The Human
Person
When Does a Human “Person” Begin?
BY WAYNE JACKSON
When does human
“personhood” begin?
Various answers
are offered to this question, depending upon the individual responding, and his
or her philosophical, or religious persuasion.
The question
cannot be answered from a strictly “scientific” perspective, for science cannot
determine anything about a human “spirit,” much less when its bestowal
initiates a “person.”
Some Theories
Some contend that the entity resulting from conception is not a “human
person” until sometime after birth, when it can be certified
genetically sound.
Such was the
position of Nobel Prize winner Sir Francis Crick, a skeptic who denied that
human beings even have a soul (Howard and Rifkin, 81).
A view among some
is that the fetus becomes “human” at birth.
Those who endorse
the practice of “partial-birth abortion” have no qualms about killing a child
so long as a portion of the tiny body is yet within the birth canal.
Many secular
medical authorities argue that viability is the commencement
of a “human person.”
Viability is
generally defined as the shortest length of pregnancy after which a child that
is born prematurely has a chance of survival. Generally, this ranges from 20-27
weeks.
Conservative
scholars within the framework of “Christendom” contend that personhood
commences at conception.
In April of 1981,
a distinguished panel of geneticists and physicians testified before the Senate
Judiciary Committee with reference to the nature of the human organism that is
produced by the union of a sperm and ovum.
Dr. McCarthy de Mere, a medical doctor and law professor at the
University of Tennessee, testified as follows: “The exact moment of the beginning of personhood and
of the human body is at the moment of conception” (emp. WJ).
Known as the “Father of Modern Genetics,” Dr. Jerome Lejeune told the
lawmakers: “To accept the fact that after
fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being
is no longer a matter of taste or opinion . . . it is plain experimental
evidence” (emp. WJ).
Note the testimony of world-renowned geneticist Theodosius Dobzhansky,
an atheist: “A human being begins
his existence when a spermatozoon fertilizes an egg cell” (10; emp. WJ).
Even the late Isaac Asimov, a rabid enemy of the Bible, conceded that “the human being . . . begins
life as a fertilized ovum” (20; emp. WJ).
Neither of these
men believed in the existence of a “soul”; nonetheless, they acknowledged that
the union of sperm and egg is the commencement of a human person.
To purposefully destroy
a human embryo is to take the life of a human being.
A Recent Claim
Recently I was introduced to a theory advanced by some gentlemen who
wanted to “bounce” off me some arguments relative to an idea they apparently
are considering.
They contend that
one cannot prove that the “spirit,” as bestowed by God, enters the sperm-egg
union at that point in time; rather, they allege it is more likely that the
spirit enters the embryo when the latter implants itself within the
uterus.
There was
absolutely no biblical argument offered for this position.
The claim was
simply this: one cannot prove that the “spirit” is bestowed at the
time of the sperm-egg union, i.e., at conception.
In view of this
position, these questions, designed to focus the issue, surely are appropriate.
(a) Is the pre-implanted embryo living or non-living?
(b) Is the embryo human or non-human? The answer to the first question
is too evident to warrant further discussion. The response to the second is
similarly apparent.
The embryo certainly is neither fish, reptile, fowl, or beast; if fully developed it will never be anything other than a man or woman.
The embryo certainly is neither fish, reptile, fowl, or beast; if fully developed it will never be anything other than a man or woman.
(c) Is the human embryo a person or non-person? If one answers that it
is a non-person, upon what basis is this judgment made? That proposition must
be supported with evidence if it is to be affirmed.
The Consequence of
the Teaching
Reflect upon this necessary deduction: If human embryos are not
“persons” prior to implantation, then they are appropriate candidates for
experimentation, or any utilitarian purpose, e.g., stem cell research, and
extermination — at the whims of scientists!
There are
approximately 400,000 frozen human embryos now awaiting an uncertain destiny.
What Christian can possibly live with this conclusion?
In the course of
my communications with the gentlemen mentioned earlier, it became fairly apparent
to me that primarily they are motivated by the fact that certain birth-control
procedures are designed to destroy the fertilized egg before it reaches the
uterus.
Thus, if it could
be demonstrated that the embryo is not a human person until implantation,
elimination procedures prior to that event could be justified. This position,
we contend, is fallacious.
Person versus
House
With the union of spermatozoon and egg, a new living entity is formed
that, in its microscopic-genetic substance, consists of everything it ever will
be genetically — if sustained with water, oxygen, and nutrition.
The implantation
in the uterus is analogous to moving into a house that has been designed to
facilitate the resident.
It makes as little
sense to argue that a baby is not a person until it enters the house in which
it will live, as it does to allege that the embryo is not a person until it
reaches the uterus.
Is it permissible
to practice infanticide while the child is en route to the house, but not after
it has entered?
Biblical Evidence
— Old Testament
As we noted earlier, “science” cannot speak to the issue of the
“spirit,” for the spirit is a non-material entity.
On the other hand,
for those who respect the testimony of the Scriptures, if there is light to be
shed on the “spirit” issue, surely it will be within the pages of sacred
literature.
