In fact, as Christians we might go as far as to argue that IVF is a moral imperative, saving lives, where chance of success exists?
That’s bizarre. IVF doesn’t save lives. It conceives them and then let’s 99% of them die. I think the distinction here is that every failure means the death of a human being. More failure means more human death and that is absolutely relevant. Cancer treatments do not *cause* death like IVF. Cancer research is not build on malicious logic, it is not built on the death of millions, it is not built on deception from its roots the way IVF was. A failed cancer treatment does not create life to destroy it. There is a clear distinction. To equate cancer treatment, with IVF’s systematic creation and destruction of life is problematic I would say. >> ask those tens of thousands of children conceived by IVF, some of whom are young adults, whether they are glad that their parents took that chance. I think each and every child conceived by IVF is precious, beautiful and loved by God. This is also true of every child conceived regardless of how he or she was conceived, whether it be by an unmarrie