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NYT and Destruction of Human Life

Apr 26, 2025

What do humans owe “cluster[s] of cells”—the tiny babies we create in laboratories around the world? That’s the question being asked in a series of articles from The New York Times by a journalist (a mother of one baby conceived via IVF and six babies still frozen) grappling with what rights, if any, embryos (human beings made in the image of God!) should have—not just when it comes to the abortion issue but in light of the growing fertility industry as well (an industry that ends untold millions of lives each year).


These articles are sickening and hard to read as they highlight a worldview that views embryos as nothing more than a “cluster of cells” that can be manipulated and discarded at the will of parents, doctors, and embryologists. Even as she asks the questions, it’s obvious from her choice of wording where she lands: embryos are not really persons.


“Cluster of Cells”

Consider the beginning of the introduction to the article series. It features a video of an embryo in a petri dish and says, “This is the embryo that became my daughter.” Notice the language: became my daughter. No, that child did not become the author’s daughter: she was her daughter (and 100% human) from the very moment of fertilization.


The tagline then says, “This report is part [of] a series about the cluster of cells at the crossroads of science, ethics and the law.” What horribly dehumanizing language in that phrase: “the cluster of cells.” That “cluster of cells” is a unique person with a combination of DNA that has never been seen before and that will never be seen again—DNA that codes for sex, hair and eye color, skin shade, and so much more. Everything that makes a person a person is there right from the moment of fertilization. That embryo is much more than a “cluster of cells.” That embryo is a person made in the image of God, being fearfully and wonderfully knit together by him (Psalm 139). That embryo is a living baby.


The author writes, “I’m now the parent of a toddler I love more than I could have imagined and in possession of six remaining embryos, frozen and waiting for my decision on their fate. Like many people who have gone through I.V.F., I have a complicated relationship with them and vacillate between wanting the finality of deciding and holding on to the possibility that they might one day, under circumstances yet unknown, come to life.”


In other words, she knows she holds the power of life and death over six unborn children. She only has a “complicated relationship with them” because she refuses to recognize their humanity. If she viewed them like she views her toddler—as her children, precious and valuable—she would not vacillate between destroying them or allowing them to continue their lives.


Deadly Research

The article features interviews with a variety of scientists involved with experiments on embryos, some of whom struggle with the ethics of their work, others who see the destruction of life as a nonissue. One scientist was involved with the first embryos grown to 14 days, the current guideline for how long a baby can be grown in a lab, and the author describes the end of the “experiment” this way: “As the clock ticked toward Day 14, the Cambridge team had to end its experiments in order to stay compliant with the law. The team removed the remaining embryos from the culture dish and fixed them in slides in order to create images of them and further examine them. Eventually, the samples deteriorated and were disposed of as medical waste.”


These embryos, unique people made in God’s image, are just referred to as “samples” that deserved nothing more than being photographed and then tossed as “medical waste.” What a culture of death we live in!


Of course, scientists who believe in this kind of research and are pushing to be allowed to grow embryos past 14 days believe they are helping humanity by doing so. One researcher was quoted as saying, “In my conscience, I know there are great benefits in pushing past 14 days. . . It may literally save lives in the next generation.” In other words, it’s okay to destroy untold numbers of children because we’re learning about embryonic development and that might save lives (e.g., help prevent miscarriage). But the ends do not justify the means.


Killing vast numbers of embryos for scientific experiments so that we may later save babies (a good end) is not justifiable. Potentially saving future babies does not justify the present killing of babies! We are not to murder (Exodus 20:13), and good ends or intentions don’t justify disregarding God’s command. And deliberately killing a human embryo is murder! It’s child sacrifice. READ MORE


Stay Awake. Keep Watch.


SOURCE: Harbinger's Daily

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