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    Fr. Joseph Jenkins

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Insights into the Sacrifice of the Mass

“The worst disease in the world today,” says Mother Teresa, “is not cancer, not leprosy, but loneliness.” The longing to give one’s self in love and to know that one is loved in return, is as universal as life itself. This longing is behind the familiar sentence in the Genesis creation tale: “Then the Lord God said, ‘It is not good for the man to be alone. I will provide a partner for him’” (Genesis 2:18).

We seek the fulfillment for which our hearts long in friendship and marriage. Beyond these human relationships people from the beginning of time have sought a remedy for their inner emptiness through fellowship with God. Often this takes the form of offering God sacrifice. Sometimes the sacrifice is to atone or make up for sin; sometimes it is offered in gratitude for blessings received or to reinforce the worshipper’s prayer for future favors. Sometimes sacrifice may take the form of a religious meal through which the worshippers seek to enter into communion with God.

Jewish religion permitted such sacrifice only in the temple at Jerusalem, which was thought to be the dwelling place of God on earth. Increasingly, however, Jesus’ people came to realize that there was a fundamental flaw in the sacrifices they offered to God. Israel’s prophets continually pointed out that God did not need or want material things, since he was the creator of everything anyway and hence their true owner. God was interested not so much in gifts as in the giver.

This was the one thing people could not offer to God in sacrifice. And, to the extent that they tried to do so, their offerings were tainted by sin, and hence, unworthy of God, who deserved a perfect offering.

The realization that the sacrifices offered in the Jerusalem temple never really made up for human sin is why Paul writes, “Every priest” (and the author is referring to Jewish priests in the Jerusalem temple) “stands ministering day by day, and offering again and again those same sacrifices which can never take away sins” (Hebrews 10:11).

It is part of the Good News which Jesus came to proclaim that this failure at the heart of his people’s religion has been ended. A perfect sacrifice has been offered to God once; one truly worthy of him; one which does make up for and take away the burden of all sins for all time and which actually achieves what all sacrifices tried to achieve without success— end human loneliness and bring people into loving fellowship with the one who alone can satisfy the deepest longings of our hearts: God himself.

This perfect sacrifice was offered by Jesus Christ. It began with his birth in obscurity in a remote village on the edge of the then known world. It continued through the whole of Jesus’ life, which he lived always in perfect obedience to his Father’s will. Jesus consummated this offering of his sinless life to his Father on Calvary, uttering as he did so the words: It is consummated” (John 19:30).

Hebrews 10:12-18 refers to this when it contrasts the repeated offering of material sacrifices in the Jerusalem temple, “Which can never take away sins,” with the perfect sacrifice of Jesus Christ. “But Jesus, on the other hand, offered one sacrifice for sins and took his seat forever at the right hand of God… By one offering he has forever perfected those who are being sanctified. Once sins have been forgiven, there is no further offering for sin.”

The last phrase arrests our attention at once. It seems to contradict the Church’s teaching that there is a daily repeated offering for sin: the Mass. We seem to be confronted with a dilemma. Either Jesus’ self-offering, consummated on Calvary was truly all-sufficient, unique and unrepeatable – in which case it is difficult to see how we can say that the Mass, too, is a sacrifice, or the Mass is a sacrifice – in which case Jesus’ sacrifice on Calvary was not all-sufficient.

This seeming dilemma makes us ask: What is the relationship between the Mass and Calvary?

To answer that question we must go behind Calvary to the Last Supper. There Jesus used the familiar symbolism of the Jewish Passover meal to interpret for his friends what he was about to do the next day. Giving thanks to God over bread and wine, which is the Jewish way of blessing them, Jesus said: “This is my body… This is my blood.” But he said more. He called the bread, “My body given for you,” and the wine, “My blood poured out for you.” That is Jewish sacrificial language. Jesus was referring to the sacrifice of his body and blood on Calvary where his body would be broken and his blood poured out.

Finally, Jesus gave his friends a command: “Do this in my memory.” When, in obedience to that command, we “do this,” Jesus is truly present with us. Here in the Eucharist we have not merely his body and blood, under the outward forms of bread and wine. Here we have Jesus’ broken body and his poured out blood. Jesus’ sacrifice is not repeated. Rather, it is made present. As Jesus presented his sacrifice “ahead of time,” as it were, at the sacrifice offered once for all on Calvary is again presented and made present as we celebrate that event in sacred symbols.

These symbols, bread and wine, make present both him whom they symbolize and what he has done for us. Here time and space fall away. Here we are able to stand with Mary and John at the Cross, with but one exception: we cannot see Jesus with our bodily eyes, only with the eyes of faith.

There is yet another dimension to the Mass. Because Jesus has offered the one, perfect sacrifice, acceptable to God, the offerings we make to him are no longer unacceptable, despite our sins. Offered together with Jesus’ sacrifice (which is here commemorated and made present, though not repeated) our offering of ourselves, our souls and bodies is acceptable to God. Our offering is imperfect. Yet, offered together with Christ’s perfect sacrifice, our littleness is swallowed up in his greatness; our imperfection is covered over by his perfection.

The priest says at Mass, “Pray, brothers and sisters, that my sacrifice and yours may be acceptable to God, the almighty Father.” Let us always respond to the offertory invitation at Mass with faith, understanding and conviction: “May the Lord accept the sacrifice at your hands for the praise and glory of his name, for our good and the good of all his holy Church.”

Msgr. William J. Awalt

 

Answers to Yesterday’s Quiz: I. 1) F / 2) F / 3) F (The substance of the bread and wine are completely annihilated; the appearance of bread and wine remain.) / 4) T / 5) F / 6) F / II. 1) Correct way to receive. / 2) Correct way to receive. / 3) Incorrect. / III. 1) water & medicine; one hour (Those of advanced age or severe infirmity can receive Holy Communion even if they have taken food within the hour.) / 2) Amen. / 3) Amen.

