Thread: The sins of the mothers Board: Oblivion / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
The Russian Orthodox Church has ruled that a baby carried by a surrogate mother cannot be baptised until its parents repent of the sin of having used a surrogate.

A pretty fierce debate is ringing about this in my corner of Orthodoxfacebookland. What do the people here think? Are they taking out the sins the parents on the child, or "protecting the sanctity" of the sacrament, or trying to ensure the child will be brought up in the Orthodox faith, or just whack?

My opinion is that the Synod is using the child as a pawn to compel the parents to bow down to its moral authority.
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
And here is me mistakenly thinking that the Orthodox Church was evangelical, urgently desiring that all who will be mystically united to Christ through baptism, chrismation, and Eucharist.

Dolts!
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
Since when are the sins of the parents a barrier to an infant's baptism? Most churches hold that the parents must desire to raise their children in a Christian manner and raise them in the Christian faith. Baptism is NOT the Lord's Supper where repentance of sin is an intrinsic part of the sacrament.
 
Posted by Macrina (# 8807) on :
 
I can only imagine how deeply this is going to inspire those parents to raise their children in the Church.

Honestly. It's an awe inspiring, challenging and jaw droppingly beautiful form of Christianity. Why do they have to mess it up so much?
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
A pretty fierce debate is ringing about this in my corner of Orthodoxfacebookland. What do the people here think? Are they taking out the sins the parents on the child, or "protecting the sanctity" of the sacrament, or trying to ensure the child will be brought up in the Orthodox faith, or just whack?

According to your own linked source (which ultimately happens to be a Catholic news agency...), we at least know what the Russian bishops intended: "Infant baptism, the statement continued, presumes “upbringing in the Christian faith and according to the norms of Christian morality.” Such an upbringing cannot be assumed, the synod stated, unless those presenting the infant for baptism – either the parents or the surrogate mother – repent. Without such repentance, baptism must be deferred until the child can make the choice."
 
Posted by churchgeek (# 5557) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
A pretty fierce debate is ringing about this in my corner of Orthodoxfacebookland. What do the people here think? Are they taking out the sins the parents on the child, or "protecting the sanctity" of the sacrament, or trying to ensure the child will be brought up in the Orthodox faith, or just whack?

According to your own linked source (which ultimately happens to be a Catholic news agency...), we at least know what the Russian bishops intended: "Infant baptism, the statement continued, presumes “upbringing in the Christian faith and according to the norms of Christian morality.” Such an upbringing cannot be assumed, the synod stated, unless those presenting the infant for baptism – either the parents or the surrogate mother – repent. Without such repentance, baptism must be deferred until the child can make the choice."
While I don't necessarily agree with this, I can understand it. What I'd like to know, though, is how they intend to help the child make that choice, especially since it looks like the child, its parents, and the surrogate mother are being pushed (pastorally, at least) away from the church. It's also not going to be easily forgotten that the parents and surrogate were asked to repent for brining this child into the world. How would any of us feel knowing the church thought we shouldn't have existed? And then that we weren't allowed to be baptized until our parents agreed that we shouldn't have been born? Yikes.

Also, we all know that motives can be mixed, though, and while the stated intention of the Bishops is understandable, it wouldn't be surprising if this were also an action taken to make a statement about the church's teaching on surrogacy.

(How bizarre to tell a woman who has given her body for 9 months and gone through labor and childbirth all for others that she has sinned!)

Can't the church "let the little children come unto Me" by finding suitable godparents at least? It seems like pastorally, that could ensure (as much as anything can) the child's upbringing in the faith.

But I, as an Anglican, have no problem with surrogacy. Maybe it would look very different if I did.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
It is false anyway to say that the parents present the child for baptism. The godparents present the child for baptism, not the parents. The parents don't even take part in the service. They sit (well, stand) and watch as the godparents hold the baby and recite the pledges.

I've never heard of a requirement for the parents to go to confession before baptism. And there are plenty of cases where the parents aren't Orthodox, maybe not even Christian, but the child is brought to be baptised by the grandparents, who are.

This is generally not the sort of thing that has a zero-tolerance, mandatory-sentencing, make-a-federal-case-about-it type rule made about it in the Orthodox Church. This kind of thing could be handled quietly and discreetly by the priest and the couple, without the bishops making a big international spectacle out of the whole thing. Hard not to accuse them of grandstanding. They're coming across like American Teabaggers more than historically attuned Orthodox bishops.

Like I said, the bishops are using the child as a pawn to punish the parents. Which will have the effect of driving all of them away from the church. Good going, bishops. Yeah, you really handled this well.

I also agree with churchgeek: The synod is basically saying, "This child ought not to exist, and the parents need to repent of having brought it into being." Yeah, that's a Christian message to send.

This is pro-life? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
I find it quite interesting that official Russian orthodox teaching (what is Russian Orthodox speak for "magisterium"?) is that artificial insemination is morally licit as long as fertilized eggs are not destroyed. I infer that they do believe that human life and personhood start with conception, aligning the Russian Orthodox with RC teaching and presumably meaning a strict condemnation of abortion.

quote:
Originally posted by churchgeek:
(How bizarre to tell a woman who has given her body for 9 months and gone through labor and childbirth all for others that she has sinned!)

Surrogate mothers do not generally accept this "job" out of the goodness of their hearts, but for substantial amounts of money. Whether this particular mode of using one's body to obtain money is sinful (like prostitution) or not (like most manual labour) is a valid question. But it is not settled simply by virtue of accepting the pregnancy.

However, I would be very interested in the Russian bishops' argumentation against surrogacy. After all, from a RC point of view they pretty much gave the argument away by allowing artificial insemination in the first place.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
It is false anyway to say that the parents present the child for baptism. The godparents present the child for baptism, not the parents. The parents don't even take part in the service. They sit (well, stand) and watch as the godparents hold the baby and recite the pledges.

I've never heard of a requirement for the parents to go to confession before baptism. And there are plenty of cases where the parents aren't Orthodox, maybe not even Christian, but the child is brought to be baptised by the grandparents, who are.

Wow, how weird and ... wrong. Clearly this is a case where the East can learn proper orthopraxis - indeed, rather obvious and simple prudence - from the West.
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
Okaaaaay.

Riddle me this, then.

In what other cases is the neglecting of "ecclesial tradition and [the not sharing of] the Christian teaching about marriage and family" [note, last para.] sufficient to deny baptism to an infant presented?

Are the children of unmarried couples routinely refused baptism and the priest who performs them subject to canonical sanctions?

In the case of marital rape or of spousal abuse of the husband upon the mother? Does the Russian Holy Mother Church require the repentance of the father for failing to share the Church's teaching?


And, in a different strain of questions, reading my handy-dandy Trebnik raises these.

Baptism is a piece of a full "Entry into the Church."

What do the worthy Bishops of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church have to say about a priest who dares to go to the house to pray over a child and mother on the first day after birth?

Who dares to preside in the church on the eighth day for the naming of the child?

Who dares to pray in the church on the fortieth day after the birth?

Who dares to make the child a catechumen immediately preceding the baptism? That evangelical service in which the sponsors are three times interrogated by the priest, "Do you renounce Satan, and all his works, and all his angels, and all his service, and all his pride?" And, then asked a further three times, "Have you renounced Satan?" And then asked three times, "Do you unite yourself to Christ?" then confirmed by asking "Have you united yourself to Christ?" and "Do you believe in Him?" (And, this Trebnik suggests that these ten questions together with the recitation of the Symbol of Faith is repeated in their entirety a second and, yet again, a third time!)

Do these bishops have so little faith? So little faith in the power of their own liturgy to convert?!

After the Chrismation the sponsors are exhorted by the priest to rejoice that those sponsors, "who have strived today [emphasis in the original] in church, for a new rod has been grafted to the True Vine, Christ the Lord...for you have received from the divine font this child of grace and light...and have been made for him a spiritual father with a commission and reception on earth," to "instruct him in the Orthodox-Catholic Faith, all its ordinance...to lead him to a life...according to the Christian calling."

Finally, let it be said that this despicable denial of baptism (and life!) is all about exercising discipline over the priest and has nought to do with the child, except as the denied baptisand becomes some collateral damage in this misbegotten skirmish in the cultural war being waged by these Thug-Bishops and their complicit Thug-Priests, their campaign against the lives of gay people being yet another front at which lives are being lost.

[ 06. January 2014, 13:03: Message edited by: The Silent Acolyte ]
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Freaks.

Bring the child here, I'll do it.

Poor wee thing.
 
Posted by EtymologicalEvangelical (# 15091) on :
 
The Bible doesn't seem to have a problem with surrogate motherhood:

Genesis 30:1-13

With particular reference to verse 3: 'So she said, "Here is my maid Bilhah; go in to her, and she will bear a child on my knees, that I also may have children by her."'

Or perhaps some mental acrobatics can be performed to pretend that this was not God's will, even though the sons of Jacob became the basis for the tribes of God's chosen people?

[ 06. January 2014, 13:32: Message edited by: EtymologicalEvangelical ]
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
Thanks to TSA for the link, which included references to a "BSC" that clearly had relevant doctrinal content. Assuming that the abbreviation stood for "The Basis of the Social Concept of the Russian Orthodox Church" I followed the link for that. And see what I have found: a collection of serious Orthodox documents, in English. Cool. And yes, the quotes are from that document.

quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
Freaks. Bring the child here, I'll do it. Poor wee thing.

The parents could also do the baptising themselves, at least according to Western understanding. The issue at hand is however the recognition of the Church.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
... After all, from a RC point of view they pretty much gave the argument away by allowing artificial insemination in the first place. ...

Tangent alert
Does the RC church forbid artificial insemination using the husband's sperm in cases of infertility where this is the only way of achieving fertilisation? After all, it's not adulterous.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
Tangent alert
Does the RC church forbid artificial insemination using the husband's sperm in cases of infertility where this is the only way of achieving fertilisation? After all, it's not adulterous.

Yes, if by artificial insemination one means a replacement rather than a technical facilitation of the conjugal act. See here, scroll down to the header "B. HOMOLOGOUS ARTIFICIAL FERTILIZATION".
 
