including their very origins.
In his letter to the Romans, St Paul drew out the parallel between Adam
and Christ and so asserted the involvement of all human beings in Adam's
sin.58
28. This association of sin and conception is
also shown within the Roman Catholic tradition in the development of the
doctrine of Mary's complete redemption from sin. The doctrine of the Immaculate
Conception appears to imply that Mary was receptive to grace from the moment
of her conception in her mother's womb. This Roman Catholic argument is
simply an expression of a more widely accepted argument from the Christian
doctrine of original sin. Both arguments express the general truth that
each and every human being needs the help of God from the very first - which
is constantly and, it seems, inevitably expressed as `from the first moment
of his or her conception'.
29. The Christian
churches teach not that the early embryo is certainly a person, but that
the embryo should always be treated as if it were a person.59 This is not only a case of
giving the embryo the benefit of the doubt - refraining from what might
be the killing of an innocent person. It is also that the ambiguity in the appearance of the
embryo has never been thought of as taking the embryo out of the realm of
the human, the God-made and the holy. When Pope John Paul II asks, `how
can a human individual not be a human person?'60
he is not denying the mysteriousness of the implied
answer. Christians
recognize the embryo to be sacred precisely because it is inseparable from
the mystery of the creation of the human person by God.61
What is clear, at the very least, is that the embryo
is `a living thing - under the care of God'.62
30. The following, then, are five principal
considerations which should inform any Christian evaluation of the moral
status of the human embryo:
I. Though penalties have varied, the Christian
tradition has always extended the principle of the sacredness of human life
to the very beginning of each human being, and never allowed the deliberate
destruction of the fruit of conception.
II. The origin of each human being is not only
a work of nature but is a special work of God in which God is involved from
the very beginning.
III. The Christian doctrine of the soul is not
dualistic but requires one to believe that, where there is a living human
individual, there is a spiritual soul.
IV. Each human being is called and consecrated
by God in the womb from the first moment of his or her existence, before
he or she becomes aware of it. Traditionally, Christians have expressed
the human need for redemption as extending from the moment of conception.
V. Jesus, who reveals to Christians what it
is to be human, was a human individual from the moment of his conception,
celebrated on the feast of the Annunciation, nine months before the feast
of Christmas.
31. Jesus reveals
the humanity especially of the needy and those who have been overlooked.
Concern over the fate of embryos destined for research is inspired, not
only by the narratives of the Annunciation, the Visitation and the Nativity,
but also by the parable of the good Samaritan and the parable of the sheep
and the goats: `Just as you did it to one of the least of these little ones
you did it to me.'63 The
aim of an ethically serious amendment to the 1990 Act should be to regulate
the procedures in fertility treatment and non-destructive medical research
on human embryos such that these human individuals are adequately protected.
Footnotes
1 Hansard Vol.62 1, No.16, col.35.37.
back to text 2
In its `Call for Evidence'.back to text 3 Cf. G. R. Dunstan `The Human Embryo in the Western
Moral Tradition' in G.R. Dunstan and M.J. Sellers The Status of the Human
Embryo London: King Edward's Hospital Fund, 1988, p. 55. back to text 4
Commentary on the Sentences book IV, d. 31 exp. text. back to text 5
Didache 2.2; Epistle of Barnabas 19.5. back
to text 6
See also Apocalypse of Peter 2.26; St Clement of Alexandria Teacher
II.10.96; Athenagoras Legatio 35; Municius Felix Octavius 30.2;
Tertullian Apology 9.4-8; Hippolytus Refutation of All Heresies
9.7. back to text 7
St Clement Prophetic Eclogues 41, 48-49, cf. M.J. Gorman Abortion
and the Early Church: Christian, Jewish & Pagan Attitudes in the Greco-Roman
World Dovers Grove Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1982, p. 52; Tertullian
On the Soul 27. `Now we allow that life begins with conception, because
we contend that the soul also begins from conception; life taking its commencement
at the same moment and place that the soul does.' back
to text 8