Quiz on the Eucharist

I. True or False. Read carefully the statements below and place T or F in the blanks according to whether they express Catholic faith in the Holy Eucharist.

1. _____ One receives bread and wine in Holy Communion, which symbolizes the spirit and teaching of Jesus.

2. _____ One receives the body and blood of Christ, whose presence is brought about by the recipient’s personal belief.

3. _____ Jesus is really, truly and substantially present in the bread and wine.

4. _____ One really and truly receives the body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus Christ under the appearance of bread and wine.

5. _____ Holy Communion is only a memorial of what happened a long time ago at the Last Supper, not the living presence of the risen Christ who comes in communion to be one with his people.

6. _____ Holy Communion is a personal devotion and not a family meal. So, even if one is not a member of God’s family, the Church, it is all right to receive Holy Communion based on your personal belief.

II. Place a check in the blanks that indicate the acceptable ways for a Catholic to receive Holy Communion:

1. _____ By extending the tongue so that the minister can place the consecrated host on it.

2. _____ By extending one hand forward, palm upward, with the other hand supporting it underneath, then taking the host in the fingers of the supporting hand and consuming it.

3. _____ By taking the host between the thumb and forefinger from the minister.

III. Fill in the blanks:

1. The Eucharistic fast consists of abstaining from all food and drink except for _____________ and _______________ for a period of ____________ before receiving Holy Communion.

2. When the Minister of Holy Communion offers the consecrated host to a Catholic and says: “the Body of Christ,” the communicant responds audibly: “_______________.”

3. When the minister of Holy Communion offers the chalice to a Catholic and says: “The Blood of Christ,” the communicant responds audibly: “________________.”

Msgr. William J. Awalt

See the answers in tomorrow’s post.

 

Interconnection of the Mass Parts

One theme to show the interconnection of the “parts” of the Mass is preparation. There is remote preparation (one’s way of life) and immediate preparation. Regarding the latter, we should come early, look over the readings and form our intention for being present, etc. Coming late to Mass is a failure to appreciate the dependence of the whole Mass upon its many parts.

1. Opening Prayer(s) – There is a call to worship and repentance that prepares us for the Word of God (Liturgy of the Word).

2. Liturgy of the Word – God confronts and comforts us to prepare us for the Preparation of the Gifts (“we” are those gifts).

3. Preparation of the Gifts – It prepares us for transformation, that we might be given the disposition and likeness of Christ.

4. Liturgy of the Eucharist – It prepares us for fruitful communion with God in the person of Jesus Christ.

5. Communion – It prepares us for our pilgrim journey as individual Christians and as the family of God.

6. Dismissal – It empowers and prepares us to go forth and to spread the “Good News” and to apply in our lives what we have done in the liturgy.

Msgr. William J. Awalt

Music in the Eucharist

The following is a listing of the parts of the Mass as they should be ranked for music whenever it is to be had for the Eucharist. This listing is based upon the official documents of the Church, contemporary commentary both musical and liturgical, and what seems to make good common sense. As an example, the Holy, Holy, Holy (Sanctus) should always be sung when music is to be had. It is a musical prayer by its very nature. Biblical analysis reveals that it has its origins in ancient worship. Liturgical studies show that it is inherently lyrical (musical). Theologically, we regard it as reserved to the whole community.

Parts to be always sung: Gospel Acclamation, Sanctus, Memorial Acclamation, Great Amen and Lamb of God.

Parts that should be sung: Responsorial Psalm (easy settings) and Communion Thanksgiving Hymn.

Parts that can be added: Processional Hymn, Lord Have Mercy, Song of Preparation of the Gifts, Lord’s Prayer, recessional Hymn and General Intercessions.

Parts that can be substituted by the choir alone: Gloria, Meditation at Preparation of the Gifts, Meditation during Communion Processional or Post-Communion Thanksgiving Piece.

On occasion, the choir might sing a solo entrance or closing hymn, but this would be rare.

Msgr. William J. Awalt

Vestments

The information about vestments that follows was derived in part from Rev. Richard Kugelman, C.P.’s introduction to the Saint Joseph Daily Missal published in 1957.

For the Priest

The Amice – A square of white material (traditionally linen) wrapped around the neck and covering the shoulders. [Today some albs have a higher collar to replace the amice.] During the Middle Ages, the amice was worn as a hood to protect the head in cold churches. The amice symbolizes the “helmet of salvation,” i.e. the virtue of hope (1 Thess. 5:8), that helps the priest to overcome the attacks of Satan.

The Alb – A long white garment reaching to the feet, it symbolizes the innocence and purity that should adorn the soul of the priest who ascends the altar.

The Cincture – The cord used as a belt to gird the alb. It symbolizes the virtues of chastity and continence required of the priest.

The Stole – Roman magistrates wore a long scarf when engaged in their official duties, just as our judges wear a court gown. Whenever a priest celebrates Mass or administers the sacraments, he wears the stole about his neck. Vesting for Mass, the priest traditionally begged God to give him on the last day the “garment of immortality” that was forfeited by our sinful first parents.

The Chasuble – It is the outer vestment put on over the others. Returning to its original shape, contemporary chasubles are full garments, shaped like a bell and reaching almost to the feet all the way around. During a bad artistic period, the 18th and 19th centuries especially, the chasuble suffered much from a process of shortening and stiffening. The chasuble symbolizes the virtue of charity, and the yoke of unselfish service in the Lord, which the priest assumes at ordination.

For the Deacon

The Dalmatic – In addition to a stole, worn from the left shoulder to the right side, the deacon may wear a dalmatic. It is an outer sleeved tunic that came to Rome from Dalmatia, whence came its name. It is worn in place of the chasuble by the deacon during Solemn Mass. It symbolizes the joy and happiness that are the fruit of dedication to God.