Posted by Jade Constable (# 17175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
I find it quite interesting that official Russian orthodox teaching (what is Russian Orthodox speak for "magisterium"?) is that artificial insemination is morally licit as long as fertilized eggs are not destroyed. I infer that they do believe that human life and personhood start with conception, aligning the Russian Orthodox with RC teaching and presumably meaning a strict condemnation of abortion.

quote:
Originally posted by churchgeek:
(How bizarre to tell a woman who has given her body for 9 months and gone through labor and childbirth all for others that she has sinned!)

Surrogate mothers do not generally accept this "job" out of the goodness of their hearts, but for substantial amounts of money. Whether this particular mode of using one's body to obtain money is sinful (like prostitution) or not (like most manual labour) is a valid question. But it is not settled simply by virtue of accepting the pregnancy.

However, I would be very interested in the Russian bishops' argumentation against surrogacy. After all, from a RC point of view they pretty much gave the argument away by allowing artificial insemination in the first place.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
It is false anyway to say that the parents present the child for baptism. The godparents present the child for baptism, not the parents. The parents don't even take part in the service. They sit (well, stand) and watch as the godparents hold the baby and recite the pledges.

I've never heard of a requirement for the parents to go to confession before baptism. And there are plenty of cases where the parents aren't Orthodox, maybe not even Christian, but the child is brought to be baptised by the grandparents, who are.

Wow, how weird and ... wrong. Clearly this is a case where the East can learn proper orthopraxis - indeed, rather obvious and simple prudence - from the West.

Iirc surrogacy cannot be done for money in the UK (I know this case isn't in the UK, but making the point that surrogacy isn't about the monetary gain everywhere).
 
Posted by HCH (# 14313) on :
 
I am led to wonder whether the baptism of a foundling would be permitted. After all, if the parents are unknown, then they might well have used artificial insemination.

The title of the thread seems odd; every child has two (biological) parents.
 
Posted by Erroneous Monk (# 10858) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
Tangent alert
Does the RC church forbid artificial insemination using the husband's sperm in cases of infertility where this is the only way of achieving fertilisation? After all, it's not adulterous.

Yes, if by artificial insemination one means a replacement rather than a technical facilitation of the conjugal act. See here, scroll down to the header "B. HOMOLOGOUS ARTIFICIAL FERTILIZATION".
However, this would not prevent an RC priest baptising a baby conceived in vitro, would it? Any more than it would prevent an RC priest baptising a child of unmarried parents?
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
Yes, if by artificial insemination one means a replacement rather than a technical facilitation of the conjugal act. See here, scroll down to the header "B. HOMOLOGOUS ARTIFICIAL FERTILIZATION".

IngoB, can you explain this Instruction in words ordinary people can understand? Have I got this right that it is permitted if the couple are regularly engaging in ordinary sexual intercourse without using contraception, but the wife is not getting pregnant. However, it is not permitted if the couple are not regularly engaging in ordinary sexual intercourse, and use AI as a substitute for conception by normal means?

Or does it mean something else, and if so, what - in terms one can understand?
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
quote:
With at least one wikipedia articla, HCH asserts:
every child has two (biological) parents.

A little poking around at the possibilities shows this to be unhelpfully restrictive. The woman who provides the womb for gestation, in addition to the woman who provides the egg, surely can be said to have a biological relation to the child.

Perhaps genetic and gestational are more helpful qualifiers.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by HCH:
The title of the thread seems odd; every child has two (biological) parents.

Not sure what that has to do with the title; the title wasn't chosen to enumerate biological parents, but to allude to the "sin" in question, which has to do with there being an inordinate number (according to their august majesties the Synod of the ROC) of mothers involved in birthing this child. The "mothers" in question are the egg donor (biological mother as concerns DNA) and the surrogate (biological mother as concerns gestation).
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:

My opinion is that the Synod is using the child as a pawn to compel the parents to bow down to its moral authority.

Given the recent history of the Synod, I see this conclusion as inevitable.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
Or does it mean something else, and if so, what - in terms one can understand?

It is not my intention to derail this thread with yet another discussion about Catholic sexual morality. I'm very happy that we are discussing Orthodox sexual morality for once. So I will keep my response crude and brief: man and woman marry for life, he occasionally sticks his penis into her vagina and (eventually) ejaculates in there as far as capable, whether conception occurs is left to the natural state of their bodies. That's allowed by Catholic lights. Nothing else. Simples. For more sophisticated discussions see the Vatican documents or indeed the multitude of prior discussions of Catholic sexual morality.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Do they baptise children born to the adulterous partners of men married to per women?

Have they in the past baptised children born to servants/slaves/concubines/mistresses of rich men? (We could start by asking about the illegitimate children of Tsars)

Will they baptise children of second wives of polygamous marriages?

I bet the answer is "yes" to all of those.

How is this different for them?
 
Posted by PaulBC (# 13712) on :
 
I find this quite odd. Even if a surrogate has been paid she still has done a good thing in carrying the child for the couple. So where be the sin ? Don't see it myself.
Where does that put on the BVM who in my opinion is the first surrogate mother and
God enginered that event.
 
Posted by Eliab (# 9153) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jade Constable:
Iirc surrogacy cannot be done for money in the UK (I know this case isn't in the UK, but making the point that surrogacy isn't about the monetary gain everywhere).

It can be, and it is. However the Courts will not enforce contracts for surrogacy. The surrogate cannot sue for the agreed fee. It's similar to the approach taken to gambling debts: you can't sue for them, but that doesn't mean that gambling for money doesn't happen.


I find it odd that the parents aren't involved in the baptismal promises in the Orthodox church (especially as it is a church which clearly considers baptism to be extremely important). Anglican baptisms I've attended have always had parents and godparents repenting of sins, turning to Christ and renouncing evil. I'm aware that priests often carry out baptismal preparation where the meaning and importance of those declarations are explained. If, in Orthodoxy, that is not considered necessary or usual, I can't see why surrogacy should be a special case.
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
What's the theological term used to describe someone born of a surrogate mother?

Is it an impediment to a person becoming an Orthodox priest, in the same way being illegitimate used to require dispensation in order to be ordained a priest in the Catholic Church? For that matter, did the same barrier to ordaining illegitimate men ever exist in the Orthodox Church?
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eliab:
It can be, and it is. However the Courts will not enforce contracts for surrogacy. The surrogate cannot sue for the agreed fee. It's similar to the approach taken to gambling debts: you can't sue for them, but that doesn't mean that gambling for money doesn't happen. ...

I'm fairly sure it's also the case that if the surrogate is overcome by maternal feelings and decides not to hand the child back to the commissioning parents, there is diddlysquat they can do about it.

It's a bit of a controversial subject, but I get the impression the whole idea of surrogate motherhood and hiring wombs inspires quite a lot of visceral distaste in the UK, to a degree that it doesn't seem to arouse in some other countries.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Palimpsest:
What's the theological term used to describe someone born of a surrogate mother?

Human.
 
Posted by Nicolemr (# 28) on :
 
One of my cousins has twins that are genetically hers and her husbands but were gestated by a surrogate mother. Although I have never spoken to my cousin about this, it is my understanding from other family members that the reason they are not Roman Catholic now is because a priest would not baptize the babies. So apparently it isn't just the Orthodox. They went to an Episcopalian church and had it done there.
 
Posted by Jade Constable (# 17175) on :
 
Up until at least Elizabethan times, it was usual in RC England for parents to not be present at a child's baptism. The infant would usually be baptised before the mother had finished her lying-in, for starters.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Palimpsest:
What's the theological term used to describe someone born of a surrogate mother?

Human.
[Overused]

quote:
Originally posted by Palimpsest:
did the same barrier to ordaining illegitimate men ever exist in the Orthodox Church?

That I do not know.
 
Posted by hugorune (# 17793) on :
 
I don't understand Orthodoxy nearly as well as most here, but this troubles me deeply. I don't believe Christ intended for his grace to be denied to anyone on account of his or her own sin, let alone that of their parents.

Indeed as a general rule, I'm not comfortable with the church putting itself forward as an arbiter of salvation. Hence why I passionately favour open communion to absolutely all who are baptised and come with a faithful heart, and this seems to me to be the same principle.

In this case where there is clearly a disagreement with the church and their families over whether a sin has occured, the church should perhaps feel free to share whatever wisdom they possess on the matter, but they should administer the sacrament nonetheless. The rest is up to God, who is merciful to the faithful.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
The rest is up to God, who is merciful to the faithful.

That's the spiritual corruption of most modern churches in a nutshell.

Now, do we have some conservative Orthodox who is going to step up for the bishops of Russia? Take heart.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
Before we all ride on in hoity-toity majesty on this, reflect a little.

I think we're all agreed that the church should not condemn a child because of the sins of his or her parents, nor because they have made moral choices that we regard (possibly in this case correctly) as understandable but defective.

Nevertheless, very few churches these days encourage indiscriminate baptism of all comers, the way that was done sixty years ago. There are different views on the objective efficacy of baptismal regeneration. Nevertheless, the higher one's view, the more it is an abuse of a sacrament to administer it in that way. Indiscriminate baptism can look like the equivalent of taking communion without discerning the body. One could say that a child is in more mortal peril being baptised by parents who don't take the rite seriously than by not being baptised until he or she attains an age to decide for themself.

I suspect that virtually all the various churches and congregations to which shipmates belong apply some sort of discipline to the process. The CofE generally expects parents of babies who are going to be baptised to attend preparation sessions, and godparents as well if possible. It also expects clergy to provide them and disapproves of those that don't.

Whether we agree with the way the Russian church's approach to this particular issue is a quite different matter. I don't know, and nor I suspect do most other shipmates, whether this is a protest decision about something that is rare to unknown in Russia but disapproved of elsewhere, making a stand against the decadent west, or whether there has developed a fashionable trend for rich oligarchs to do this so as to protect their figures. If the former, that is grandstanding. If the latter, then IMHO the Synod has a point and I take off my hat to them.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulBC:
I find this quite odd. Even if a surrogate has been paid she still has done a good thing in carrying the child for the couple. So where be the sin ? Don't see it myself.
Where does that put on the BVM who in my opinion is the first surrogate mother and
God enginered that event.