`Some Current Ethical Issues Concerning the Treatment of the Pre-Implantation
Human Embryo', a briefing paper prepared by the General Synod Board for
Social Responsibility; cf. G. Bonner, `Abortion and Early Christian Thought'
in J.H. Channer ed. Abortion and the Sanctity of Human Life, Exeter:
The Paternoster Press, 1985; M.J. Gorman; L. Crutchfield `The Early Church
Fathers and Abortion' at http://www.all.org/issues/ab99x.htm . back
to text 9
Elvira (305 CE )
canons 53, 65; Ancyra (314 CE ) 21; Lerida (524 CE ) 2; Braga (527 CE ) 77; Trullo (692
CE ) 91; Mainz (847 CE ) 21; cf. S. Troianos `The Embryo in Byzantine
Canon Law'. back to text 10
Basil Epistle 118.2. back to text 11
St Gregory of Nyssa On the Making of Man 29; cf. St Maximus the Confessor
II Ambigua 42. back to text 12
Lactantius De Opificio Dei 12; Ambrosiaster QQ Veteris et Novi
Testamenti 23. back to text 13
On the History of Animals VII.3, 4:583. back
to text 14
St Jerome On Ecclesiastes 2.5; Apologia adversus Rufinum 2.8;
St Augustine Enchiridion 85, On Exodus 2.80; though each of
these sometimes state that the foetus is not a man (homo) until he
is fully formed. back to text 15
St Augustine On Marriage and Concupiscence 1.15; St Ambrose Hexameron
5.18; St Jerome Epistle 22, 13; St John Chrysostom Homily 24 on
the Epistle to the Romans; Caesarius of Arles Sermons 9, 91. back to text 16
J. Connery Abortion: The Development of the Roman Catholic Perspective,
Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1977, p. 306, cf. G. Grisez, Abortion:
the Myths the Realities and the Arguments, New York: Corpus Books, 1970;
J.T. Noonan `An Almost Absolute Value in History' in J.T. Noonan ed. The
Morality of Abortion: Legal and Historical Perspectives Cambridge Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1970. back to text 17
Bull of 1591, Sedes Apostolica cf. Connery p. 148; Grisez pp. 167-168;
Noonan p. 33. back to text 18
Connery pp.114-134; Grisez pp. 166-168; Noonan pp. 26-27. back to text 19
Connery pp. 134-141; Grisez pp. 168-169; Noonan pp. 27-31. back to text 20
Denzinger-Schoenmetzer Enchiridion Symbolorum Rome: Herder, 1965,
2134-2135 cf. Connery p. 189; Grisez p. 174; Noonan p. 34. back to text 21
Theologia Moralis III, 4.1, n. 394.back
to text 22 Theologia Moralis VI, 1.1, dubia 4, n. 124 cf.
Connery p. 210; Grisez p. 176; Noonan p. 31. back
to text 23
The theory developed by Fienus (1567-1631), Zacchia (1584-1659) and Cangiamila
(1701-1763) cf. Connery ch. 10-11; Grisez pp. 170-172; Noonan pp. 34-40. back to text 24
This has also become the prevailing opinion among followers of St Thomas
Aquinas, cf. B. Ashley `A Critique of the Theory of Delayed Hominization'
in D. McCarthy and A. Moraczewski Evaluation of Fetal Experimentation:
An Interdisciplinary Study St Louis: Pope John Center, 1976; B. Ashley
and A. Moraczewski `Cloning, Aquinas, and the Embryonic Person' The National
Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 1 (2000), 189-201; S. Heaney, `Aquinas
and the Presence of the Human Rational Soul in the Early Embryo' The
Thomist 56, (1992) 1; M. Johnston `Delayed Hominization' Theological
Studies 56 (1995); R. Joyce `The Human Zygote Is a Person' The New
Scholasticism 51 (1975). back to text 25
Second Vatican Council Gaudium et Spes 51. back
to text 26
Lambeth Conference 1958 report `The Family in Contemporary Society' in What
the Bishops Have Said about Marriage London: SPCK, 1968, p. 17. back to text 27
`The Church has always held in regard to the morality of abortion that it
is a serious sin to destroy a fetus at any stage of development. However,
as a juridical norm in the determination of penalties against abortion,
the Church at various times did accept the distinction between a formed
and a non-formed, an animated and a non-animated fetus.'
R. J. Huser The Crime of Abortion in Canon Law Washington D.C.: Catholic
Univ. Press, 1942, preliminary note. back to
text 28
An ill-tempered but perceptive critique of some recent attempts to reread
the Christian tradition on abortion as `relatively tolerant' to abortion
of an unformed foetus is D. DeMarco `The Roman Catholic Church and Abortion:
An Historical Perspective' in Homiletic & Pastoral Review July
1984, 59-66 and August-September, 68-76; cf. http://www.petersnet.net/research/retrieve.cfm?RecNum=3362
back to text 29
Lambeth Conference 1958 report `The Family in Contemporary Society' in What
the Bishops Have Said about Marriage London: SPCK, 1968, p. 17. back to text 30
Creed of Nicaea, N. Tanner Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils London:
Sheed & Ward, 1990, I. p. 5. back to text 31 Gregory
of Nyssa On the Making of Man; John Damascene Exposition of the
Orthodox Faith II.12; Creed of Lateran IV, Tanner p. 230.back to text
32 Job 10.8-12, Ecclesiastes 11.5, Ezekiel 37.7-10, (cf.
Wisdom 7.1, 15.10-11).back to text
36
Genesis 1.26-28; 2.7; 2.19-20. back to text 37
Genesis 3.19. back to text 38
Daniel 12.2-3; cf. Ezekiel 37.1-14; John 11.24. back
to text 39
Job 10.21-22; Psalms 6.5, 88.10, 115.17; Ecclesiastes 9.3-6 cf. Homer Odyssey
XI. 485-491. back to text 40
Isaiah 26.19; Hosea 13.14; (cf. II Maccabees 7.9-14). back
to text 41
John 11.1-44. back to text 42
Ignatius of Antioch Smyrneans 3 cf. Luke 24:13-51; John 20.19-29. back to text 43
John Damascene, Peter Lombard, St Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologiae
Ia Q. 118 art.2-3; Pius XII Humani Generis. back
to text 44
Council of Vienne, On the Catholic Faith, Tanner p. 361. back to text 45
The debate about the timing of the `infusion of the soul' was a debate about
when the living human body came into existence. back
to text 46
Isaiah 49.1. back to text 47
Jeremiah 1.5. back to text 48
Psalm 22.10-11; Psalm 71.6; Job 10.8-12. back
to text 49
Psalm 139. back to text 50
Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et Spes 22. back
to text 51
J. Saward The Redeemer in the Womb San Francisco: Ignatius, 1993,
ch. 3. back to text 52
Epistle of St Cyril to John of Antioch, Tanner p. 70. back
to text 53
II Ambigua 42. back to text 54
Hebrews 4.15. back to text 55
Cf. Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologiae IIIa Q.6 art 4. back to text 56
Sermon IX on the Nativity in J. Saward, p. 100. back
to text 57
Psalm 51.5. back to text 58
Romans 5.12-21. back to text 59
For example, `The human being is to be respected and treated as a
person from the moment of conception' Pope John Paul II Evangelium Vitae
60, emphasis added. back to text 60
Ibid. back to text 61
Cf. O. O'Donovan Begotten or made? Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984,
ch. 4. back to text 62
Athenagoras Legatio 35. back to text 63
Matthew 25.40.back to text
*Prepared byRev David Jones MA MA MSt, Director of the Linacre Centre for Healthcare
Ethics, London.
On behalf of an ad hoc group of Christian theologians from the Anglican,
Catholic, Orthodox and Reformed traditions and endorsed by:
+ Cardinal Cahal B Daly, BA MA DD, Peritus at Vatican II,
Archbishop Emeritus of Armagh, Primate Emeritus of All Ireland.
+ Rt Rev Kallistos Ware, MA DPhil, Bishop of Diokleia in the
Orthodox Archdiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain, Lecturer in Eastern
Orthodox Studies, Oxford University.
+ Most Rev Rowan Williams, MA DPhil DD, FBA, Bishop of Monmouth,
Archbishop of Wales.
Rev Prof Benedict M Ashley OP, MA STL PhD PhD STM, Adjunct Professor,
Center for Healthcare Ethics, St Louis University, St Louis, Missouri.
Dr Margaret Atkins, MA MA PhD, Lecturer in Theology, Trinity and
All Saints College, Leeds.
Rev Prof Michael Banner, BA DPhil, Professor of Moral and Social
Theology, King's College, London.
Rev Prof Nigel M de S Cameron, MA BD PhD, Professor of Theology and
Culture, Trinity International University, Illinois.
Prof Celia Deane-Drummond, BA MA PhD PhD, Professor in Theology and
the Biological Sciences, Chester College, University of Liverpool.
Prof Michael J Gorman, BA MDiv PhD, Dean, The Ecumenical Institute
of Theology, Professor of New Testament and Early Church History, St Mary's
University and Seminary, Baltimore, Maryland.
Prof Vigen Guroian, BA PhD, Professor of Theology and Ethics, Loyola
College, Baltimore, Maryland, Visiting Lecturer, St Nersess Armenian Seminary.
Prof Andrew Louth, MA MA MTh DD, Professor of Patristic and Byzantine
Studies, University of Durham.
Prof William E May, BA MA PhD, Professor of Moral Theology, John
Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family, Washington.
Rev Herbert McCabe OP, STL BA STM, Lecturer in Theology, Blackfriars
Hall, Oxford.
Prof Gilbert Meilaender, BA MDiv PhD, Professor of Christian Ethics,
Valparaiso, Indiana.
Prof John Milbank, BA MA PhD DD, Professor of Philosophical Theology,
University of Virginia.
Dr C Ben Mitchell, BS MDiv PhD, Senior Fellow, The Center for Bioethics
& Human Dignity, Bannockburn, Illinois.
Rev Dr Aidan Nichols OP, STL MA DipTheol PhD, Affiliated lecturer,
Divinity Faculty, Cambridge University, Lecturer in Theology, Blackfriars
Hall, Oxford.
Rev Prof Oliver O'Donovan, MA DPhil, Canon of Christi Church, Regius
Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, Oxford University.
Rev Terence Phipps MA AM STL, Lecturer in Moral Theology, Allen Hall,
London.
Prof John Rist, MA, FRSC, Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto,
Visiting Professor, Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum, Rome.
Prof John Saward, BA MLitt, Professor of Dogmatic Theology, International
Theological Institute, Gaming Austria, Aquinas Fellow, Plater College, Oxford.
Dr Robert Song, MA DPhil, Lecturer in Theology, University of Durham.
Rev Dr Thomas G Weinandy OFMCap, BA MA MA PhD, Warden, Tutorial
Fellow in Theology, Greyfriars, Oxford.
Submitted to the House of Lords, 1st June 2001. Accepted for publication
in Ethics & Medicine: An International Journal of Bioethics,
17:3 (Fall 2001).