Msgr. William J. Awalt

Never Mind Your Wishes, We Know Better

In England, doctors would like to make the choice between life and death. Here is a report from back in 2006. It is still relevant today:

A High Court judge on Wednesday refused a request from doctors to turn off a ventilator keeping alive an 18-month-old boy with incurable spinal muscular atrophy. The boy’s parents had opposed their request, arguing that although he was severely physically disabled, the boy could still enjoy spending time with his family . . . The case was believed to be the first in which doctors had asked to allow a patient who is not in a persistent vegetative state to die.

Under England’s NHS, I imagine the doctors were trying to protect their financial interests. It’s certainly not cost effective to pay for the care of the severely disabled. (Never mind that the funding comes from the sky-high taxes of their very own patients!)

In this case, the request was denied, but the fact that the doctors felt themselves within their medical right to make such a request has far-reaching and grotesque implications. How can anyone in England feel safe in the hands of these arrogant holier-than-thous?

Not much of a leap from abortion to infanticide, the slippery slope has already been realized in our own country.

Remember the newborn child with an obstruction in the throat that prevented feeding? Because the child also suffered from Down’s Syndrome and most likely retarded, an easy surgery to correct the feeding problem was dismissed. The baby starved to death.

There have been several similar cases since, and of course, we always have Partial Birth Abortion which is really a form of Infanticide.

The ethicist Singer suggests that infanticide should be allowed at least until about three years of age– arguing that they are not viable without assistance and not “full” persons.

The brave new world resembles the old world more and more every day. The ancient Romans allowed babies to die from exposure and abandonment. If any of you ever saw the old movie HAWAII dealing with early colonization and missionary work, you may remember the scene where the girl baby is thrown off a cliff. I wonder if it would still shock audiences today?

Activist Judges and Moral Questions

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia has objected to the era of the “moralist” judge, arguing that they are not qualified to decide moral questions like gay marriage and abortion. He places the gravity for such things with the elected legislators and points as an example to the constitutional amendment of 1920 that gave women the right to vote. Given that activist judges with a leftist bent gave us Roe vs. Wade, reading something into the Constitution that was not there, Justice Scalia has a point. Who is to say that activist judges cannot be just as abusive when they come from the other side of the ideological spectrum? While a few judges like Clarence Thomas have an extensive philosophical and ethical formation; many judges would not consider possible moral absolutes and the natural law. Unfortunately, I am not sure that voters, and least of all elected representatives, would possess the necessary formation and personal integrity to deal coherently with the major questions of the day, either.

Speaking for myself, I like judges, who prefer long-standing precedent; who have a vast respect for the inalienable rights of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” and who are somewhat unoriginal and literal in their thinking. Creativity is great in the artist and poet, I am not so sure about judges.

The large Catholic presence on the Supreme Court is quite amazing. Even Judge Bork, denied a place on the Court, was baptized by my dear spiritual father, Msgr. William Awalt, at the Catholic Information Center in DC. He is now a Christian and a Catholic. Justice Clarence Thomas was received back into the Catholic Church through the ministry of another brother priest in Washington. While Scalia sometimes attends his son’s Masses in Virginia, he and Thomas often attend the Tridentine Latin Mass at Old St. Mary’s in Chinatown, DC. Pat Buchanon, although a parishioner at Blessed Sacrament, is also a regular there.

Frozen Embryo Adoption, part 2

Good Intent, No Morally Licit Solution

DIGNITATIS PERSONAE was released from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (September 2008) and the verdict about embryonic adoption was negative, making any satisfactory or positive solution dubious for these children in frozen limbo. A strict reading of the few words said about the matter would imply that it still falls under the same prohibition as regular IVF. The instruction states:

It has also been proposed, solely in order to allow human beings to be born who are otherwise condemned to destruction, that there could be a form of “prenatal adoption”. This proposal, praiseworthy with regard to the intention of respecting and defending human life, presents however various problems not dissimilar to those mentioned above (in regard to IVF).

If these problems are deal-breakers, then my initial sympathies on the issue, as were those of Professor May are wrong and Msgr. Smith was right. There is nothing we can do.

  • Propagation outside of the conjugal act is immoral.
  • The IVF process (the intervention of a technician) and the destruction of excess embryos is immoral.
  • The freezing of embryos is immoral.

All this is granted, but where do we go from here? The instruction goes on to say:

All things considered, it needs to be recognized that the thousands of abandoned embryos represent a situation of injustice which in fact cannot be resolved. Therefore John Paul II made an “appeal to the conscience of the world’s scientific authorities and in particular to doctors, that the production of human embryos be halted, taking into account that there seems to be no morally licit solution regarding the human destiny of the thousands and thousands of ‘frozen’ embryos which are and remain the subjects of essential rights and should therefore be protected by law as human persons.”

I guess that pretty much takes orthodox Catholics out of the embryonic adoption business. The prohibition may not be absolute, but it certainly weighs against it.

DISCUSSION

ROBERT: Speaking from a purely biological perspective, the static or frozen human embryo is not technically alive. There are certain biological prerequisites that it would need to possess in order to meet that definition. There must be (and is no) movement (or ability to detect and respond to internal or external stimulus), capacity for reproduction or heredity, growth or development, metabolism, or ability for that person to maintain homeostasis while frozen. The frozen person is cellular and highly organized – and therefore exhibits only one criterion of living things, but unfortunately it is impossible to differentiate that particular trait of the frozen embryo from a fully grown, and then deceased and frozen person. The difference between a frozen embryo and a corpse lies in a potential for life – a potential which is – even under the best of conditions for the embryo – both certainly uncertain and unable to be predicted.