This. I find it very odd and unloving.

What about children born by AID? (or AIH for that matter - I have one of them!)

In the case of AID and AIH no one need know except the medical teams. It's a sad world when giving life and love is seen as a sin.
 
Posted by pydseybare (# 16184) on :
 
I don't believe in baptism as a sacrament, but if I did and I wanted to be part of a church which had this kind of teaching, I can't see that it is inconsistent to expect parents to repent of sins (or even specific sins) before their child is baptised.

I suppose one might say that there is a uncalled for randomness implicit in this specific sin (why should the parents be called on this rather than anything else?) - but then that is the way of these things.

Ultimately, perhaps, the parents should have thought of the impact upon their family of being rejected by their church because of their choice to have a surrogate. I guess they're still free to a) repent b) give up on the idea of baptising their child or c) join a different church.
 
Posted by hugorune (# 17793) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pydseybare:


I suppose one might say that there is a uncalled for randomness implicit in this specific sin (why should the parents be called on this rather than anything else?) - but then that is the way of these things.

It's not randomness. It's self-righteousness. Far too often those in the church hieracy condemn others for specifically selected sins that they do not commit themselves. When was the last time you saw a church deny sacraments to believers on the basis of unrepentant pride? Never. It's far easy for us to condemn others, and be righteous in our own eyes, on the basis of those sins which others commit.
 
Posted by pydseybare (# 16184) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
quote:
Originally posted by pydseybare:


I suppose one might say that there is a uncalled for randomness implicit in this specific sin (why should the parents be called on this rather than anything else?) - but then that is the way of these things.

It's not randomness. It's self-righteousness. Far too often those in the church hieracy condemn others for specifically selected sins that they do not commit themselves. When was the last time you saw a church deny sacraments to believers on the basis of unrepentant pride? Never. It's far easy for us to condemn others, and be righteous in our own eyes, on the basis of those sins which others commit.
Woo there sailor, it isn't my opinion, my church or my theology. Nothing could persuade me that this was anything other than Wrong. But then I accept the right of others to make choices in things that I feel are entirely Wrong.

Self-righteousness is essentially a matter of opinion - one doesn't actually have to have committed murder to believe it is a sin.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
When was the last time you saw a church deny sacraments to believers on the basis of unrepentant pride? Never.

How precisely would you go about determining that someone is mortally sinning through unrepentant pride?
 
Posted by hugorune (# 17793) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pydseybare:
Woo there sailor, it isn't my opinion, my church or my theology. Nothing could persuade me that this was anything other than Wrong. But then I accept the right of others to make choices in things that I feel are entirely Wrong.

Self-righteousness is essentially a matter of opinion - one doesn't actually have to have committed murder to believe it is a sin.

I fully understand that and I wasn't trying to have a go at you personally, although I would venture the opinion that surrogacy is hardly murder.

The point I'm trying to make is that when church authorities condemn those actions which they consider sinful (when society in general tolerates them), there is a very high tendency for those condemned actions to be external to them. For example, conservative churches speak out far more often on the issue of same sex marriage than they do on divorce. Although it's questionable if the former is more of a threat to the sacrament of marriage than the latter, the latter tends to make them uncomfortable due to the actions of their own members. I don't think this is a coincidence.

[ 07. January 2014, 09:19: Message edited by: hugorune ]
 
Posted by hugorune (# 17793) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
When was the last time you saw a church deny sacraments to believers on the basis of unrepentant pride? Never.

How precisely would you go about determining that someone is mortally sinning through unrepentant pride?
I think we have a pretty good example of it when the Church withholds sacraments to show how righteous they are.
 
Posted by Ad Orientem (# 17574) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
When was the last time you saw a church deny sacraments to believers on the basis of unrepentant pride? Never.

How precisely would you go about determining that someone is mortally sinning through unrepentant pride?
I think we have a pretty good example of it when the Church withholds sacraments to show how righteous they are.
So the Church shouldn't withold the sacraments to anyone for any reason then?
 
Posted by hugorune (# 17793) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ad Orientem:
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by hugorune:
When was the last time you saw a church deny sacraments to believers on the basis of unrepentant pride? Never.

How precisely would you go about determining that someone is mortally sinning through unrepentant pride?
I think we have a pretty good example of it when the Church withholds sacraments to show how righteous they are.
So the Church shouldn't withold the sacraments to anyone for any reason then?
No, I would not say that. If a person believed their own righteousness made them worthy to receive the sacraments, than I would say the sacrament should be withheld.
 
Posted by Ad Orientem (# 17574) on :
 
But then would that, according to you, also make the Church....er...nevermind! [brick wall]
 
Posted by hugorune (# 17793) on :
 
I know, Ad Orientum. I'm not very good at this. I passionately believe in open communion and everything implied by that, but I don't think my theology is good enough to properly defend it. I'll work on that - or I may learn something that will change my opinion. We'll see [Smile]
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
Many of the responses here seem to glide over the morally problematic nature of surrogacy, especially when for pay.

I am willing to consider that it may be sinful to essentially rent a woman's womb - perhaps that is degrading to that woman.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
If there is anything I understand about surrogate motherhood it's that it is a very complex issue. I for one wouldn't dare to start discussing it in detail. But the debate on this thread has fortified my dislike for the the traditional idea of 'sin', showing that it is much too one-dimensional to be helpful in a case like this.
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
But - as I understand it - the morally problematic nature of surrogacy is not what the thread is about. It's about withholding baptism from a child who did not choose the manner of its birth in order to coerce someone else into doing something.

I agree with churchgeek:

quote:
It's also not going to be easily forgotten that the parents and surrogate were asked to repent for bringing this child into the world. How would any of us feel knowing the church thought we shouldn't have existed? And then that we weren't allowed to be baptized until our parents agreed that we shouldn't have been born? Yikes.
Incidentally, if fertility treatment works the same way in Russia as it does in the UK then the subject line of this thread is inaccurate. The consent of the sperm donor is also required to create an embryo, so the child is being punished for the sins of both/all three parents. Not just the mother/s.

[ 07. January 2014, 10:39: Message edited by: Jane R ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
It's about withholding baptism from a child who did not choose the manner of its birth....

That would be all of them then.
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
Exactly.
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
But - as I understand it - the morally problematic nature of surrogacy is not what the thread is about. It's about withholding baptism from a child who did not choose the manner of its birth in order to coerce someone else into doing something.

I think it's a blunt instrument for a nuanced situation. Nonetheless it doesn't stop anyone from getting their baby baptized, as long as they accept the church's teaching that the use of the surrogate was wrong.

Orthodox on Surrogacy

This link seems to say that the baptism is not withheld from the child, in that if the parents never accept that surrogacy is sinful, the child can be baptized in good faith when old enough to choose for him or herself.

The reason I raised the moral issues around surrogacy, is to suggest that it might be right for parents who use it to consider them after the fact. In the least generous way of looking at surrogacy (for the purpose of the debate), it is renting a woman's body and then buying the baby she has carried.
 
Posted by Late Paul (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
But - as I understand it - the morally problematic nature of surrogacy is not what the thread is about. It's about withholding baptism from a child who did not choose the manner of its birth in order to coerce someone else into doing something.

And by the same token you'd be "imposing" baptism on the child who did not choose it if you were to go ahead. As with any infant baptism of course. So if you believe in paedo-baptism ISTM that you are always dealing with the choices of more than just the child (or even child+parents) and so there's always an element of one party's actions affecting the others involved. From that point of view the ruling makes sense.

I think it does seem harsh to me, but maninly because a) I'm not a paedo-baptist, b) I don't have a very high view of sacraments and c) I don't think surrogacy is automatically sinful. But if I did...
 
Posted by Ad Orientem (# 17574) on :
 
The last bit of the statement does says this:

quote:
This concerns not only the question of “surrogate motherhood,” but also any consciously expressed unwillingness to live in a Christian manner .

 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
Late Paul:
quote:
So if you believe in paedo-baptism ISTM that you are always dealing with the choices of more than just the child (or even child+parents) and so there's always an element of one party's actions affecting the others involved.
Granted, but if baptism is barred to children of any parents expressing 'conscious unwillingness to live in a Christian manner' then illegitimate children and children of divorced parents should also be turned away. Heck, if you want to be really picky nobody is worthy to bring a child to baptism - all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. What happens to 'Let the children come to Me' then?

In any case, the church has always been willing to baptise children who are illegitimate or the result of adulterous relationships. Even children of prostitutes. That seems to suggest that the child's acceptance into the church is not dependent on the parents being good obedient clean-living Christians.

Which is just as well really (see above re glory of God, falling short of).
 
Posted by Ad Orientem (# 17574) on :
 
I'm not sure you understand "unwillingness to live in a Christian manner" correctly here. It certainly doesn't refer to perfection but rather repentance, a willingness to reform etc. At least one of the parents is under the solemn obligation to bring the child up in the faith. If it is obvious that there is no intention to do so then baptism is rightly, in my view, withheld until the child can decide for himself.
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
I do understand it, thanks. That's why I mentioned prostitutes. A prostitute who presents her (or his) child for baptism whilst intending to continue in the same job is certainly not conforming to most people's expectations of 'living in a Christian manner'. And in the eyes of some, a remarried divorcee is an unrepentant adulterer.
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
I do understand it, thanks. That's why I mentioned prostitutes. A prostitute who presents her (or his) child for baptism whilst intending to continue in the same job is certainly not conforming to most people's expectations of 'living in a Christian manner'. And in the eyes of some, a remarried divorcee is an unrepentant adulterer.

You assume that a priest who baptizes a prostitute's child does not ask the woman to repent, and that the prostitute does not agree to making an effort to change at the time of the request.

Are you aware of any such case where a priest (Orthodox or otherwise) had full knowledge that someone was intending to raise a child in a house of prostitution, but baptized that child anyway? Perhaps it does happen but it strikes me as terribly unlikely.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
In any case, the church has always been willing to baptise children who are illegitimate or the result of adulterous relationships. Even children of prostitutes. That seems to suggest that the child's acceptance into the church is not dependent on the parents being good obedient clean-living Christians.

