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5. IS HOMOLOGOUS 'IN VITRO' FERTILIZATION
MORALLY LICIT?
The answer to this question is strictly
dependent on the principles just mentioned. Certainly one cannot ignore the
legitimate aspirations of sterile couples. For some, recourse to homologous IVF
and ET appears to be the only way of fulfilling their sincere desire for a
child. The question is asked whether the totality of conjugal life in such
situations is not sufficient to ensure the dignity proper to human procreation.
It is acknowledged that IVF and ET certainly cannot supply for the absence of
sexual relations (47) and cannot be preferred to the specific acts of
conjugal union, given the risks involved for the child and the difficulties of
the procedure. But it is asked whether, when there is no other way of
overcoming the sterility which is a source of suffering, homologous in vitro
fertilization may not constitute an aid, if not a form of therapy, whereby its
moral licitness could be admitted. The desire for a child - or at the very
least an openness to the transmission of life - is a necessary prerequisite
from the moral point of view for responsible human procreation. But this good
intention is not sufficient for making a positive moral evaluation of in
vitro fertilization between spouses. The process of IVF and ET must be
judged in itself and cannot borrow its definitive moral quality from the
totality of conjugal life of which it becomes part nor from the conjugal acts
which may precede or follow it.(48)
It has already been recalled that, in the
circumstances in which it is regularly practised, IVF and ET involves the
destruction of human beings, which is something contrary to the doctrine on the
illicitness of abortion previously mentioned.(49) But even
in a situation in which every precaution were taken to avoid the death of human
embryos, homologous IVF and ET dissociates from the conjugal act the actions
which are directed to human fertilization. For
this reason the very nature of homologous IVF and ET also must be taken into
account, even abstracting from the link with procured abortion. Homologous IVF
and ET is brought about outside the bodies of the couple through actions of
third parties whose competence and technical activity determine the success of
the procedure. Such fertilization entrusts the life and identity of the embryo
into the power of doctors and biologists and establishes the domination of
technology over the origin and destiny of the human person. Such a relationship
of domination is in itself contrary to the dignity and equality that must be
common to parents and children.
Conception in vitro is the result of
the technical action which presides over fertilization. Such fertilization
is neither in fact achieved nor positively willed as the expression and fruit
of a specific act of the conjugal union. In homologous IVF and ET, therefore,
even if it is considered in the context of 'de facto' existing sexual relations,
the generation of the human person is objectively deprived of its proper
perfection: namely, that of being the result and fruit of a conjugal act in
which the spouses can become "cooperators with God for giving life to a
new person".(50) These reasons enable us to understand why the act
of conjugal love is considered in the teaching of the Church as the only
setting worthy of human procreation. For the same reasons the so-called
"simple case", i.e. a homologous IVF and ET procedure that is free of
any compromise with the abortive practice of destroying embryos and with
masturbation, remains a technique which is morally illicit because it deprives
human procreation of the dignity which is proper and connatural to it.
Certainly, homologous IVF and ET fertilization is not marked by all that
ethical negativity found in extra-conjugal procreation; the family and marriage
continue to constitute the setting for the birth and upbringing of the
children. Nevertheless, in conformity with the traditional doctrine relating to
the goods of marriage and the dignity of the person, the Church remain
opposed from the moral point of view to homologous 'in vitro' fertilization.
Such fertilization is in itself illicit and in opposition to the dignity of
procreation and of the conjugal union, even when everything is done to avoid
the death of the human embryo. Although the manner in which human
conception is achieved with IVF and ET cannot be approved, every child which
comes into the world must in any case be accepted as a living gift of the
divine Goodness and must be brought up with love.
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