FATHER JOE: Taking the question of the soul aside, the Church and many moral philosophers and various scientists regard the embryo as a human life from the first moment of conception. Any subsequent stasis or slowing down of the metabolic processes does not make a life suddenly cease and then reappear after a thawing or quickening process. If at any time it is permitted to continue its developmental trajectory, and survives the freezing, thawing and implantation, it will reveal that it was a certain type of living organism all along. If any of this species do not survive, the few that do will illuminate their identity as well. The biological traits of life must be viewed not from any one temporal moment but from the entity’s entire chronology. Children for instance cannot reproduce; but after puberty and sexual development, this deficit is usually overcome. However, this trait of a living organism is not present in every individual. Some living and true human beings are defective in their natural powers. However, it should be admitted, that the freezing of either embryos or fully developed human beings can result in the death of these entities. If the moral concerns of IVF apply to embryonic adoption, then there is no viable moral recourse to reanimate the embryos and to allow them to mature into full-term babies.

ROBERT: A frozen embryo, therefore, is a real person who is not really alive – the frozen embryo, while not a “potential person” is only potentially alive.

FATHER JOE: I cannot see how one who is alive can become “potentially alive.” There is life and there is death. In between are various levels of health or viability.

ROBERT: The post-IVF implantation of the embryonic person into a surrogate mother is in and of itself both against natural law and intrinsically evil. Just as with contraception, (but in the opposite direction) it separates the two-fold purpose of the conjugal act. Because the cart is truly before the horse here, the frozen person has already been created – a person who is, however, only potentially alive.

FATHER JOE: Where do you get this notion of “potentiality” in living? Did I miss it in any papal clarification or in the definition from the Congregation for the Faith? Is freezing really a limbo between life and death? Is that what you mean? A sperm and an egg signify potential personhood and a potential particular life. But can a person only be potentially alive? I cannot fathom how it could be so. We might regard persons as living composites of body and soul. If life is lost, the soul flies to its Maker and the body is reduced to an inanimate corpse. While the freezing process certainly affects animation, the embryo still suffers a continuing degradation. That is a type of movement I suppose. After only a few years, it is difficult to reclaim many of the embryos in implantation. Although there is currently no viable technology, would you argue that any futuristic cryogenics whereby adult human beings could be suspended for decades or centuries and then revived would only constitute “potential” life? They are not really dead. They would not be akin to reanimated vampires or walking zombies if permitted to be resuscitated.

ROBERT: The implantation of the IVF-created embryo carries forward the task of bringing about his or her actual life.

FATHER JOE: Here again I am troubled by a phrase, this time that of “actual” life. I am not convinced one can make such distinctions. It may simply be a case, as the Pope seems to be saying, that there are some living embryonic human beings (although frozen) that we cannot save.

ROBERT: It fulfills this necessary step at the cost of the self-donative intimacy intrinsic to the conjugal act itself and is thus innately disordered.

FATHER JOE: Yes, that seems to be the Vatican position and was held by the late Msgr. Smith of Dunwoodie.

ROBERT:

No person can participate in such an act without sin – a sin that is not diminished by arguing from a position of utilitarianism or consequentialism.
From a more theological perspective, although we esteem Mary, Virgin and Mother, as a perfect model for Christian life, this does not mean that we should ourselves deign to overshadow the conjugal nature of the procreative act, for in so doing we deign to establish ourselves as God and hold ourselves above the natural law that He established.

Again, in order for a valid Sacrifice of the Mass, there is a necessary form and substance. It would not be acceptable to start with the Eucharistic Person prior to the act of consecration. Nor could a priest place bread and wine in the tabernacle and have it be God without first consecrating the Transubstantiative Sacrifice on the altar. Just so, it is out of place for those of the married vocation to approach the procreative altar of their marriage bed, not with bread and wine (sperm and ova), but with the preconceived presence of a person who was brought about without the necessary and donative sacrifice of self. A non-spousal participation (the technician effecting the implantation of the embryo that the surrogate parents bought) adds further to the disorder wreaked by not having the donative and free gift come from within the sacramental bounds of the marriage.

FATHER JOE: Although Dr. William May argued for embryonic adoption as an act of sacrifice and heroism, what you say here, he taught me over 25 years ago.

ROBERT: As was stated in Dignitas Personae, this is a true moral quandry, one which presents no possible solution. Those who act on the supposition that the adoption and implantation of embryos is a morally good or heroic act should know that they do so at the peril of their souls.

See comments for a follow-up.

Frozen Embryo Adoption, part 1

A few years ago I grappled with the topic of FROZEN EMBRYO ADOPTION. Prior to the definitive decision of the Holy See, I examined the various arguments on both sides of the debate. This was an argument between men and women counted within the orthodox Catholic camp. It did not directly regard a controversy with liberal dissenters. The inspiration for the reflection was a paper prepared by a close friend for her ethics class.

chickenelephantegg.jpg

Dr. Germain Grisez (a philosopher), Dr. William May (a theologian), and Fr. Thomas Williams were on one side and on the other was the late Msgr. William Smith, a moral theologian and Thomist who was known as tough and very traditional. The Holy See would eventually side with Msgr. Smith.

If nothing can be done to avert the death sentence facing frozen embryos, then what purpose would embryonic adoption serve? One critic remarked that the adoption was okay but not the thawing and implantation. Is there something contradictory to this logic? Is it not disingenuous to declare such adoption morally licit while condemning any attempted thawing and implantation?

It would seem to me that embryonic adoption by necessity refers to the whole process (from adoption to implantation) and that any particular distinctions remain simply helpful abstractions. What constitutes embryonic adoption other than the implantation of thawed out embryos? The first part cannot be defined as something distinct from the necessary operation. The whole sequence (adoption, implantation and birth) is either morally right or it is immoral.

But maybe the contradiction is mine? Msgr. Smith might contend that the “whole process” that must be considered begins with the initial egg harvesting and fertilization, which the Church clearly teaches is wrong and immoral. Msgr. Smith would claim that if any part of this series of events is illicit, then the whole business is forbidden.