I would be interested in actual historical facts on this matter. Truly always, everywhere, all churches? Maybe that is true, but I just don't know. What I do know is that the relevant §868 in current RC canon law is wide open to interpretation ("For an infant to be baptized lawfully it is required... that there be a well-founded hope that the child will be brought up in the Catholic religion" ... what provides well-founded hope then?), and it seems that there is quite some variation as to how it is in fact being interpreted. Most comments I have heard seem to indicate that the RCC in North America is a lot stricter about this than the RCC in Europe, see for example this from Canada.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by seekingsister:


Are you aware of any such case where a priest (Orthodox or otherwise) had full knowledge that someone was intending to raise a child in a house of prostitution, but baptized that child anyway?



I think a Church of England priest would be legally required to baptise the child, if resident in their parish.
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by seekingsister:


Are you aware of any such case where a priest (Orthodox or otherwise) had full knowledge that someone was intending to raise a child in a house of prostitution, but baptized that child anyway?



I think a Church of England priest would be legally required to baptise the child, if resident in their parish.
In most cases without "full knowledge" because CofE priests don't ask those sorts of questions due to their requirement to baptize any child within the parish presented to them.
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
seekingsister:
quote:
Are you aware of any such case where a priest (Orthodox or otherwise) had full knowledge that someone was intending to raise a child in a house of prostitution, but baptized that child anyway? Perhaps it does happen but it strikes me as terribly unlikely.
I don't know what happens in the Orthodox church nowadays, or even what happens in the RCC, but I get the impression from my reading of history that *in practice*, in the English church at least, most priests would baptise anyone's baby if asked to do so. This may have something to do with the belief that unbaptized babies would go to Limbo.

The modern RCC does not endorse Augustine's view of Limbo, but the Catechism says "...the great mercy of God who desires that all men should be saved, and Jesus' tenderness toward children which caused him to say: 'Let the children come to me, do not hinder them,' allow us to hope that there is a way of salvation for children who have died without Baptism. All the more urgent is the Church's call not to prevent little children coming to Christ through the gift of holy Baptism." (source of the quote is here ) So the RCC's official position still seems to be that baptism must be done as soon as possible after the birth and presumably, jeopardising a child's chance of salvation in order to play mind games with its parents is not on.

As Ken says, in the C of E there is a legal requirement to baptise anyone living in the parish who is presented for baptism - though most parishes will ask you to do some sort of preparation for it which might (and probably will) include talking about the need for repentance.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
seekingsister: You assume that a priest who baptizes a prostitute's child does not ask the woman to repent, and that the prostitute does not agree to making an effort to change at the time of the request.
I have only very fleetingly worked with an organization that accompanies (ex-)prostitutes in Brazil so I don't claim expertise, but what I do know is that it is a complex problem where the prostitutes are often as much a victim as anything else. Calling on them to repent seems an extremely inadequate approach to me, much less with their children as some strange kind of hostages.

[ 07. January 2014, 15:45: Message edited by: LeRoc ]
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
LeRoc:
quote:
Calling on them to repent seems an extremely inadequate approach to me, much less with their children as some strange kind of hostages.
Indeed.

If you don't have a high view of baptism, why does it matter?

If you do, how can you possibly justify risking the child's immortal soul in order to punish the parents?
 
Posted by Leorning Cniht (# 17564) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
I think a Church of England priest would be legally required to baptise the child, if resident in their parish.

Indeed.
quote:
Canon B22:
4. No minister shall refuse or, save for the purpose of preparing or instructing the parents or guardians or godparents, delay to baptize any infant within his cure that is brought to the church to be baptized, provided that due notice has been given and the provisions relating to godparents in these Canons are observed.

The provisions relating to godparents are that there are to be at least 3 people - two of the same sex as the child and one of the opposite sex, and that they be confirmed. The priest has the authority to water down these requirements to some degree if he sees fit, but cannot be compelled to.

The only way that I can see that a C of E priest could legally deny baptism to an infant residing in his parish lies in Canon B23:

quote:

2. The godparents shall be persons who will faithfully fulfil their responsibilities both by their care for the children committed to their charge and by the example of their own godly living.

This suggests that, just perhaps, the priest might have the ability to veto the choice of particular godparents if, for example, they live lives of such notorious ill-repute that they can't provide "the example of their own godly living".
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
Outside of state churches like the Church of England that have legal requirements regarding baptism, I would expect most clergy/priests to discuss sin and repentance with parents presenting their children prior to the service.

Not being RCC/Orthodox perhaps someone can help - are parents or godparents meant to make a confession before the baptism service?
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
I know that when my daughter was baptised (in a rather Anglo-Catholic service though it wasn't Anglican, and I doubt the priest would consider himself or his church to be precisely Anglo-Catholic) we promised to turn our backs on the devil. And more relevantly, before hand, we discussed with the priest what that meant. However not what it meant in terms of our lives, but that it clearly did mean rejecting sins in our lives. On the other hand, we were (and are) also members of that church, and even used to live in the Community related to the church, so he knew how we live, and presumably didn't have any major objections to our lives or the way we are raising said daughter.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
Irrespective of the law, I think it would be difficult for a couple to insist on having their baby baptised if they flatly refused to attend preparation classes.

I don't know how often this is really an issue. Can any shipmates advise. One would hope and expect that the bishop would back an incumbent if a couple really tried to insist on that. The reference in the Canon to,
quote:
save for the purpose of preparing or instructing the parents or guardians or godparents
means that is supposed to be a condition precedent, and can be insisted on.

I'd interpret that as also meaning, though, that once the parameters are met, the vicar is simply responsible for administering the sacrament. Whether they like it or not, the parents and godparents, not the vicar, take responsibility for understanding and meaning the commitments they are entering into. So it is also not the vicar's responsibility for vetting whether he or she thinks they have got the right theological knowledge or variety of faith before baptising their baby.

I think I'd agree with that. It also goes with what Queen Elizabeth I said about not making windows in men's souls (in those days, and indeed until much more recently, men's included women's without anyone making a fuss about it).
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
As an atheist it doesn't matter to me if surrogate borne children, or prematurely delivered infants kept in incubators are not baptized. For those who care, the recent comment by Pope Francis about reaching out to the children of gay couples and children of broken marriages seems germane;
quote:
How can we proclaim Christ to a generation that is changing? We must be careful not to administer a vaccine against faith to them...
Pope Francis discusses gay couples
 
Posted by Mockingbird (# 5818) on :
 
The document states
quote:
In the case when an infant is brought to Church who has been born of a “surrogate mother,” the question of its Baptism can be decided in accordance with the instructions of the diocesan bishop, who is bound to be guided in concrete cases by the norms contained in the present document. The performance by a priest of the sacrament of Baptism in such cases without the blessing of his bishop serves as the basis for applying canonical sanctions to this priest.
This might (or might not) allow the priest some leeway. It depends on how flexible are the enforcement mechanisms for "the norms contained in the present document".

I note that the document is prescriptive. Unless more appears, we cannot conclude that any child has yet been denied baptism on the basis of its teachings.

On the general point: A priest should indeed conscientiously refuse baptism, or marriage, or to witness and bless any other vows, if there are strong grounds for thinking that the vows will not be made sincerely.

I would expect such decisions to be made case-by-case. Here, though, the bishops seem to lean toward the view that those raising the child, if they were party to the surrogacy in any way, are by that very fact presumptively untrustworthy. Is there any other canon law that creates a presumption of untrustworthiness? If so, how does the present statement compare? The document refers to "teachings of the Church regarding the inadmissibility of the Baptism of infants in families whose members explicitly and deliberately neglect ecclesial tradition and do not share the Christian teaching about marriage and family, which practically eliminates the possibility of the child’s Christian upbringing," but provides no citations.

If the bishops met to transact legal business on December 25-26, should that be taken as a deliberate snub toward those who use the Gregorian or Revised Julian calendars? Or is that reading too much into it?
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingbird:
If the bishops met to transact legal business on December 25-26, should that be taken as a deliberate snub toward those who use the Gregorian or Revised Julian calendars? Or is that reading too much into it?

That's like saying if I go to work on Yom Kippur it's a deliberate snub of Jews. Gregorian December 25 isn't a holiday for them. Why shouldn't they work on it?

It's been brought up twice but nobody has answered it: the synod's decision is tantamount to telling these parents, "Your baby has no right to exist."
 
Posted by Ad Orientem (# 17574) on :
 
No. There is a difference between the means being sinful and the result nevertheless having a right to exist.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
It's been brought up twice but nobody has answered it: the synod's decision is tantamount to telling these parents, "Your baby has no right to exist."

That's a deliberate rhetorical confusion of the moral evaluation of the parent's actions and the baby's being, trading on ambiguities in what "right to exist" means. It also simply ignores what the Russian bishops have said about their motivations, and is inconsistent with the provisions they have established (the baby can be baptised, given two different conditions). Silence was the charitable option there, or perhaps just what one hears when eyes are being rolled...
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
No, I don't think it is rhetorical confusion. It is a reasonable conclusion drawn from what the document says. If surrogacy is (always) considered sinful, then the 'true' Christian course for any couple who are unable to have a baby without using a surrogate mother is not to have a baby at all. It's not much of a stretch from there to 'this baby shouldn't exist'. Most people are intelligent enough to make the connection, even if the bishops don't come right out and say it aloud.
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
No, I don't think it is rhetorical confusion. It is a reasonable conclusion drawn from what the document says. If surrogacy is (always) considered sinful, then the 'true' Christian course for any couple who are unable to have a baby without using a surrogate mother is not to have a baby at all. It's not much of a stretch from there to 'this baby shouldn't exist'. Most people are intelligent enough to make the connection, even if the bishops don't come right out and say it aloud.

That's your interpretation of it.

One can easily read it as, the sin of using a woman is so significant as to put into question the commitment to Christian faith of the parents who hired her. So that commitment must be confirmed with an agreement to repent of the sin, so that the baby can be baptized in accordance with church rules on the parents' obligations.

