Aborting the Disabled A bill before the Senate hopes to better inform mothers about diagnosed disabilities, while a study confirms that women can feel pressured to terminate their pregnancy if tests find a disability.
by Rob Moll | April 13, 2006
Are You My Sperm Donor? Plus: Another Hwang turn, more small surprises, and other life ethics stories.
Nigel M. de S. Cameron | January 26, 2006
Hope for the Living Dead Without corrective surgery, women with fistula injuries become outcasts.
Deann Alford | December 16, 2005
Painful Choice The debate on when the unborn feel pain heats up.
by Mark Stricherz | October 12, 2005
Stemming the Embryonic Tide Pro-lifers face a scientific and public relations juggernaut.
by Stan Guthrie with Agnieszka Tennant, Sheryl Henderson Blunt in Washington, and Rob James in the United Kingdom | September 28, 2005
Ultrasound Quieted House hesitates on sonograms.
by Mark Stricherz in Washington | June 15, 2005
Gender Is No Disease Our children's sex is not something to be screened but gratefully received.
A Christianity Today Editorial | January 25, 2005
Frozen Out What to do with those extra embryos.
By John Van Regenmorter | July 1, 2004
Unwanted Interruptions Why is our culture so hostile to children-inside and outside the womb?
An interview with theological ethicist Amy Laura Hall | July 1, 2004
Another Small Step for Life Recent federal bill recognizes the humanity of the fetus for the first time.
By Mark Stricherz in Washington | June 1, 2004
Plan B (for Bad) Christians fight to keep 'morning-after-pill' under the counter.
Lisa Griffin and Baptist Press | April 1, 2004
Senate Passes Fetal Homicide Bill Plus: Former Archbishop of Canterbury criticizes Islam, The Passion of The Christ opens overseas, and other stories from online sources around the world.
Compiled by Ted Olsen | March 1, 2004