The very word, “adoption,” signifies several things: that the embryos are human persons (not a commodity) and that there is a maternal bond, albeit juridical and not biological. As far as natural law is concerned, which could be argued to prohibit such adoption, one might make contrary correlations. There is hardly anything natural about sustaining human embryos in frozen cocktails. It would seem more in tune with natural law to restore the embryos to a natural unfrozen state and to deposit them into the type of place where the Creator intended them to exist, in the womb. If half of the frozen embryos survive the thawing process, and still fewer undergo a successful implantation; does this not parallel the natural course of things? After all, many embryos are regularly lost and reabsorbed by the woman’s body, often without her awareness.

A serious charge is made, that the doctor who thaws out and implants the embryo is guilty of murder. I would hesitate to say this unless he and his clients were also the ones who originally harvested and fertilized them. A declaration of guilt toward those seeking to adopt embryos seems to ignore their pro-life sympathies and efforts.

Further, if our emphasis is upon the shortcomings of current science and the insistence of a 100% thawing survival rate, then authorities argue that frozen embryos must be left in cryopreservation. This is unreasonable. A 100% success rate is statistically impossible, no matter what technology might develop. Some of the embryos themselves may never have been viable. Similarly, no such success rate can be achieved for implantation. Normal pregnancies sometimes have complications and there is even a mortality rate for mothers. This last fact shows something of the courage that women possess in wanting to adopt these embryos rejected by their biological parents.

It seems overly pragmatic to base its legitimacy upon feasibility statistics and failure rates. There might be some weight to the “wait” argument, if embryos could be frozen indefinitely without harm. However, we know that this is not the case. There is a definite shelf-life, maybe as short as five years. There is no intent in embryonic adoption to kill the embryos. Indeed, it might be argued that the loss of some or even most of them in a desperate attempt to save them would be an application of the Catholic principle of double-effect.

Father Thomas Williams says that

Given the current state of medical science, the only thing that can be done to save the lives of those persons is gestation in a woman’s womb. Most women aren’t called to make this sacrifice, but those who feel called should not be discouraged from doing so. . . . An ethical analysis of embryo adoption cannot be based principally on the consequences we foresee. We must ask ourselves what the right thing is to do for these little persons. Sometimes doing the right thing carries with it unpleasant consequences, or mixed results. But to condition our treatment of persons by the possible effects that it will have on others would be to reduce those persons to a means, and our morality would decay into a utilitarian calculus. In fact, speaking of negative consequences, the condemnation of embryo adoption sends out a very inconsistent message regarding the sanctity of human life. On the one hand, we denounce abortion as the killing of innocent human persons; on the other hand, we refuse to help those embryonic persons already in existence. We simply can’t have it both ways (ZENIT Interview 050605).

Msgr. William Smith must immediately change the terms of the debate. He does not believe there is any such thing as embryonic adoption. He classifies this as just a slightly different kind of surrogate pregnancy which has been condemned by the Church (see Donum Vitae). While one critic contended that Msgr. Smith does not extend moral culpability far enough, I think a more extensive reading of his view would show that he would place the doctor in the same circle of culpability with the would-be parents.

While it sidesteps the philosophical discussion to some degree and relies upon Church authority, the instruction, Donum Vitae (1987) taught that “The fidelity of the spouses in the unity of marriage involves reciprocal respect of their right to become a father and a mother only through each other.” A great deal depends upon interpretation because the document addressed the problem of couples having eggs harvested and fertilized which is at variance with those who simply want to “receive” and give a “home” to a child already conceived.

While Msgr. Smith uses Latin terms for his distinctions and appeals to St. Thomas; however, I can assure the reader that Dr. William May is also a friend of the perennial philosopher of the Church. Much depends upon what they associate with the terms. Msgr. Smith, notes the finis operas as “the wife becom[ing] a nine-month surrogate” and the finis operantis as the so-called “adoption”. Along the lines of his reasoning, it does not matter how pro-life or loving or generous these prospective parents might be— surrogate motherhood is everywhere and always wrong and the adoption is a farce because they have no right to the embryo.

The categorization of the adoptive mother as a surrogate is crucial to Msgr. Smith’s argument. He defines the proper mother as strictly the biological one, not an adoptive parent. But, if a juridical relationship is indeed possible, then the new parent would still be receiving her own “adopted” embryos into her womb. There is also the question of the medical personnel who would do the implantation.

If any of these three elements is immoral, then the whole business is wrong. Applied to the doctor, my friend and Confirmation god-daughter claimed that the finis operas is the embryonic implantation and that this is condemned by Donum Vitae. However, it is precisely IVF (in vitro fertilization) that is denounced, the stage that happened prior to the adoption, thawing, and implantation. While implantation would sometimes follow, the fact it does not always is the reason for this question of adoption. We must not force Church documents to say more than they actually do say.

Targeting the doctor further, my friend makes note of the consequences that flow from the thawing process and makes the high fatality rate “the crux of the problem”. It is true that Donum Vitae condemns the cryopreservation of embryos; however, this is a bad situation that we have inherited. We are presuming that those involved with the adoption process also find this practice abhorrent, and by thawing out the embryos, hope to return some normalcy. We are seeking now, not to freeze embryos, or to perpetuate their arctic limbo, but to give those that survive a chance and those that do not, peace and dignity. It is not clear that Donum Vitae would have condemned adoptive parents of embryos and those assisting them of the kind of “manipulation” that the congregation wanted halted. The intention throughout this process is not to destroy the embryos but to assure their survival and life. The late Pope Paul VI was very clear that we did not have to use every extraordinary means to maintain human life. I cannot imagine anything more extreme than freezing human beings in a mixture cooled by liquid nitrogen. Thus, a high mortality rate in an attempt to save them, while unfortunate, might be justified.

Keeping the embryos frozen is not a real answer, as it constitutes in itself an offense against human dignity and the person. The embryo has a right to life befitting its inherent teleology. The genuine object of the moral act here is to make possible the embryo’s development to its proper end, birth into a human family. While the original parents used a few embryos and abandoned the rest, an unlawful utilitarian approach, the adoptive parents seek to give all the embryos a chance at a normal life, even if that chance is slim.

