INDIANAPOLIS — Southern Baptist delegates expressed alarm Wednesday over the way in vitro fertilization is routinely being practiced, approving a resolution lamenting that the creation of surplus frozen embryos often results in ''destruction of embryonic human life.''
They urged members to carefully weigh the ethical implications of the technology while also expressing sympathy with couples ''who experience the searing pain of infertility.''
The resolution — approved near the end of the Southern Baptist Convention's two-day annual meeting — affirms that embryos are human beings from the moment of fertilization, whether in the womb or generated in the laboratory via IVF. That's the same position held by the Alabama Supreme Court in ruling that frozen embryos have the full rights of people.
In the wake of that decision, Alabama passed a law shielding IVF providers from prosecution and lawsuits — reflecting that even in a state with strong anti-abortion sentiment, there is support for a technology used by many couples facing infertility.
The resolution also urged couples to adopt surplus frozen embryos that would otherwise be destroyed.
Did the resolution condemn IVF or call for its banning?
Not in a blanket way. What it did was denounce the routine practice of creating multiple embryos, frozen for potential use but often with surplus embryos destroyed. It also denounced the use of embryos for experiments, as well as ''dehumanizing methods for determining suitability for life and genetic sorting, based on notions of genetic fitness and parental preferences.''
Kristen Ferguson, chair of the committee on resolutions, said after the vote that the resolution amounts to the SBC's first foray into a new ethnical frontier but rooted in their longstanding belief in ''the sanctity of the human embryo.''