CONFERENCE OF EUROPEAN CHURCHES
CONFERENCE DES EGLISES EUROPEENNES
KONFERENZ EUROPAEISCHER KIRCHEN


EUROPEAN ECUMENICAL COMMISSION FOR CHURCH AND SOCIETY

MEDICALLY ASSISTED PROCREATION AFTER 20 YEARS

This text, adopted by the Executive Committee of EECCS on 26 November 1998, was prepared by the EECCS Working Group on Bioethics. It summarises the kind of questions which, in the view of EECCS, are posed in this field. It is a first stage of reflection and will be followed up by a more detailed document.

Its first addressee is the Council of Europe's Steering Committee on Bioethics in the hope that the paper will contribute positively to the debates leading to the preparation of a draft Protocol to the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine on the protection of the human embryo and foetus.

It is also intended to encourage reflection of member churches and councils of churches of EECCS and other groups, organisations and individuals linked with the churches.

  1. Louise Brown, the first baby conceived in vitro, that is, outside the mother's body, was born in Manchester on 25 July 1978. Her birth was the result of 10 years' work by biologist R. Edwards and gynaecologist P. Steptoe and marked the beginning of a new era in the field of human reproductive medicine.

  2. That was 20 years ago. To date, this method has resulted in the births (single or multiple) of more than 200,000 children, and the happiness of a corresponding number of parents previously faced with infertility and the sense of failure which this often brings.

  3. Protestant churches responded positively to the initial and subsequent developments in the field of assisted reproduction, which relieves the suffering of couples unable to reproduce naturally.

  4. The rapid advances in genetics and reproductive biology over the last two decades have fostered considerable progress in the technology, which has in its turn speeded up the scientific process. This feedback between science and technology has produced a reproductive technology which amounts to a biotechnological reconstruction of human reproduction. This now gives humankind a new power over our fellow humans.

  5. Biomedicine makes the claim that it has mastered fertility, but what ways does society have for regulating this new mastery? In our desire to contribute as Christians to the public debate on the numerous medical, ethical, biological and social questions raised by assisted reproduction, we now put forward some points regarding what seem to us the more sensitive aspects of new biomedical practices:

  6. The EECCS Working Group on Bioethics is concerned to ensure that technology remains in the service of humanity and not the other way round, and that the interests of unborn children should be the central point of our assessment of biomedical projects on reproduction. We would therefore like to see:

November 1998

Original in French