Surrogate motherhood is wrong because it breaches the expression of corporeal love between spouses from the natural transmission of human life. It cheapens and clouds the real meaning of being a parent and the family. Once the damage is done, and the embryos are created, there is a moral obligation to transfer them to their mother’s womb as soon as possible. Despite the artificial intervention at the beginning, the womb is the embryo’s proper home and the only place where it has a chance of survival. However, and this is very important, the embryo has a right to life independent from the receptivity or acceptance of parents. This is true in the case of abortion and this remains true in the sad case of stored embryos.

Transferring the embryo to an adoptive mother, when the natural one is unwilling or unable to do so, must be distinguished from surrogate motherhood if it is to be a legitimate option. Granting that prenatal adoption is possible, there is arguably no detriment to the marital unity or any disruption to the family relationships. It would express their generous and selfless openness to human life in respects to children whose parents were diseased or who had abandoned their responsibilities.

Maurizio P. Faggioni, O.F.M. writes:

This solution, suggested as an to save embryos abandoned to certain death, has the merit of taking seriously the value of the embryo’s life, found in such jeopardy, and of courageously accepting the challenge of cryopreservation. It seeks to check the evil effects of a disordered situation; however, the disordered situation itself within which ethical reason must enter to function in this case profoundly colours the attempts at a solution. In fact, there are serious questions which cannot be concealed: in the first place, the fear that such a singular adoption might not be able to avoid the dehumanizing criteria of efficiency which govern the technology of artificial reproduction.

Is it possible to exclude all forms of selection? Is it possible to avoid the situation in which embryos are produced in order to be adopted? Is it possible to foresee a transparent relationship between those centres which illicitly produce embryos and those in which they are licitly transferred into adoptive mothers? Do we not run the risk of legitimizing and even promoting, unwittingly and paradoxically, a new form of objectification and manipulation of human embryos, and more generally, of the human person?

I have differed from my friend on the object of the moral act, but as for the finis operantis, we can agree that the intention is good or, at least, indifferent. (Of course, this would not be the case if the woman merely saw her pregnancy as a means to an end, with no enduring relationship or bond with the child. She will have the flesh and receptive womb of a mother; but she must also have a mother’s mind, heart and soul.) Circumstances aside, Msgr. Smith says that the whole business of adopting embryos collapses because the finis operis is evil (implantation and thawing). However, I suggested that it was IVF proper and the freezing itself that were condemned as immoral by the Church. In any case, the real moral object of the action is to insure the embryo’s natural development to its proper end as a member of a family, albeit through adoption. This differs somewhat from Geoffrey Surtrees in that he considers the object of the act to be the “home” that the woman makes of her womb for the embryonic child. Germain Grisez notes that there is more to it: the object is the woman having the embryo removed from cryopreservation, implanted in her womb, and then nurturing that child there as any mother would. The woman who adopts and carries an embryo is not simply an instrument to save a child’s life; she becomes the child’s mother. There is a metaphysical or ontological transformation. A bond is created that will remain throughout this life, and forever in the next.

I argued, apparently wrongly, that there may be both a legitimate type of embryonic adoption and an illegitimate form. The external actions may be the same, but an errant motivation could make a permissible act, at least according to some, seriously wrong and akin to surrogate motherhood. If a woman did not have it as her object to start a bond as a mother to a child, a perpetual relationship with dire responsibilities, then she would fall under the condemnations of Donum Vitae against surrogate parentage. It would be an affront to the child’s innate human dignity. Indeed, it would also corrupt her own dignity as a parent. Such motherhood must not be understood as a means to an end. Embryonic adoption, if it is to be legitimate, requires a maternal disposition and change of the whole person.

My friend argued that frozen embryo adoption, and I would object to narrowing the focus of adoption to the ownership of a tray of frozen embryos, incurs “serious moral condemnation.” Do you really think this would incite punishment from God’s justice? While a verdict has since been given, at the time this discussion first took place, the voice of the Church was ambiguous and those who worked at the John Paul II Pontifical Institute seemed to gravitate to the other side of the debate, yes, even commending those who would make the sacrifice.

Are the frozen embryos simply to be surrendered to their fate? My friend argued, and the Holy See confirmed, the answer is yes. The embryos must be left in cryopreservation indefinitely. The heart-breaking problem remains: freezing does not preserve them indefinitely. Unless there is a major leap in technology, and I suspect that voices from critics like Msgr. William Smith will also object against the use of these (like artificial wombs), then we are condemning the embryos, human beings, to certain death. This is more than an abstract moral debate. Some lives will be saved if we act; however, all will die if we do not. Knowing the full implications, we are destined to suffer in conscience about this matter?

Given the difference of opinion about the morality of embryonic adoption, and I must admit that prior to the Holy See’s negative verdict, I leaned in its favor, I was troubled about the possible material cooperation in evil. Throughout, I had a nagging concern about the intrusion of a third party in the process of marital fecundity, the true nature of motherhood (as more than a receptacle or home for the embryo) and on how exactly embryonic adoption expresses the full giving of the spouses to one another. Obviously the principle of appropriation that applies in the transplant of organs could not apply to the implantation of a human being who is a distinct being.

Let me rehash and clarify some of the most pertinent points, as I see them:

1. Magisterial ethicists and theologians are agreed that the frozen embryos came to exist through an immoral and illicit intervention on the part of medical personnel and parents.