If a man who committed rape brought the resulting child to a priest for baptism, do you think that the priest asking that man to repent of his sin, is the same thing as saying "this child should not exist?" Do you think children born of rape shouldn't exist even though I am sure you think rape is a sin? Of course not.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
No, I don't think it is rhetorical confusion. It is a reasonable conclusion drawn from what the document says. If surrogacy is (always) considered sinful, then the 'true' Christian course for any couple who are unable to have a baby without using a surrogate mother is not to have a baby at all. It's not much of a stretch from there to 'this baby shouldn't exist'. Most people are intelligent enough to make the connection, even if the bishops don't come right out and say it aloud.

You are just perpetuating the rhetorical confusion, which frankly is massively insulting to the bishops (not that they are my bishops, but still...). "This baby should not exist" is true in the sense that (according to the bishops) the baby exists because of sinful actions, and sins should not be committed. "This baby should not exist" is false in the sense that the baby alive now has less of a right to exist than other human beings.

The reason the bishops have given for their denial of baptism clearly pertains to the former, not the latter. They say that they are worried about the Orthodox upbringing of the child, given that the way it has been brought into the world is sinful according to their Orthodoxy. This is about the past actions of the parents predicting their future actions, and it can get fixed by the parents repenting (and thus providing reason to believe that the child will be brought up Orthodox). This is in not about the life of the baby, as indicated by the fact that they will allow the child to ask for baptism as soon as it is capable thereof (and without any repenting by the child). If the life of the child was the problem itself, then this would make no sense at all.

I have no problem with a discussion whether the particular sins of the parents here warrant such a reaction, whether this is inconsistent with other decisions of the same bishops, etc. One can certainly question this decision in many ways. But to assume that the bishops somehow have a problem with the baby's life as such is really shameful, unless there is serious evidence that they are sick bastards ignorant of the basics of Christian faith, indeed, of universal morality. I have seen no such evidence so far.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
I don't think it's correct to describe this as 'rhetorical confusion'. Nevertheless, although I can see how they might get there, I think that both Mousethief and Jane R are thinking linearly and so ending up in the wrong place. Seekingsister's interpretation fits the statement of the Bishops, and both make good sense to me.
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
seekingsister:
quote:
One can easily read it as, the sin of using a woman is so significant as to put into question the commitment to Christian faith of the parents who hired her.
I can understand the concern about wealthy women outsourcing the messy parts of pregnancy by hiring a poorer woman as surrogate. If that is a significant problem in Russia, I can see why the bishops are concerned. However, as several people have already said, surrogacy for profit is illegal in the UK (as is donation of eggs or sperm) and many surrogate mothers enter into the arrangement for altruistic reasons. And if after giving birth they do not wish to hand the baby over to its biological parents, under UK law they don't have to.

I'm out of here, anyway.
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
I can understand the concern about wealthy women outsourcing the messy parts of pregnancy by hiring a poorer woman as surrogate. If that is a significant problem in Russia, I can see why the bishops are concerned.

Commercial for-profit surrogacy is legal in Russia and it's apparently a popular choice for overseas couples from US, UK because it's cheaper.

Russian Surrogacy
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by seekingsister:
Commercial for-profit surrogacy is legal in Russia and it's apparently a popular choice for overseas couples from US, UK because it's cheaper Russian Surrogacy

That was ... educational. Total costs €36,000 to €60,000. I wonder how much the surrogate mother gets of that? Anyway, the Russian bishops are opposed to surrogacy per se, not (just) because of the potential commercial aspect:
quote:
The Basis of the Social Concept XII.4:
«Surrogate motherhood», that is, the bearing of a fertilised ovule by a woman who after the delivery returns the child to the «customers», is unnatural and morally inadmissible even in those cases where it is realised on a non-commercial basis. This method involves the violation of the profound emotional and spiritual intimacy that is established between mother and child already during the pregnancy. «Surrogate motherhood» traumatises both the bearing woman, whose mother’s feelings are trampled upon, and the child who may subsequently experience an identity crisis.


 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by seekingsister:
Commercial for-profit surrogacy is legal in Russia and it's apparently a popular choice for overseas couples from US, UK because it's cheaper.

Russian Surrogacy

Thank you for finding that out. I didn't know that, and probably would not have known what keywords to google to get it. I found it quite disturbing. It sounds as though, far from being an exotic foreign thing, womb farming is a bit of a growth industry in Russia, probably with westerners, local oligarchs and various clinics exploiting poor girls throughout the towns and villages of Russia.

With that background, I'm even more in sympathy with the Russian bishops.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
Enoch: With that background, I'm even more in sympathy with the Russian bishops.
I'm in awe of how bravely they have halted this process by not baptizing the children.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
That's a deliberate rhetorical confusion of the moral evaluation of the parent's actions and the baby's being, trading on ambiguities in what "right to exist" means.

I was making a point about how the parents feel. This is emotion talk. Logic doesn't enter into it nearly as much as some people might wish.

quote:
It also simply ignores what the Russian bishops have said about their motivations
This actually tells in its favor, given the relationship between the ROC and Putin.

quote:
and is inconsistent with the provisions they have established (the baby can be baptised, given two different conditions).
"Just admit this baby should never have existed, and we'll baptise it."

quote:
Silence was the charitable option there, or perhaps just what one hears when eyes are being rolled...
We have a pot/kettle problem here.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
quote:
Enoch: With that background, I'm even more in sympathy with the Russian bishops.
I'm in awe of how bravely they have halted this process by not baptizing the children.
That's a daft comment, of course. Just because one cannot stop something does not mean that one has to condone it by one's own actions.

That said, I would not expect that Western "womb tourism" would lead to big demands for Russian Orthodox baptism, in Russia. I assume that most of those babies would be baptised back in the West by the "buying" parents. And I'm rather sceptical that many Russian oligarchs are trying to build their dynasty by mass surrogacy of heirs, or for that matter that many rich Russian women farm out their pregnancies to poor ones. I expect that by and large this remains a service demanded by infertile couples, whether Russian or foreign.

I think the moral case should be made against the backdrop of the entirely reasonable and natural desire of couples for children. If one has to invent weird villains to justify the moral rules, then the case has already been lost. I note that in my quote from the Russian bishops above, they argue against surrogacy as such, even if it is done apart from any commercial gain.
 
Posted by seekingsister (# 17707) on :
 
IngoB - apparently the outrage was sparked by a 64 year old Russian celeb having twins with her much younger husband via surrogate.

Orthodox Church slams surrogacy

quote:
The comment from the head of the Patriarchy Commission for Family Motherhood and Childhood, Dmitry Smirnov, came after Russian mass media reported that in September 64-year-old Russian pop star Alla Pugachova and her 37-year-old husband Maksim Galkin had two children born through surrogate motherhood.

“I would ban this, of course. We can see that a bad example is contagious,” the senior church representative was quoted as saying by Interfax. “This is mutiny against God, this is very happy fascism with a contract, the money and confiscation of a child.”



[ 08. January 2014, 15:23: Message edited by: seekingsister ]
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I was making a point about how the parents feel. This is emotion talk. Logic doesn't enter into it nearly as much as some people might wish.

Fine. But Church doctrine and discipline cannot be based simply on sentiment, however heartfelt. And I would suggest that the best way of getting this ruling changed, if one wishes that, is not to go on about the hurt feelings of the parents. Frankly, most sinners have hurt feelings when being called on their sins, and I doubt that the Russian bishops will be shocked by yet another instance of that. Rather it is precisely the logical argument presented on this thread, namely that it is unfair to single out surrogacy as evil that must be repented of when many other sins of parents are being overlooked systematically, which might have some impact.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:
It also simply ignores what the Russian bishops have said about their motivations
This actually tells in its favor, given the relationship between the ROC and Putin.
That's simply an argumentum ad hominem. Also, you are in communion with these bishops, correct? Can you point to a contrary ruling of your bishops? Or are you now suggesting that the bishops in Orthodoxy have no teaching authority any longer?

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
"Just admit this baby should never have existed, and we'll baptise it."

More like: "Admit that this baby should never have existed according to the Orthodox faith you share, and we'll accept your claim that you will raise the baby as Orthodox, and baptise it into the Orthodox community."
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by seekingsister:
IngoB - apparently the outrage was sparked by a 64 year old Russian celeb having twins with her much younger husband via surrogate.

Orthodox Church slams surrogacy


The current outrage may stem from this. But the document I have been quoting from was issued in the year 2000 by the Council of Russian Bishops, thus over a decade ago. If this is a case of policy on the run, then only as far as the denial of baptism over surrogacy is concerned, not concerning their general rejection of surrogacy.

Anyway, abusus non tollit usum (abuse is no argument against proper use). I see no evidence of a surrogacy epidemic even among rich Russian women just because of one case. Any moral argument should deal with the average infertile couple sincerely desiring offspring. Outrage about some woman trying an end-run around her biological clock should not determine basic moral argument.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I was making a point about how the parents feel. This is emotion talk. Logic doesn't enter into it nearly as much as some people might wish.

Fine. But Church doctrine and discipline cannot be based simply on sentiment, however heartfelt.
True. This wasn't meant to lay forth a basis for episcopal decision-making on terms of praxis. (Indeed I'm not at all sure how it could have been taken to be such, but there you go.) It was meant to portray what the parents may feel like they are being asked to do when they are asked to "repent."

quote:
And I would suggest that the best way of getting this ruling changed, if one wishes that, is not to go on about the hurt feelings of the parents.
As noted, that's not the reason I brought that up.

quote:
Frankly, most sinners have hurt feelings when being called on their sins, and I doubt that the Russian bishops will be shocked by yet another instance of that.
I would suggest that "having hurt feelings" and "being told your child doesn't deserve to exist" are not exactly analogous. You're trivializing something that to a parent could be crushing. I find it difficult to believe anybody could reduce the latter to "you have hurt feelings." It rather feels disingenuous.

quote:

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:
It also simply ignores what the Russian bishops have said about their motivations
This actually tells in its favor, given the relationship between the ROC and Putin.
That's simply an argumentum ad hominem.
No, it's simply an insult. An argumetum ad hominem is by definition an argument. I wasn't making an argument here, just giving my opinion about those particular bishops and how much I trust what they say about their own motivations. Knowing how they fawn over Putin, in the name of Orthodoxy, gives me a certain skepticism about what they claim to be motivated by.

quote:
Also, you are in communion with these bishops, correct? Can you point to a contrary ruling of your bishops? Or are you now suggesting that the bishops in Orthodoxy have no teaching authority any longer?
Yes, no, no. What does this have to do with the argument? It seems rather a non sequitur.

quote:
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
"Just admit this baby should never have existed, and we'll baptise it."

