Would alternative means of reproduction affect the Church?
Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2007 1:25 pm
So there is talk about the possibility of producing female sperm from stem cells, or replacing the nuclei of ova with male DNA which I'm sure many people have heard of. There has also been some research done on the artificial uterus. All the threads about victorian women and "angels of the hearth" etc. got me thinking: if/once those things become a viable option, what would the Church's rationale be for denying women the priesthood?
Now it's all centered around women's reproductive abilities and the argument that some women are sterile is dismissed through generalizations (such as "only women are capable of bearing children, hence all women should be mothers and have motherly roles"). Also, the ability to carry a fetus is somehow equated with the priesthood (we were granted this precious gift men do not have - the uterus! Praise the Lord!).
Of course, in XIXth-century understanding, it seemed more likely to revive a corpse than find alternative means to reproduce. Not now, though. As our understanding of reproduction and biological sex increases, it becomes obvious that it is not all that simple and that perhaps men and women do not need each other for exaltation (if you are assuming there even is such a thing). I am already confident that gay people will eventually be able to marry in the temple, but perhaps they will even have a promise of eternal increase with each other once it becomes possible/legal to create female sperm/male eggs and/or use an artificial uterus? How would such developments affect LDS theology and doctrine, in your opinion?
Now it's all centered around women's reproductive abilities and the argument that some women are sterile is dismissed through generalizations (such as "only women are capable of bearing children, hence all women should be mothers and have motherly roles"). Also, the ability to carry a fetus is somehow equated with the priesthood (we were granted this precious gift men do not have - the uterus! Praise the Lord!).
Of course, in XIXth-century understanding, it seemed more likely to revive a corpse than find alternative means to reproduce. Not now, though. As our understanding of reproduction and biological sex increases, it becomes obvious that it is not all that simple and that perhaps men and women do not need each other for exaltation (if you are assuming there even is such a thing). I am already confident that gay people will eventually be able to marry in the temple, but perhaps they will even have a promise of eternal increase with each other once it becomes possible/legal to create female sperm/male eggs and/or use an artificial uterus? How would such developments affect LDS theology and doctrine, in your opinion?