2. As to whether or not Donum Vitae, issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (headed by Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI), forbade embryonic adoption, there was some disagreement. As the congregation so often did, it was proposing guidance on a specific question and was not seeking to promulgate a negative law that would rule universally over every case and those involved. Donum Vitae was directed to the problem of harvesting eggs, artificially inseminating them, and keeping them in cold storage if not used with implantation. It would seem that the first half of this problem does not apply; although Msgr. Smith refuses to allow this distinction, claiming in some sense, that the biological parents are made direct agents for those potential parents who want to adopt unused embryos. Father Williams, Dr. May and Dr. Grisez would no doubt argue that the culpability ends with the first couple and while it is wrong for a mother to spurn her child; still those wishing to adopt would not be contaminated with any culpability. If what the adoptive parents desire to do is judged appreciably different (in species) from the natural parents, then the central point argued by Msgr. Smith would be compromised. Further, the full consideration of the question of frozen embryos had not been considered when the instruction was released and it could hardly immediately rule out something like embryonic adoption that was not yet a scrutinized or perfected avenue of action.

3. Every human being is a gift from God, even the recently conceived embryo. Does not every child have a right to be born? Msgr. Smith seems to put the gravity on procreation and the conjugal act. Critics would argue that we are dealing with a human being already conceived and in need of assistance. It sounds to me as if the sides are talking at cross-purposes. There is a debate, but they are not entirely on the same page.

4. The object of choice for the one couple is adoption, something that is perfectly licit. The object of choice for the other couple is artificial insemination and reproduction which is illicit and wrong. It involves third-party intervention and the side-stepping of the conjugal act, thus alienating procreation from the good of fides, the unitive dimension.

5. It may one day be possible to remove an embryo from a womb, offer DNA repair, and return it safely into the mother. A general prohibition against embryonic adoption might also have the sad consequence of preventing medical intervention to save and/or to treat unborn children in the womb. Another question that is already being discussed is the morality of transferring a child from a diseased womb to a healthy one when an emergency arises. How we decide on embryonic adoption will have far-reaching consequences. Msgr. Smith insists that there is no such thing as embryonic adoption and that the distinctions made represent a kind of slide-of-hand.

Statistics show that Ectopic pregnancies are 17 times greater for the implantation of frozen over fresh embryos. This can be quite problematic for the mother and the fact that she knows the risk demonstrates something of the courage it takes to make this decision. While 50% of the embryos survive thawing, live births of previously frozen embryos only have a 16.8% survival rate over 29.7% for fresh embryos. The procedure, which is not certain, also costs between $6,000 to $9,000; not cheap by any means. We did not have unlimited time to make a decision about this question. It would seem that a high statistical failure rate would not in itself make embryonic adoption morally prohibitive.

Even though there may be 400,000 frozen embryos available, not all of them can be legally adopted. Most couples oppose the donation of embryos and either keep them cryogenically frozen, or if too expensive, have them destroyed in a saline solution and cremated. What we see here is the same mentality that we observe in abortion. Women will make the nonsensical statement that “They could never allow their children to be raised by strangers,” and thus prefer to terminate the pregnancies, thus robbing their children of any life at all— the height of selfishness!

I am not going to get into a big discussion of ectogenesis, as it will take us away from the topic at hand. However, if such should ever leave the sphere of science fiction, it will raise its own serious concerns. Many possibilities are even now being explored. A means may be achieved where a uterus from a cadaver might be transplanted to an animal or DNA re-sequencing might provide a womb capable of sustaining an embryo to birth. Professor Carl Wood actually implanted human embryos into sheep as part of an experiment that fortunately failed. An artificial womb capable of supporting implantation and supporting embryonic development is being theorized by researchers. Except for the most serious emergencies, such methods if perfected would seem to offer excessive danger to the embryo and raise too many questions for children who would look to an animal or a machine as their birth-mother.

For Embryonic Adoption

I have borrowed these citations and information “for” and “against” from Human Life Review, “Where Do Frozen Embryos Belong?” by Brian Caulfield.

My old professor, Dr. William May is one of the chief defenders of embryonic adoption and has a whole section on it in his most recent book:

I believe that the moral object specifying the human act of a woman who seeks to rescue a frozen embryo is not an act of surrogacy, nor (is it) to substitute for the relation to the father a mere arrangement with a technician. What precisely is the object? (It is) the adoption of a frozen embryo, a human child abandoned by those who have generated it. (It) is to give the adopted child a home.

Bishop Elio Sgreccia, of the Pontifical Academy for Life, said that embryo adoption has “an end which is good” and cannot be dismissed as illicit. But given the high failure rate of implantation and the fact that the process of freezing and thawing may cause many embryos to suffer genetic damage, he concludes, “Can we really counsel women to do this? It would mean counseling heroism . . . The issue is one big question mark. The point is we should never have gone down this road to begin with.”

Against Embryonic Adoption

Mary Geach, an English philosopher, as well as a wife and mother, could not disagree more. Dr. May summarizes her argument,

She claims that if a woman makes her womb available to the child of strangers and allows herself to be made pregnant by means of a technical act of impregnation, she shares in the evil of in vitro fertilization . . . she ruins reproductive integrity… By allowing herself to be made pregnant by the technician’s art a woman engages in a highly defective version of the marital act.

Brian Caulfield writes:

To me, the choice of adopting an embryo makes a woman redefine herself in terms of something that is at the root of her being: her ability to get pregnant, bear new life, become a mother. To separate this inherent capacity from the intimacy of conjugal relations goes too far. It not only separates a wife from her husband, by interposing another impregnating party; it separates a woman from herself if she uses her womb merely as an instrument for the good end of saving a life.

Names of some in favor of embryonic adoption: Dr. William E. May, Fr. Thomas Williams, Dr. Jerome Lejeune, Dr. Charles Rice, Dr. Germain Grisez, Fr. Philip Boyle, Geoffrey Surtees and Dr. Dianne Irving.

Names of some against embryonic adoption: Msgr. William Smith, Dr. Daniel Sulmasy, O.F.M., Mary Geach and Brian Caulfield.