Is there biblical
information that provides help in this regard? Yes. The Bible writers take for
granted that personhood begins at conception.
The Hebrew Old
Testament uses the word zera’ (seed)
both literally and figuratively.
In a literal sense it may be used of seed planted in a field. “The most frequent metaphorical use of . . .
zera’ (seed) is employment to designate human seed, i.e., offspring and
descendant(s)” (VanGemeren,
1152).
The word can
signify an individual person, as in the case of the coming Messiah (Genesis 3:15), the people of the
nation of Israel (Genesis
15:5; 22:18), or, prophetically, Christians (Psalm 22:30; Isaiah 53:10; cf. “children” – Hebrews 2:13).
Now here is an important point. In Numbers 5:28, a woman was said to “conceive
seed,” or as the English Standard Version reads, “conceive children.”
That which is “conceived” is not a blob that later
becomes a child; it is a child.
David declared: “In sin did my mother conceive me” (Psalm 51:5).
Calvinists pervert
this text in an attempt to prove original sin; they misunderstand the
hyperbolic nature of the language (cf. Job 31:18; Psalm 22:10).
That aside, the
text assuredly indicates that David considered himself a person (“me”) from the
moment of his conception.
In Psalm 139, David described God’s care of him even at the earliest
stages of his development. He said that Jehovah saw “my unformed substance” (verse 16).
The Hebrew expression appears to denote the “undeveloped embryo” (Kirkpatrick, 789;
cf. Kidner, 466; emp WJ).
The “embryo”
exists before implantation.
Biblical Evidence
– New Testament
A Greek word corresponding to the Old Testament zera’ is sperma (seed).
It is found 217
times in the Greek Old Testament (Septuagint; LXX), and 44 times in the
Greek New Testament.
Likewise, it is
employed metaphorically for a person; and this “seed” (person) commences at
“conception” (see Hebrews
11:11).
Both Elizabeth and Mary are said to have “conceived” a “son”
— not mere tissue (Luke
1:36). It will scarcely be denied that “son” in this context indicates a
person.
James wrote: “The body apart from the spirit is dead” (James 2:26).
The text suggests
(by implication) that the spirit is present as soon as there is a living body.
That tiny “body” commences at conception.
But is it proper
to designate the embryo as a “body”? How is a living human to be defined?
By the time the
embryo reaches the uterus, it already has developed into a conglomerate of some
50 to 150 cells. This tiny organism exhibits all the
characteristics of a living body.
·
It has independent movement.
·
It experiences true growth, the
multiplication of cells.
·
It responds to external stimuli.
·
It is capable of metabolism, i.e., it breaks
down products outside of itself for the production of energy.
The fact that it
is so small in no way nullifies the reality that this is a living body.
This information,
combined with James’ affirmation, argues for the presence of the “spirit” or
“soul” of that person.
The divine
equation is this: body – spirit = corpse; body + spirit = living person.
To classify this
process of logical reasoning as mere “assumption,” as some have done, is incredible!
It is logical inference, not assumption.
Defensive Quibbles
As suggested earlier, after analyzing the statements of some of those
who justify the destruction of the embryo prior to implantation, I am convinced
that the prime motive behind this position either is:
(a) guilt for having sanctioned birth control methods that are known to
abort the embryo;
(b) a desire to defend a practice that is perceived to be a convenient
method of birth control. Some argue in this fashion.
1.If all embryos
have a spirit, and;
2.Oral
contraceptives abort embryos;
3.Then, oral
contraceptives kill embryos with spirits, thus people.
The “syllogism” is constructed incorrectly. If the conclusion is to
follow, the minor premise (2) must read: “All
oral contraceptives kill embryos.” That was not proved.
A contraceptive
designed to destroy an embryo is immoral. One aimed at
simply suppressing ovulation is not. A wife should be informed
as to the nature of the pill she uses.
Another argument
being employed relates to what is called the “Luteal phase defect” (LPD), which is believed to occasionally
interfere with the implantation of embryos during the postpartum breast-feeding
span.
Unbelievably, some
contend that God “designed women in such
a way as to cause” LPD, and therefore this destruction of an embryo is
evidence that the spirit is not present.
What about the
many causes of “miscarriage” after uterine
implantation?
Do these tragic
occurrences likewise suggest that the fetus is not a human person; thus,
abortion is permissible anywhere en route to birth?
The fact
is, LPD is recognized as a “disorder,”
a “defect” — not something divinely
purposed.
One might as well
argue that heart attacks and cancer have been divinely designed.
The human body is
fraught with many weaknesses as a consequence of the long-term effects of sin.
Disorders and
death are attributed to Satan (Luke 13:16; John 8:44b), not God.
Does the fact that
disease takes life argue that one may kill his neighbor with impunity?
Conclusion
It is unconscionable that men who profess to represent Jesus Christ
should advocate that the deliberate destruction of an embryo is a moral act
that carries the approval of the Creator.
Yet even good men
can be caught up in societal trends. Such is a tragic reality.
May those who seek
to be advocates of Christianity study carefully and reason logically.
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