More like: "Admit that this baby should never have existed according to the Orthodox faith you share, and we'll accept your claim that you will raise the baby as Orthodox, and baptise it into the Orthodox community."
Potayto.
 
Posted by pydseybare (# 16184) on :
 
I don't understand how these things work. Is an Orthodox believer under an obligation to agree with a Bishop even when they (the believer) thinks they (the Bishop) are fundamentally wrong about something?
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
I already said I do understand the bishops' concerns about 'wombs for hire', though I hadn't realised it was such a big problem in Russia.

I was slightly bemused by this comment:
quote:
This method involves the violation of the profound emotional and spiritual intimacy that is established between mother and child already during the pregnancy.
How many bishops have personally experienced the 'profound emotional and spiritual intimacy' of pregnancy? Or is this yet another example of the male priesthood romanticizing motherhood?

And once again; if they believe baptism is important, why withhold it from the child in order to punish the parents? What does the Orthodox Church think will happen to the child's soul if it dies before it is old enough to choose to be baptised by itself?
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
It was meant to portray what the parents may feel like they are being asked to do when they are asked to "repent."

And your latest description "just admit this baby should never have existed, and we'll baptise it" is fair enough, given that you understand it as "potayto" to mine. We can now discuss whether the Russian bishops are correct factually. We can also discuss whether accepting that they are correct factually (at least for the sake of argument), their actions are prudent pastorally and politically. What we cannot do however is to say that because we see pastoral or political issues they must have their facts wrong.

"Parents unhappy therefore bishops wrong" is simply not a valid argument here. It would be if Christianity was about making people happy in this world, but since it is not we gain nothing from such an argument.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I would suggest that "having hurt feelings" and "being told your child doesn't deserve to exist" are not exactly analogous. You're trivializing something that to a parent could be crushing. I find it difficult to believe anybody could reduce the latter to "you have hurt feelings." It rather feels disingenuous.

First, you keep changing your statement about the baby. "Should never have existed" is not the same as "does not deserve to exist". If this is not intentional rhetorical trickery, then please think carefully about what you claim the bishops are saying to the parents and stick to one thing. It is rather annoying having to update my agreement or disagreement with your assessment every other post. Second, I did not intend to indicate some kind of upper limit to how much hurt was being caused here. I simply intended to state in what way the hurt was being caused. Bones were not broken, rather feeling were being hurt. That's all. If you want to say instead that the parents are being "emotionally traumatised", for example, then that is no skin off my nose.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
No, it's simply an insult. An argumetum ad hominem is by definition an argument. I wasn't making an argument here, just giving my opinion about those particular bishops and how much I trust what they say about their own motivations. Knowing how they fawn over Putin, in the name of Orthodoxy, gives me a certain skepticism about what they claim to be motivated by.

"This actually tells in its favor, given X." is an argument, however minimalistic. If X is a personal insult, then it becomes an an argumentum ad hominem. And you continue along these lines here, by putting the motivations of the Russian bishops in question. "Argument" means more than just "logical deduction". There is no reason at all why we should discuss the relationship of the Russian bishops to Putin here. They have argued their case with no reference to Putin or the Russian state, therefore we can and should address their argument on their terms.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:
Also, you are in communion with these bishops, correct? Can you point to a contrary ruling of your bishops? Or are you now suggesting that the bishops in Orthodoxy have no teaching authority any longer?

Yes, no, no. What does this have to do with the argument? It seems rather a non sequitur.
I'm sorry, that may just be my Catholicism coming through. We believe that people who are in communion with each other need to agree at least officially on important matters of faith and morals. If the RC bishops of Russia made a major ruling on faith and morals that I find highly problematic, then I would consider it very pressing to get this sorted out at the official level. Because otherwise the assumption of coherent faith and morals across the communion means that this ruling will apply to me as well. Obviously, the way the RCC is organised, I would mostly look to Rome for a "global" clarification. But absent that, I would look to "my" local bishops for comment. What I would not do is to set this aside with a shrug of my shoulders, or complain about it as one does about foreign affairs. I cannot set aside the actions of any RC bishop anywhere like that, because they all contribute to one and the same teaching office of the Church.

[ 09. January 2014, 09:27: Message edited by: IngoB ]
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pydseybare:
I don't understand how these things work. Is an Orthodox believer under an obligation to agree with a Bishop even when they (the believer) thinks they (the Bishop) are fundamentally wrong about something?

I'm not Orthodox, but as far as RCs go, you are ultimately bound by your conscience alone. However, it is one's duty to inform that conscience properly; and official teachings of the Church, to which bishops can contribute, are privileged by faith in providing such information with various levels of authority. Thus a bishop officially teaching against what your conscience currently tells you is like receiving a piece of new evidence apparently contrary to what you held true so far. It is not clear that your conscience must change, but it is clear that you must worry about that. The more authoritative the teaching, the more so.

quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
How many bishops have personally experienced the 'profound emotional and spiritual intimacy' of pregnancy? Or is this yet another example of the male priesthood romanticizing motherhood?

Is it your opinion that a medical doctor must have suffered every disease she is ready to treat, because otherwise she does not have the necessary experience to do anything about it?

quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
And once again; if they believe baptism is important, why withhold it from the child in order to punish the parents?

This is not what the bishops themselves say they are doing. Please present some kind of argument, rather than mere assertion, why you think that they are lying.

quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
What does the Orthodox Church think will happen to the child's soul if it dies before it is old enough to choose to be baptised by itself?

That's an interesting question, and I would be keen to hear an answer from an Orthodox. For RCs, in danger of death such concerns about providing sacraments have to yield. However, there is of course a risk that the child dies unexpectedly and too rapidly to provide an "emergency sacrament". Such risk however is considered to be on the heads of the parents. The Church cannot accommodate every sin just to protect all innocents. Parents do have responsibility for their children.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
We can now discuss whether the Russian bishops are correct factually.

I'm not sure what you would appeal to to determine if a ruling on morals was "factually" correct. Do you mean if it follows from other moral teachings of the church? You can't get an "ought" from an "is." Morals aren't matters of "fact."

quote:
We can also discuss whether accepting that they are correct factually (at least for the sake of argument), their actions are prudent pastorally and politically.
That's rather what I thought I was doing here. Perhaps I didn't make it clear enough?

quote:
"Parents unhappy therefore bishops wrong" is simply not a valid argument here.
Yes. Thank you. I have agreed. You can stop saying it. Really. Stop. Now.

quote:
First, you keep changing your statement about the baby. "Should never have existed" is not the same as "does not deserve to exist".
Not logically, no. But I thought I had made it clear I wasn't talking about logic here. See previous comment.

quote:
Second, I did not intend to indicate some kind of upper limit to how much hurt was being caused here. I simply intended to state in what way the hurt was being caused. Bones were not broken, rather feeling were being hurt.
It was far from clear what you were intending.

quote:
If you want to say instead that the parents are being "emotionally traumatised", for example, then that is no skin off my nose.
Chivalrous of you.

quote:
"This actually tells in its favor, given X." is an argument, however minimalistic.
I just told you it wasn't. Do you want to tell me other contents of my mind I'm not aware of myself?

quote:
There is no reason at all why we should discuss the relationship of the Russian bishops to Putin here. They have argued their case with no reference to Putin or the Russian state, therefore we can and should address their argument on their terms.
If you don't think their character has bearing on their decisions in moral areas, I'd say you are deluded about how human beings actually operate. This seems to me the problem some Catholics have who can't understand why the pedophile scandals have made people less trusting of the Catholic Church's moral authority.

quote:
We believe that people who are in communion with each other need to agree at least officially on important matters of faith and morals.
It is one of the greatest strengths and also one of the greatest weaknesses of Orthodoxy that we don't have this lockstep mentality. The autocephalous churches truly are autocephalous.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I'm not sure what you would appeal to to determine if a ruling on morals was "factually" correct. Do you mean if it follows from other moral teachings of the church? You can't get an "ought" from an "is." Morals aren't matters of "fact."

I disagree, one can get an "ought" from an "is" and morals are matters of fact. But I actually did not want to make a natural moral law argument here. I just sloppily used "factually" because it is a bit difficult to find a single word for the part of this that is not pastoral / political: doctrinally sound, logically coherent, practically discernible, scripturally proven, authoritatively decided... all that sort of stuff in due measure put together. The sort of thing one thinks about when one is not just considering one concrete case, or worried about the public impact.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
That's rather what I thought I was doing here. Perhaps I didn't make it clear enough?

Perhaps I simply do not think that one can discuss the pastoral / political side usefully without considering the "factual" side carefully first. I'm also not just talking to you on this thread, and it is quite possible that on occasion I simply write in a wider context than just addressing your concerns.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Not logically, no. But I thought I had made it clear I wasn't talking about logic here. See previous comment.

I wasn't complaining about the logic, but about having to update my response every time you change your claim about what the parents may feel.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
If you don't think their character has bearing on their decisions in moral areas, I'd say you are deluded about how human beings actually operate. This seems to me the problem some Catholics have who can't understand why the pedophile scandals have made people less trusting of the Catholic Church's moral authority.

Well, that is fair enough. However, this sort of prejudice is useful for times when a judgement is needed instantly, or perhaps when one cannot gather all the information required. It's then a way to make a "quick and dirty guess". Here however we are having a leisurely discussion based on a considerable range of source materials, with the internet being freely available to gather more information. There is then simply no excuse for shooting from the hip. We can evaluate the statements and actions of these bishops carefully, and we should be able to discern the truth. Or at least we should be able to discern the truth much better than just by saying "cronies of Putin are likely to make immoral decisions". Perhaps they are, but whether they did so in this case is what we are discussing here.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
It is one of the greatest strengths and also one of the greatest weaknesses of Orthodoxy that we don't have this lockstep mentality. The autocephalous churches truly are autocephalous.

I can see all too clearly how this is a weakness, but in what way is this a strength, precisely?
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
It is one of the greatest strengths and also one of the greatest weaknesses of Orthodoxy that we don't have this lockstep mentality. The autocephalous churches truly are autocephalous.

I can see all too clearly how this is a weakness, but in what way is this a strength, precisely?
For one thing, if one church goes off the rails, the others can act as a corrective. Think Borgia Popes.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
For one thing, if one church goes off the rails, the others can act as a corrective. Think Borgia Popes.

I don't see how, at least not how in any systemic way. After all, your bishops are not particularly concerned by the crap that the bishops of Russia are spouting (assuming that it is crap for the sake of argument). After all, that is an autocephalous church to you. And if your bishops do make a decision that is contrary, then the Russian bishops need not be overly concerned with that either - after all, you are an autocephalous church to them, so what does it matter if you disagree?

I could theoretically see the potential for faster exploration there, i.e., in theory all your different autocephalous churches could trial different rulings, and then pick the best one to move forward. Except historically speaking we see no such dynamism at all. Whether you agree with the direction the RCC has taken or not, it is simply true that she is changing a lot faster than all Orthodox churches combined. And the reason for that seems obvious enough: you have no functional mechanism for evaluating and selecting from whatever diversity may arise.

I am not just shilling for the RCC in this case. I can see plenty of potential for organising her structure better than the shape into which she has grown. Perhaps even by relaxing the lockstep, as you say, in specific ways. But I really don't see much advantage in the current Orthodox system. Indeed, I would worry about its overall stability in modern times (where local change is starting to accumulate much more quickly). If the Russians take enough "wrong but who cares" decisions, then eventually their sum will become of serious concern to you. It's after all not as if you are communion with just everybody, or as if you have the Anglican ability to politely look the other way no matter what.
 
Posted by stonespring (# 15530) on :
 
I'm new to this thread and haven't read all of it. Forgive me.

I understand that in Orthodoxy like in the RCC and quite a few places a priest will not baptize a child unless the parents agree to raise the kid in the faith and appear to actually mean that.

I do not think this is a discussion about the validity of any baptism of an infant where the parents do not really intend to raise the infant to believe in all the doctrines of the Church, but I am going to ask about it.

If an adult is baptized but does not intend to believe, for example, that surrogacy is sinful, is his/her baptism valid?

If an infant is baptized but her/his parents do not believe that surrogacy is sinful and do not intend to teach the child that, is the infant's baptism valid?

The reason the Church refuses to baptize babies when the parents don't seem that they will really raise the child in the faith may have nothing to do with validity. But I am interested in the validity nonetheless.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
Surely one's opinion on surrogacy does not rise to the level occupied by core doctrine such as the Trinity, the Incarnation, the Atonement, the sacrifical nature of the Eucharist and Christ's Real Presence under the outward forms of bread and wine in the Eucharist. I am unaware that RC priests normally refuse to baptise infants whose parents are almost certainly using artificial contraception (I'm not suggesting the parents would be gratuitously interrogated about the matter, but rather that a combination of observation of circumstances, general knowledge regarding fertility and human sexuality, and timing of child-bearing in any particular instance would tend to reveal quite a lot to anyone thinking about a particular case; nonetheless, RC clergy don't appear to deny baptism to the children of contraception-using "cafeteria Catholics" AFAIK).

[ 09. January 2014, 20:06: Message edited by: Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras ]
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
If an adult is baptized but does not intend to believe, for example, that surrogacy is sinful, is his/her baptism valid?

I'm neither Catholic nor Orthodox, but would assume that the answer is yes. We are baptised on our belief in Jesus Christ, not our opinion about something else.

Also, baptism is the beginning of the journey. I hope no church withholds baptism from all those who have not yet got everything right.

On this particular issue, having a speculative view about whether surrogacy is sinful or not is relatively unimportant unless you start doing something about it, hiring someone to bear your child, renting out your womb, or working in the industry.

Also, being baptised doesn't suddenly make everything that was sinful, OK.

quote:
If an infant is baptized but her/his parents do not believe that surrogacy is sinful and do not intend to teach the child that, is the infant's baptism valid? ....
Again, I would have thought, obviously, yes. I would have thought everyone is agreed that baptism is objective.

Again, also, there's a difference between whether this is a fundamental and significant part of the family belief system, e.g. because the child was born that way, or because that is how one of the parents earns their living, or is just something remote and in the background, of no particular relevance.

The actual question though, isn't about validity, but whether it is a good practice or an abuse for churches to baptise people who don't seem to intend to live a Christian life or bring up their child to.

I get the impression that most ecclesial communities have moved their position on this over the last 60 years or so. Very few would now say that baptism, automatically, objectively and mechanically, bestows regeneration and salvation on babies, irrespective of what sort of instruction they later receive or whether they subsequently appropriate Christian faith for themselves.

If it were as simple as that, it would be a good thing and a work of virtue to go round baptising all and sundry, the more the merrier. There have been people in the past who acted as though they believed this was so. I get the impression that is now either unknown or very rare.

[ 09. January 2014, 20:23: Message edited by: Enoch ]
 
Posted by stonespring (# 15530) on :
 
Um...well I think that the RCC believes that if a child is baptized and dies before reaching the age of reason, the child is going straight to heaven. The RCC isn't so sure about unbaptized children before the age of reason, and it isn't so sure that such children would go to "Limbo," if such a thing exists, either, but it places its hope in God's mercy for such cases.

As for children baptized as infants who reach the age of reason, the remaining graces of the sacrament that would work in the child's remaining in life and after death are (correct me if I'm wrong) still there, but don't take effect unless the child chooses to continue in living and believing in the faith.

Not baptizing a child with parents who don't seem intent on teaching the doctrine of the Church to their children might be bad for other reasons, but the reason I asked about validity is that the RCC at least (and I think Eastern Orthodoxy but correct me if I'm wrong) thinks that baptism is very important for the salvation of children for the reasons listed above. So I'm inclined to think that as long as all baptisms of infants using the correct form and matter are valid, the parents should be given the benefit of the doubt and more infant baptisms would always be a blessing. But that is why I am asking about any effect of the parents' intent on the validity of an infant baptism. Any RC or Orthodox(or non-RC and non-Orthodox experts of RC and Orthodox doctrine) hair-splitters want to tackle this?
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
Another vote for renegade baptisms here! The idea of withholding God's grace from a child in order to manipulate the child's parents is just...repugnant to me. (And, as others here have noted, while I myself have some real issues with the practice of surrogacy, I'd hardly put desperate infertile parents using a surrogate mother in the same category as parents in blatant apostasy.)

Surrogacy may indeed be exploitative in many cases, especially in countries like Russia with a lot of vulnerable and easily exploitable women/manipulative menfolk and not a lot of legal protection or governmental oversight...but, again, the baby involved is an innocent party in all this. And while you can harangue infertile couples endlessly about legal adoption as a better option all around...people don't always think rationally when it comes to parenthood. Rather than pushing families away from the Church, I'd think the Church would do better to use this opportunity to reach out to them and bring them into a reconciled relationship (maybe one that includes thoughtful, empathetic faith formation that helps people make better ethical decisions?).
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
IngoB:
quote:
This is not what the bishops themselves say they are doing. Please present some kind of argument, rather than mere assertion, why you think that they are lying.
I do apologise. What I should have said was this:

Why are the bishops withholding baptism from the child in order to force the parents to agree with them on the issue of surrogacy?

Or does the end (bringing the parents into line) justify the means (risking the baby's salvation)?
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
Why are the bishops withholding baptism from the child in order to force the parents to agree with them on the issue of surrogacy? Or does the end (bringing the parents into line) justify the means (risking the baby's salvation)?

Baptism is a conscious decision to follow Christ, and to join His community, the Church. For Orthodox, as for RCs, this decision brings with it a wide range of beliefs, duties and consequences that will last for a lifetime. Baptism is not some isolated sign, but an entry point to a massive superstructure of faith within which one will move henceforth. An adult convert will have to take all this on explicitly. In having their children baptised the parents (and the godparents) basically tell the Church: if you will let the little one enter now, we promise to make sure that this child will take all these things on as well, just bit by bit as its capabilities grow, through our guidance. That children can be baptised is an accommodation by the Church - the Church trusts parents (and godparents) there to take over her role in guarding the entry point to her mysteries.

If there is no reasonable hope that the (god)parents will follow up on these promises, then it is natural for the Church to revert to the proper process: wait until the child is old enough to ask for entry in its own right. Whether using a surrogate mother is sufficient to abandon such hope can certainly be contended. I'm not necessarily convinced of that myself, in particular in the light of the many other failures of (god)parents that the Church overlooks without apparently losing this hope. But the principle of withholding baptism if no faithful upbringing can be expected is sound in my eyes, in principle.

Really, this is no different than not simply baptising everybody who wanders in from the street and asks for it. Or for that matter, why not make one big ceremony to baptise the entire world virtually, and be done with it? Does an adult not have an immortal soul? Is an adult not in danger of eternal doom? Yet we (or at least certainly the RCC and the Orthodox) have never handed out baptism willy-nilly. The Church demands from adults conviction in order to enter, and so it does from infants - only there through the agency of their (god)parents over time. And just as an adult can be denied baptism, unless approaching death makes charity trump faith, so for infants.
 
Posted by stonespring (# 15530) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
Why are the bishops withholding baptism from the child in order to force the parents to agree with them on the issue of surrogacy? Or does the end (bringing the parents into line) justify the means (risking the baby's salvation)?

Baptism is a conscious decision to follow Christ, and to join His community, the Church. For Orthodox, as for RCs, this decision brings with it a wide range of beliefs, duties and consequences that will last for a lifetime. Baptism is not some isolated sign, but an entry point to a massive superstructure of faith within which one will move henceforth. An adult convert will have to take all this on explicitly. In having their children baptised the parents (and the godparents) basically tell the Church: if you will let the little one enter now, we promise to make sure that this child will take all these things on as well, just bit by bit as its capabilities grow, through our guidance. That children can be baptised is an accommodation by the Church - the Church trusts parents (and godparents) there to take over her role in guarding the entry point to her mysteries.

If there is no reasonable hope that the (god)parents will follow up on these promises, then it is natural for the Church to revert to the proper process: wait until the child is old enough to ask for entry in its own right. Whether using a surrogate mother is sufficient to abandon such hope can certainly be contended. I'm not necessarily convinced of that myself, in particular in the light of the many other failures of (god)parents that the Church overlooks without apparently losing this hope. But the principle of withholding baptism if no faithful upbringing can be expected is sound in my eyes, in principle.

Really, this is no different than not simply baptising everybody who wanders in from the street and asks for it. Or for that matter, why not make one big ceremony to baptise the entire world virtually, and be done with it? Does an adult not have an immortal soul? Is an adult not in danger of eternal doom? Yet we (or at least certainly the RCC and the Orthodox) have never handed out baptism willy-nilly. The Church demands from adults conviction in order to enter, and so it does from infants - only there through the agency of their (god)parents over time. And just as an adult can be denied baptism, unless approaching death makes charity trump faith, so for infants.

This only makes sense if the RCC or Orthodoxy believes that unbaptized children are almost certainly going to Heaven if they die before the age of reason. I have heard nothing to indicate that this is the case. All I have heard about is hoping in God's mercy in such cases.

This means that to refuse baptism to an infant is to put the child's salvation in jeopardy, arguably in greater jeopardy than one would be doing than by allowing (god)parents who seem not intent on raising their kids with orthodox Christian beliefs to have their (god)children baptized. And godparents are very important here. If the parents cannot find godparents who are orthodox in their beliefs and practices, the Church can find them. The Church frequently finds sponsors for Confirmation for people.

Once the kids are old enough, you can require religious education - with the parents or godparents involved - and ask the kid whether s/he agrees with the Church's teachings. Then the kid is in the same boat with all the other faithful of that denomination in terms of personal responsibility. If the parents never take the kid to church again after baptism - is the kid or the Christian community more harmed than if the kid was denied baptism in the first place? I don't think so and think the reverse is true - it is much more harmful to the child and causes much greater scandal to deny baptism to infants based on the moral decisions of the parents and their willingness to repent of them.
 
Posted by stonespring (# 15530) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
Yet we (or at least certainly the RCC and the Orthodox) have never handed out baptism willy-nilly. The Church demands from adults conviction in order to enter, and so it does from infants - only there through the agency of their (god)parents over time.

But there has been very famous (even celebrated) misuse of the sacrament of Baptism - for example: the coerced baptism of the city of Kiev in the Dnieper River at the order of Vladimir the Great. I find no trouble in believing that any of the people in the paintings, frescoes, mosaics, etc., of that event - many of which are displayed proudly in churches - who did not really consent to adopt the Orthodox faith in their hearts when they had to jump in the river were not validly baptized. What about the infants of those people who also went into the river?

I know this discussion is not about validity and this is not related to what is going on in Russia today. But willy-nilly baptism did occur in certain times and places. It was never officially allowed in a strictly theological sense (I think). But the baptism of Kiev is still celebrated by the Slavic Orthodox Churches. Were all the people coerced into baptism miraculously given faith so that it really can be celebrated as a good example of Christian ministry? Or does it not really matter because it resulted in the greater spread of Orthodoxy?
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
IngoB:
quote:
Baptism is a conscious decision to follow Christ, and to join His community, the Church.
Then you shouldn't allow infant baptism at all.

Oh, and what stonespring said.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
This only makes sense if the RCC or Orthodoxy believes that unbaptized children are almost certainly going to Heaven if they die before the age of reason. I have heard nothing to indicate that this is the case. All I have heard about is hoping in God's mercy in such cases.

Correct, at least as far as the RCC is concerned (I do not know what the Orthodox say about the eternal fate of unbaptised children). Yet there is a balance here between bringing salvation to all and keeping the Church intact as a community of faith.

quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
This means that to refuse baptism to an infant is to put the child's salvation in jeopardy, arguably in greater jeopardy than one would be doing than by allowing (god)parents who seem not intent on raising their kids with orthodox Christian beliefs to have their (god)children baptised.

Hence in danger of death of the infant can be baptised licitly even against the will of the parents. The risk of the infant dying before it can be properly baptised is on the heads of the (god)parents. They can, of course, baptise the child themselves if they find this necessary but nevertheless are unwilling to accept their duties as Christian parents. The efficacy of such a private baptism will be judged by God, but it certainly can be valid.

quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
If the parents never take the kid to church again after baptism - is the kid or the Christian community more harmed than if the kid was denied baptism in the first place?

That is difficult to answer. The graces poured out in baptism must be received to become efficacious, and it is unlikely that a child raised apart from the Church will be able to realise the graces of baptism fully. At the age of reason, the child will start accumulating sin with no education about that, and indeed possibly in the false hope that the baptism once received protects forevermore against sin, or in the false belief that Christianity has nothing further to offer. The only advantage would presumably be that the child would be free from original sin, and thus heaven-bound if it died before it was old enough to commit actual sin. This is "better" than just hoping that God will be merciful to unbaptised children, I guess. As for the community of faith, it may become diluted by people who belong to it merely in the sense of a formal admission event once upon a time. These people are then a false witness to the world what being a Christian is about, and internal to the Church allowing such consequence-free baptisms to be common may encourage lukewarmness in the faith. It is in my opinion unclear where the optimal balance lies.

quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
I don't think so and think the reverse is true - it is much more harmful to the child and causes much greater scandal to deny baptism to infants based on the moral decisions of the parents and their willingness to repent of them.

The point is not to pressure the parents into repenting out of fear for their child. The point is that their repentance would indicate their readiness to provide a faithful upbringing. The parent's (or other guardian's) faith is important for making the child become a Christian, and baptism is about becoming a Christian. Once more, I'm personally not convinced that using surrogacy is severe enough to declare the parents unsuitable. That's a different, "practical" discussion, and the Church tends to take a very lenient approach in most cases. So why not here? But I certainly agree to the principle that parents can be unsuitable for raising a Christian.

quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
But there has been very famous (even celebrated) misuse of the sacrament of Baptism - for example: the coerced baptism of the city of Kiev in the Dnieper River at the order of Vladimir the Great.

Coerced baptisms are invalid, no matter how much they may be celebrated by some people. Or perhaps one could say it like this: even the most basic and immediate graces of baptism cannot be received by a mind set against them.

quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
What about the infants of those people who also went into the river?

I guess they were valid, in the "going to heaven if they died shortly thereafter" sense. Infants cannot set their mind for or against baptism, and the basic and immediate graces presumably were received. However, if in the following they had a non-Christian upbringing by parents resenting the coerced baptism, then this is an extreme version of the case discussed above. I expect no good to come from this, neither for the child nor for the Church.

quote:
Originally posted by stonespring:
Were all the people coerced into baptism miraculously given faith so that it really can be celebrated as a good example of Christian ministry? Or does it not really matter because it resulted in the greater spread of Orthodoxy?

The end does not justify the means, so these were evil acts that would not have received God's blessing, much less a miracle (unless perhaps as suitable to God's mercy, as in some infant about to die). God may have worked good from this evil in the long run, but that gives glory to God, it does not justify the evil.

quote:
Originally posted by Jane R:
Then you shouldn't allow infant baptism at all.

That it is possible for an infant to be baptised still relies on the conscious decision of someone, who takes responsibility before God that this specific child shall become part of the Body of Christ. In the general run of things this someone should be the parents, though it could be someone else. Christianity does allow for one person to stand in for another before God in matters of salvation, most notably in Christ standing in for all of us.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I think it was Martin Luther who wrote that, if a baby needs faith to be baptized, then God provides the baby faith. It's a line that seems less fraught with problems to me. On the other hand, he uses the same line to argue that forced baptisms are valid, but I think it's still easy enough to argue that forced baptism is wrong on other grounds.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
The actual question though, isn't about validity, but whether it is a good practice or an abuse for churches to baptise people who don't seem to intend to live a Christian life or bring up their child to.

That's half the question. The other half is, is it necessary to believe surrogacy is wrong to live a Christian life? This seems to me the crux of the matter, and nobody seems to want to address it.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
... The graces poured out in baptism must be received to become efficacious, and it is unlikely that a child raised apart from the Church will be able to realise the graces of baptism fully...

This may be slightly tangential, but there are two serious errors here, which invariably lead to seriously erroneous conclusions.

There are not 'graces'. Nor are 'they' poured out as though from one of those pourers that measures out a tot sized portion. Thinking of this as though God has authorised his Church to dispense 'graces', like when one puts the right money in one gets coffee from from a drinks' machine, or that if one gets the mechanics right, one gets a precise 1/-'s worth of grace as with an old fashioned electricity meter is a nonsense. Grace in the context of God is a singular abstract noun that describes the way God is.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
That's half the question. The other half is, is it necessary to believe surrogacy is wrong to live a Christian life? This seems to me the crux of the matter, and nobody seems to want to address it.

I can see that, but I don't think that is the question the Bishops are addressing. What they are saying seems to me to be more like, 'if you can't see that surrogacy is wrong, we'd construe that as indicating that you don't take faith seriously - in effect, it's a symptom that you are expecting to have God on your terms rather than his'.

I don't know whether I agree with them or not, but I can see where they are coming from. What they have said makes sense, whether one agrees with them or not.

As I've also said earlier, what one's view is on surrogacy is a great deal more significant if one is acting on it, rather than if it is mere speculation about how you think others might behave.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
I can see that, but I don't think that is the question the Bishops are addressing. What they are saying seems to me to be more like, 'if you can't see that surrogacy is wrong, we'd construe that as indicating that you don't take faith seriously - in effect, it's a symptom that you are expecting to have God on your terms rather than his'.

I can't slide a knife between this and what I said.
 


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