DISCUSSION

FATHER JOE:

I spent time praying about this subject of embryonic adoption. Several inherent problems nagged me from the very first. The doctor or technician is a third party and such involvement is generally forbidden when we are speaking about the subject of human fertility. The act by which women become pregnant is naturally the marital act: sexual intercourse between a husband and wife. Several years ago there was a program called GIFT which permitted a husband and wife to engage in the sexual act and then, immediately afterwards, doctors intervened to facilitate the meeting of the sperm and an egg cell. While some thought it would pass muster, it was still criticized for the problem of artificial manipulation. Here, in embryonic adoption, there is no marital act at all. Indeed, some are saying that a woman need not be married to undergo the implantation procedure. That brings with it a whole set of additional problems.

Can she remain blameless, just because the embryo is not from her egg and the sperm that joined with it is not from her husband?

ANNIE:

I have been reading many thoughts on both sides of the frozen embryo issue and I would like to share my thoughts. First, I want to make clear the distinction between adopting a frozen embryo already created and requesting a donor to create a frozen embryo. Clearly the request for the creation falls under IVF and/or surrogacy. Now, regarding embryonic adoption, the act of adopting and implanting the frozen child could not be considered surrogate motherhood. If it is then one could easily argue that normal adoption is a form of surrogacy; another womb carries the child for the couple which has removed “the child’s right from being born from a father and mother known to him and bound to each other by marriage.” This also poses that the act of a normal adoption betrays the couples right of becoming parents only through each other (CCC 2376). We, of course, know that the Church approves the adoption of an abandoned child (CCC 2379).

So, we must remove surrogacy from the argument; but what about IVF? We know that the method or techniques required for IVF are morally unacceptable for two reasons: it undermines the dignity of the child while allowing another dominion over the sacred union of husband and wife (CCC 2377) and it creates extra ‘unwanted’ embryos. Now it is in the term ‘abandoned’ where I believe the adoption of the embryos should be allowed by the Church. According to issue 2379 in the Catholic Catechism, infertile couples have two choices, they can express their generosity by offering themselves to a life of service to others or they can “adopt abandoned children”. Are these embryos not abandoned? Yes, they are; they are no longer desired by their biological parents and are left to die. One person argued that because the act of the original IVF was a sin, the act of adopting the embryos becomes a moral wrong. But was the act that produced the child adopted in a legitimized way not a sin, referring to either sex outside of marriage or the act of rape? Here too we can argue that the ends does not excuse the means, for we offer women and men an option to rid themselves of their responsibility to care for a child produced through the act of sex, allowing them to continue without care for the consequences of their sin. The issue also addresses the possibility of the adoption of the embryos to facilitate a demand; but in America the legitimizing of adoption has created an inflated demand for white babies in which many women will get pregnant just to sell their child. This makes the adoptive parents culpable of the sin by facilitating the demand. We have to remember that there are many who do not follow the law of the Church and will do as they please, but we who do follow the laws will not contribute to the sin by having the embryo created. The issue is not in the creation once the child is created but in the dignity, worth and the status of the life of that child, whether he/she is at the end of fetal development or at the beginning. In actuality, by adopting these abandoned children, we are returning the will of God over their lives to them. If I am wrong in my thinking, please guide me properly to the will of God.

KEVIN:

I have a question to which I legitimately don’t know the answer.

First, I am a new parent of a baby girl (Abigail) who started life as an embryo that my wife and I adopted (we don’t know the parents to this day). Since a part of the process is at the root of my question, let me tell you a piece of our story:

We adopted 5 frozen embryos from the biological parents. They were frozen (as is customary) in ‘strips’- one strip had 3 embryos on it (the one we thawed), the other has 2 (still ‘in the freezer’).

Of the 3 embryos we thawed, 1 died as part of the thawing process. It’s my understanding that when a frozen embryo dies at this stage, the root cause is actually imperfections in the outer cells that get exacerbated by the freezing process. (They actually get irreparably damaged as part of the freezing process; we just don’t know about the damage until thawing).

This left us with 2 to implant. One took hold and grew into Abby, the other died/was passed ‘naturally’.

My understanding is that these statistics are perfectly in line with broad-based averages: 33% die during the thawing process; 50% of those left die/pass/miscarriage after being implanted; the rest are born 9 months later.
Finally, my question: Has my immediate desire for children contributed to putting the embryos (kids) in my charge at additional risk?

What if, in the future, a thawing process is discovered that kills less than 33%? What if there are fertility drugs discovered that increase the odds of implantation to something greater than 50%?

Now I am operating under the assumption that the embryos can remain in a frozen state indefinitely (e.g. a woman in Israel recently delivered twins from 12 year old frozen embryos). So is leaving the embryos frozen for now the safest course of action FOR THEM?

FATHER JOE:

Some ethicists would argue that leaving them frozen might be the only immediate course of action. However, I am not sure how long they can be kept frozen. There is also evidence that this process and the length of cryogenic preservation also degrade the odds for later success with thawing and implantation. As you could see in the post, some argue against embryonic adoption altogether while others contend that it is a selfless and noble pro-life effort, no matter what the odds.

(That is why many of us waited for a definitive answer about it from the Magisterium. The Church had already given a negative verdict to surrogate pregnancy as such, but of course, this was argued as a different question. Now the Holy See has spoken and embryonic adoption is not an option at all for faithful Catholics.)

That makes my earlier speculation rather mute. Rather than directly address your questions, what I can do is praise God for the precious child that survived the process for your little family. Abby is still a miracle of God and I will keep you all in my prayers.

NOT A JOKE:

Have you heard about celebrities wearing frozen embryos in lockets?

http://swiftreport.blogs.com/news/2005/08/more_celebritie.html

FATHER JOE:

I was curious to see how long it took for someone to pick that up. But I am assured that it is a joke. The fake news story reports that certain movie stars and celebrities (like Lindsay Lohan) have embraced the fad of embryonic adoption, but wear them in lockets around their necks, still in cryogenic suspension. Such would reduce human beings to jewelry! If true it would have been all over the news, the biggest thing since the Nazis made lampshades and soap out of Jewish people.

See part 2 of this discussion and the Verdict from ROME.

Links to Spiritual Classics

Much of our religious inheritance is available online: