EDITORIAL NOTES
1. This
essay is long: thirteen-odd pages. I don't expect many people to read it, and I
certainly don't expect people to read it all. I wrote it for myself. If it
helps anyone else, that's wonderful.
2. Although I cite Mormon sources, all
interpretation and opinions are my own and do not represent official doctrine
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
3. There are different systems for
classifying fetal development. Some sources count from fertilization, and
others count from the way doctors classify gestational age, which means adding
an extra two weeks to account for the mother’s reproductive cycle. Thus, a
doctor might say that at the moment of fertilization, the pregnancy is already
two weeks along[1].
It sounds odd, but I use the gestational system in my essay unless I note
otherwise.
4. A
miscarriage is a pregnancy that fails before the baby would normally be
considered viable, or able to survive outside the womb. Most miscarriages occur
in the first thirteen weeks, or “trimester.” “A stillbirth is delivery of the
dead fetus that has developed to the point where it would normally have been
viable.”[2]
5. My
formatting in Word was so pretty, with footnotes at the bottom of their proper
pages. Blogger is not so format friendly; sorry about needing to scroll down.
If you email me, I would be happy to get you a PDF or word version.
6. My
thanks to my mother and sister Carolyn for their help as beta-readers and
editors.
MARIAN
Five years ago
today, I had a stillborn daughter.[3]
We named her Marian Marguerite Berry. It was a surreal experience, because I
began labor knowing the baby was already dead.[4]
This brought new meaning to the scripture “in sorrow thou shalt bring forth
children.” [5]
Several years
earlier, I had done some research on the topic of stillborn babies. I was aware
that such children could be listed on family group sheets, but were not
eligible for proxy temple work.[6]
I was further aware that there was no definitive revelation on their eternal
status. My personal opinion was that they “counted”—meaning they were persons entitled to all the blessings of
Abraham—but I had not inquired much further.
My experience
with Marian inspired me to dig deeper.
After some thorough research, I wrote an essay about my opinion on the
questions “Will my stillborn child be resurrected? Will she belong to my
eternal family?” and “When does the spirit enter the body? Does it matter?” and
“Why isn’t there an official revelation on this point? Are we likely ever to
receive one?” Finding it too painful to publish, I put it aside with the
intention to pull it back out in several years.
Now I can’t find
it.
Losing the essay
reminds me of losing my baby. They parallel each other somehow. I wish I could
recall everything I felt and wrote half a decade ago. I also wish I could find
the original research, quotes, and references I used.
I have decided
to reconstruct it as best as I can. It won’t be perfect—for one thing, I’m
using internet sources (including Wikipedia) instead of medical textbooks—but
hopefully it will be “good enough”—for whatever, still unknown, purpose it ends
up serving.
The stillbirth
happened in my old Raleigh ward. I did not keep it quiet there—for one thing,
it was a hard pregnancy and I couldn’t hide how I was vomiting four times a
day, and, and for another, I was far enough along to be showing. Friends in
that ward were very kind during the pregnancy, particularly in helping with the
driving. (Car motion exacerbated my nausea.) When tragedy struck, they provided
meals, cleaned my house, watched my children, and offered lots of hugs. My
extended family were also very supportive.
I did not
mention Marian after moving to the Leander ward. I wanted some privacy for my
grief, some space for my sadness. I didn’t want to introduce myself with a
dramatic “My baby died! Pity me!”
I have told a
few people as it seemed appropriate. The occasional person who caught me
weeping in a bathroom following a baby blessing, for instance, or another woman
who had suffered a similar loss.
When I was
pregnant with Sam, several people thought I was having a girl. “Probably Daniel
has been talking about his baby sister and people got confused,” I thought, but
did not feel compelled to explain.[7]
For some reason, this year, the grief surrounding Marian’s birthday is hitting me particularly hard. Last Sunday I sobbed through most of church, frustrated and slightly embarrassed that I couldn’t control myself. After that, I concluded that “keeping it quiet” might no longer be an option, or at least might no longer be the correct option. “Perhaps,” I thought, “I should try something different, like talking about her.”
For some reason, this year, the grief surrounding Marian’s birthday is hitting me particularly hard. Last Sunday I sobbed through most of church, frustrated and slightly embarrassed that I couldn’t control myself. After that, I concluded that “keeping it quiet” might no longer be an option, or at least might no longer be the correct option. “Perhaps,” I thought, “I should try something different, like talking about her.”
I dug through my
files, trying to find my old essay. When that failed, I wrote a new one.
For the first time, instead of telling people “Please keep this confidential,” I am inviting you to share it with anyone whom you think might benefit from reading it.
For the first time, instead of telling people “Please keep this confidential,” I am inviting you to share it with anyone whom you think might benefit from reading it.
Perhaps it will
prove a fitting memorial for Marian.
“ALL THE ANSWERS”
Imagine a woman
who is pregnant with twins enduring a complicated labor. The first baby emerges
healthy, but the second arrives, a few minutes later, in distress. He breathes
weakly a few times, and then dies, despite everything the doctors can do.
How
heartbreaking.
As the ward
family encircles the bereaved parents in support, the mother tearfully bears
her testimony of eternal families. “We are sealed in the temple,” she says,
“And it’s such a comfort to know I’ll see my baby again.”
Now imagine the same situation with a variation: the first baby arrives healthy, but the second dies moments before birth and never breathes in mortality.
As the ward
family encircles the bereaved parents in support, many well-meaning friends
bear their testimonies of eternal families. “You know you’ll see your baby
again,” they say.
The stricken mother is thankful for the attempted comfort, but cries harder, because she doesn’t “know”—there is no official revelation on the point.
In our church, we hear many variations of the following story:
The stricken mother is thankful for the attempted comfort, but cries harder, because she doesn’t “know”—there is no official revelation on the point.
In our church, we hear many variations of the following story:
A poor mother in
rural South America loses a two-week old baby. The local priest chastises her
for not having had the baby baptized earlier (despite the difficulty of her
circumstances) and says her infant will not go to heaven because of her
negligence. For a long time she grieves doubly over her mortal bereavement and
her eternal guilt, but slowly comes to believe the priest is wrong. Many years
later, missionaries knock on her door and teach her the restored gospel. When
she hears the good news that her baby not only will go to Heaven but she will also
have an eternal relationship with him, she gratefully begs for baptism.
We tell these
stories to each other in Relief Society and express sympathy. Here in America,
baby loss is rare, but when it does happen, members of our church have the
assurance that it is only a temporary separation. “How that poor mother must
have suffered, spending all those years in doubt,” they commiserate. “How
blessed we are to have the restored gospel, which has all the answers.”
At the General Relief Society Broadcast in late September, I cried. And cried. And cried. The ladies sitting near me considerately supplied me with tissues, but looked worried, probably thinking “She’s not even singing the hymns! Something really must be wrong!”
At the General Relief Society Broadcast in late September, I cried. And cried. And cried. The ladies sitting near me considerately supplied me with tissues, but looked worried, probably thinking “She’s not even singing the hymns! Something really must be wrong!”
In that session,
I counted two stories of babies dying, one of an older but still minor daughter
dying, and one of a pregnancy that almost ended in tragedy, fifteen weeks
early—but the one-pound baby girl and her mother were both, miraculously,
saved.
When I got home,
I told Jon, still tearfully, “The stories about babies who died were bad. And
the story about the baby girl who lived was even worse.” It’s not that I begrudge
Elder Eyring’s daughter, or any mother, her miracle. It’s just that these
emotional and faith-promoting stories remind me achingly of my own loss—and
uncertainty. [8]
THE THRESHOLD OF THE MORTAL JOURNEY
Let us return to
the theoretical twins I mentioned earlier. Does the living twin qualify as part
of the eternal family while the other, separated by only a few minutes of
development, somehow not “count”?
Most Mormons—in
fact, most people of any faith system—instinctively answer “Of course not! They
will play together in the hereafter.” There is nothing in scripture or modern
revelation to contradict that view. There is, however, also nothing official to
confirm it.
One theory is
that a “living soul” only begins at birth, when the combination of water,
blood, and spirit merge, and the baby takes that first independent breath which
changes his heart—literally—so that he now processes oxygen through his own
lungs instead of from his mother’s umbilical cord. Our baptismal ritual
deliberately invokes that moment in a spiritual “rebirth,” involving water,
blood, and Spirit—as does the weekly Sacrament.
Does the baby’s
first inhalation act as the “breath of life” which effects the official, divine entrance of the spirit into the body? Or
is it merely the obvious mark we humans can measure? “The spirit and body are
the soul of man,”[9]
which hints that this “breath of life” may not be necessary.
It seems
reasonable to consider the dead baby a person, equal in eternal status with his
living twin. They were both full term. Both had moved with deliberation in the
womb and responded to their mother’s voice. The Biblical Rachel sought
revelation when her “children struggled together within her.”[10]
She was told this was a behavior both boys would continue throughout their
lives. This implies her twins had personalities—and thus personhood—before they
were born.
But if the first
presidency issued a formal statement saying that full term babies who died
during delivery had an official assurance of the celestial kingdom, similar to
the status of other children who die before the age of accountability, they
would be besieged by bereaved parents trying to move the goalpost backwards.
What about a
woman who lost her child at 36 weeks? That’s almost full term. Most babies born
at that stage do not need assistive machines; they are capable of eating and
breathing independently.
What about a
pregnancy that made it to 30 weeks? Even almost a hundred years ago, such a
baby had a chance. My grandmother and her twin sister were born in rural Idaho,
in the winter, in a farmhouse without electricity. They were two months early,
too weak to nurse, and almost too small to survive. And yet, miraculously, they
lived.[11]
They had lifelong medical problems, but both married and bore healthy children.
My own premature daughter is named in their honor.
I had extra
ultrasounds with Sammy because, after Marian, I was now considered “high risk.”
Around 28 weeks, I could make out his face pretty well, and could tell that he
was absolutely adorable. I also watched him, on the monitor, tickling his own
toes. He would reach out a hand slowly—and then jerk back when he made contact.
I imagined him giggling. Then he would slowly reach out a hand again, trying to
get as close as possible without quite touching himself…Bam! He jerked backward
again. He was exhibiting curiosity, exploring his environment, and playing. He also sucked on his
wrist—frequently. After he was born, he
continued that habit; whenever I put him down for a nap, he would cry and
nuzzle around until he found his wrist, after which he would settle down. He
has since migrated to his fist and then finger, but he still does it. He was a
person before he was born, and he remained the same person afterward.[12]
What about 24
weeks? Currently, that is considered the age of “viability,” or the point at
which a baby has roughly a fifty percent chance of surviving outside the womb,
albeit with intensive intervention. What
if a pregnant woman were severely injured in a car crash at this stage? As she
is rushed to the hospital, she goes into labor from the trauma. ER physicians
decide to try an emergency C-section to save the baby; sadly, they are not in
time. But with an extra half-hour, they might have been able to extract the
baby and put him on oxygen, and he might have survived.
What about 20
weeks? As technology improves, viability has been pushed back, incrementally. A
few babies born at 21 weeks have made it. Someday a 20-weeks baby will set a
new record.
16 weeks? The
baby’s organs are fully formed, and external sex characteristics might be
visible with an ultrasound. Marian made it to this stage.[13]
Marian looked like a baby, not an “embryo” or an alien or an odd lump of
tissue. Her tiny but perfect hand was smaller than one section of her daddy’s
little finger. She was 7 inches long.
By 12 weeks,
the body looks “human” and the baby is classified as a fetus, not an embryo. [14]
At 6 weeks
there is a heartbeat, but no clear limbs.
At 4 weeks,
or 2 weeks after fertilization, many women don’t even know they’re pregnant.
Many more have a few days of nail-biting anxiety (sometimes hoping for and
against at the same time) until they get a decisive answer.
I suspect I had a miscarriage once. My cycle
was three days late and a home pregnancy test showed a faint positive. But when
it became obvious that I had either never been pregnant, or at least, was
certainly not pregnant any more, it rattled me only slightly. Somehow it didn’t
feel real.[15]
Perhaps half of
all fertilized eggs fail to implant successfully. [16]
Does it count as a pregnancy if the egg never implants?[17]
Does it count as a miscarriage if the mother never knows about it? If such
pregnancies “count,” would a woman be shocked to find herself the mother of a
dozen babies in the Millennium? But if they don’t “count,” is that fair to the
women who struggle with the pain of infertility and lost pregnancies? Many
women grieve greatly at a false pregnancy, or an ectopic pregnancy, or a failed
round of IVF.
SCRIPTURAL SOURCES
What do the
scriptures and modern prophets have to say about life and spirits and unborn babies?
Elder Russell M.
Nelson, apostle and physician, said “It is not a question of when ‘meaningful
life’ begins or when the spirit ‘quickens’ the body.” He taught that all life is
sacred--and interfering with its divine potential at any stage of development is
wrong.[18]
In a 1909
message about “The Origin of Man,” the First Presidency said, “The body of man
enters upon its career as a tiny germ embryo, which becomes an infant,
quickened at a certain stage by the spirit whose tabernacle it is, and the
child, after being born, develops into a man.” This statement implies that the
spirit enters the body prior to birth.
Further, Elder
Joseph Fielding Smith said that “there is no information given by revelation in
regard to the status of stillborn children. However, I will express my personal
opinion that we should have hope that these little ones will receive a
resurrection and then belong to us.”[19]
That is very heartening, though I note three things: first, it is a personal
opinion, second, he says nothing about miscarriages, and third, the line
between stillbirths and miscarriages can sometimes be blurry.
Brigham Young
opined that “when the mother feels life come to her infant it is the spirit
entering the body.”[20]
Discernible fetal movements are called “the quickening,” and tend to occur
around 20 weeks for a first-time mother and as early as 16 weeks for a woman
who has given birth before.
With modern ultrasounds,
though, we know the fetus moves long before the mother can feel it. Marian made it to 16 weeks, but I am not
certain if I ever felt her move. The doctors did not understand why so many of
my questions involved the activity level of a typical sixteen-week-old fetus. I
was thinking, “If she was moving deliberately, if she was swimming around, her
spirit must have already entered her body. And if her spirit had entered her
body, then she will almost certainly be resurrected, right?”
Sadly, I can’t
find a consensus opinion on when purposeful movements begin. Even after birth,
a baby’s nervous system is very immature. The post-partum period is called “the
fourth trimester” and is characterized by babies having odd little spasms that
look like seizures. My newborn boys were lucky to find their own thumbs,
couldn’t focus their eyes, and were, to a man, rotten at nursing. Likely their spirits were still trying to
integrate their eternal software into this fascinating but frustrating “mortal
body platform.”[21]
A fetal nervous
system is even less mature, and in embryos it is mostly undifferentiated,
meaning spine and brain are beginning to develop, but much of the tissue hasn’t
formally been designated “nerves” or “muscle” yet.
My doctor said
my baby would have been “swimming all over the place.” But what if Marian
wasn’t moving purposefully? What if she was just twitching from random immature
nervous pulses?
I personally
don’t see how a baby could move purposefully without the animating force of a
spirit, but I also don’t know how early that occurs. Elizabeth, mother of John
the Baptist, would have been about six months along when “the babe leaped in
her womb”[22]
as (presumably) his spirit recognized Mary’s pregnancy with Jesus.
Does that mean
the Lord’s spirit was already present, even at Mary’s early stage of pregnancy?
(No matter what, Mary’s pregnancy with Jesus, heralded by an angel, was obviously important, even
before it began.) On the other hand, the Book of Mormon seems to indicate that
Jesus visited the prophet Nephi before his birth. “On the morrow come I into the
world.” [23]
Do spirits somehow co-exist, straddling a threshold with one foot in the spirit world and the other in mortality? Was Jesus an exception? If any spirit could be an exception, it would be He who also had power to raise himself from the dead. Was it the Spirit speaking “as” Jesus, similar to the divine investiture of authority with which the prophet may speak for Jesus, or the Lord may speak for the Father?
Do spirits somehow co-exist, straddling a threshold with one foot in the spirit world and the other in mortality? Was Jesus an exception? If any spirit could be an exception, it would be He who also had power to raise himself from the dead. Was it the Spirit speaking “as” Jesus, similar to the divine investiture of authority with which the prophet may speak for Jesus, or the Lord may speak for the Father?
RESURRECTION
When does the
spirit enter the body? When is the baby developed enough to be resurrected if
she dies? What is the earliest point at which parents can assert an eternal
claim to a child? Perhaps those are separate questions.
Assuming Marian
will be resurrected, how would that work?
"The body
will come forth as it is laid to rest, for there is no growth nor development
in the grave. As it is laid down, so will it arise, and changes to perfection
will come by the law of restitution.”[24]
Presumably that means the blind man’s
sight will improve, perhaps gradually. Will an amputee’s arm grow back over time?
The cancer shrinks. The fetus…um.
Would the pregnancy start over from the beginning? Would it resume at sixteen weeks of gestation? Would I have a resurrected or mortal body at that point? In either case, would I endure the nausea again? Would we perhaps use some kind of artificial incubator? (That seems unlikely, but the technology might have improved dramatically by then.)
Would the pregnancy start over from the beginning? Would it resume at sixteen weeks of gestation? Would I have a resurrected or mortal body at that point? In either case, would I endure the nausea again? Would we perhaps use some kind of artificial incubator? (That seems unlikely, but the technology might have improved dramatically by then.)
Can a stillborn
baby actually “enter the second time into his mother’s womb,” and be born again?[25]
TEMPLE ORDINANCES
An adult man who
married, had children, and died without hearing the gospel should have several
vicarious ordinances performed: baptism, priesthood ordination, initiatory, endowment,
and sealing.
A teen-age boy
who died without hearing the gospel should receive baptism, priesthood
ordination, endowment, and sealing to parents.
A boy who dies
before the age of eight automatically routes to the celestial kingdom, but he
does not “need” the ordinances of baptism, priesthood ordination, or endowment.
Similarly, “No
ordinances are necessary for children who are stillborn. However, if there is
any possibility that a child lived after birth, he or she should be sealed to
the parents unless the child was born in the covenant.”[26]
(Emphasis added)
In the case of
the adolescent, it makes sense that we should do all the work except eternal
marriage. We should not presume to pick
out a bride for him and seal them together.[27]
For the unaccountable boy, it makes sense not to perform baptism, since he truly
does not need the cleansing power of the atonement; he was incapable of sin. I
might also imagine such a spirit entering the celestial kingdom without the
endowment, since that ordinance is primarily designed to help adults get there,
and the spirit in question has already been assured entrance. I assume,
however, that he will have the chance to court and marry an eternal companion,
and that he would need to be ordained to the priesthood before the sealing
ordinance could take place during the Millennium.
Regarding stillborn
babies, I was worried at first. “If they are not supposed to be sealed to
their parents,” I thought, “It implies that the parents have no eternal claim
to them.” My mother suggested an alternative
interpretation I like much better: they are simply beyond our jurisdiction.
I see no reason
not to ordain a boy who died at age six to the priesthood, except that we have
not been commanded to do it. Similarly, I see no reason to assume that
stillborn babies will not one day be sealed to their parents—after we have been
authorized to do it.
It also makes
sense to perform the sealing if there is any possibility the child lived after
birth. (What if he had a heartbeat but no respiration, for instance?) That’s
similar, in my view, to performing a baptism a second time if a member’s
records are lost. The original ordinance was probably valid, but it’s best to
err on the side of caution. (And have an official record. Our church really
likes records.) It is better, in a limited way, to do an extra ordinance than
to omit a necessary one.
If we were
authorized to perform ordinances for stillbirths, I can imagine how it might be
done. Records would likely be very spotty
since they might not have been recorded in the family Bible and were probably
not even mentioned by most parish priests.
A miscarriage,
though, would be awful. How do you baptize “Unnamed miscarriage #3 Jones of
indeterminate gender from October or November of 1817 mentioned in a letter
fifteen years after the fact” by proxy?
The prophet has
stewardship over the earth, and over people who have lived in mortality. How do
we classify who, exactly, has lived in mortality?
As a parent, I
understand the importance of simple, elegant, easily defined rules.
Fetal
development is a vague line. It makes sense that the prophet hasn’t announced
revelation announcing “Any pregnancies that make it past fifteen weeks count;
everything else doesn’t.” Saying “the baby must breathe independently, at least
once, in mortality” is a clear, easily measured metric. Probably the prophet
only has priesthood keys over people who have breathed independently in
mortality: the living, and the post-living. Not the “pre-living” as it were.
The more I think about it, the more I understand why there isn’t a revelation on the point, and why it seems unlikely the question will be resolved until the Millennium.
The more I think about it, the more I understand why there isn’t a revelation on the point, and why it seems unlikely the question will be resolved until the Millennium.
GRIEF
In a sequel to Anne of Green Gables, an adult Anne, now
married to Gilbert, delivers a baby girl who dies a few days later.
“It doesn’t seem fair,” said Anne rebelliously. “Babies
are born and live where they are not wanted—where they will be neglected—where they
will have no chance. I would have loved my baby so—and cared…so tenderly—and tried
to give her every chance for good. And yet I wasn’t allowed to keep her.”[28]
I felt exactly the same way. I wanted to “give” Jon and
his family a baby girl. I’m not a big fashionista, but I wanted to play “dress
up” a little.[29] I wanted to watch Jon
teach her math.
Many women came up to me after I lost Marian. “I had a miscarriage
at ten weeks,” they said, “Nothing like what you went through, but I do have
some inkling…”
In my turn, I wondered if my experience was at all “comparable”
to a woman who lost a full-term baby during delivery.
One of the most important things I learned from Marian is
that grief is not a competitive sport. A loss is a loss; we should grieve
appropriately, respect feelings, and try to comfort each other. We
need not exaggerate or minimize our own losses, but choose whether and how much
to share of our honest experiences.
Before Marian, I
was offering advice and a female perspective to a guy friend of mine. “ As a
general rule of thumb,” I said, “I would expect that the longer the pregnancy
has lasted, the harder its termination would be. Each day makes the child more
real, and builds the relationship.”
Since Marian, I have often thought that it would have
been easier for me if Marian had been full term and lived independently, even
just for a moment, because then I would have had an assurance of her eternal
status.
I would also add that, in the midst of my grief and guilt
over losing my baby, I realized, “Satan convinces millions of women to do this on purpose? He truly is a great
deceiver.” My guilt was mercifully very short, because I hadn’t actually done
anything bad. Several times a day, I would go through my litany: “But I didn’t
smoke or drink alcohol or do drugs or ignore medical advice or do anything else
risky. I didn’t do anything wrong, and this isn’t my fault.” Then I would
think, “I believe that’s true—so why do I feel the need to reassure myself so
often?”
As horrible as I felt, I can only imagine the guilt of
women who had an abortion and then afterwards realized the full implications. I
do not judge them. Instead, I ache for them, imagining how much pain they have
inflicted upon themselves. Mercifully, the Savior has power to forgive and
heal.
ETERNAL UNCERTAINTY
Another thing I
realized after my experience is that many people face confusion about the eternal
makeup of their families. Consider the following representative, but hardly comprehensive, examples:
* "My
son was a rebellious teen-ager. At age nineteen, he was starting to mature but
had not come back to church yet. We were hopeful that things were improving—but
then he died in a car crash.”
* “My
parents got married in the temple and then divorced when I was two. My father
remarried, again in the temple. Technically I’m still sealed to my birth
mother, but my stepmother has been more of a “real” mom to me. I want to be
sealed to her, but I don’t know if that is what will happen.”
* “My
parents got baptized but never sealed in the temple. They have no interest in
returning to full activity in our faith. My brother died last year, and through
no fault of my own, I am not sealed to him. I had his priesthood
ordination and endowments done by proxy, but will he
and I ever be sealed as siblings? If I cannot be sealed to my own parents in
eternity, what about grandparents or great-grandparents who ultimately accept
the gospel in the spirit world?”
* “After
years of struggling with infertility, my husband and I were delighted when I
got pregnant. For the first several weeks we bit our fingernails, worried that
something might go wrong. After eight weeks we started to relax, only to be
devastated when I had a miscarriage two weeks later. Our baby wasn’t even a
fetus, just an embryo. I don’t know if it was a boy or a girl. But I feel even
more bereft than when my father died. I believe my husband and I can have
eternal increase, but will this specific child come back to us?”
* "My
mother got married in the temple and then was widowed young, with two small
children. She remarried my father in the temple, but they are not sealed 'for
all eternity.' They went on to have several more children, including me. 'Whose
wife will she be in the resurrection?' Will I be sealed to my earthly father,
or to some guy I’ve never met?"
* "My
wife and I fostered a wonderful child for two years. She was a part of our
family, and we planned to have her sealed to us as soon as the adoption was
final. Abruptly, the adoption fell through and she was returned to her birth
mother’s custody. We are heartbroken for ourselves, but even more worried for
her emotional stability and spiritual safety. We pray for her daily, hoping
that by some miracle she will return to us."
All those
questions are reasonable, and all of them remind me that I am not the only
person with uncertainty. If God revealed everything to us, we would have no
curiosity, no sense of wonder, no impetus to search the scriptures, and no need
to walk by faith. (Also no need for scientists to go crazy trying to figure out
dark matter or a Grand Unified Theory.) If every young woman knew, at age
twelve, who she would marry, and what she should study in college, and if and
where she would serve a mission, she would not need to seek her Heavenly
Father’s council in prayer, and would thus not develop a vital spiritual
relationship with Him.
As soon as I
have solved the last level of a computer game, I get bored with it. I hate
being bored. God has handed me a mystery, a knotty, thorny problem, to ponder
over and worry at and chew on for the rest of my mortal life. It is an
unexpected and bittersweet gift which will doubtless bless me in profound and
uncomfortable ways.
ANSWERS
Will my
stillborn be resurrected? Probably, though I don't know how it will work.
Will she belong
to my eternal family? I believe so.
When does the
spirit enter the body? I would guess by at least 20 weeks, but the earlier we go
beyond that, the murkier it seems.
Does it matter
when the spirit enters the body? Probably not, at least for the purposes of
claiming a child.
Why isn't there
an official revelation on this point? It's a tricksy, slippery slope, and
probably outside the stewardship and jurisdiction of the prophet.
Are we likely
ever to receive one? I am not predicting anything prior to the Millennium.
A more refined question might be "At what point is a spirit assigned to an eternal family?" That's very complicated. I envision Heavenly Father sitting his spirit children down for a priesthood interview and extending a "mission call." At least some of that must have happened before the creation of the world, since specific people, primarily prophets, were foreordained to their responsibilities. After that, we get into pure speculation about "rank and file" spirits and families, and timing, and abortion complicating things. I'm not prepared to "go there" right now.
A more refined question might be "At what point is a spirit assigned to an eternal family?" That's very complicated. I envision Heavenly Father sitting his spirit children down for a priesthood interview and extending a "mission call." At least some of that must have happened before the creation of the world, since specific people, primarily prophets, were foreordained to their responsibilities. After that, we get into pure speculation about "rank and file" spirits and families, and timing, and abortion complicating things. I'm not prepared to "go there" right now.
HOPE
Here are a few
principles which help me to feel better:
1. God wants to give us as many blessings as
He can.
2. He respects our agency.
3. “All that is unfair in this life can be
made right through the atonement.”[30]
4. Parents have the right to study, pray,
and attend the temple in seeking personal revelation about their children.
Though there is no official blanket revelation, there is nothing to prevent parents
from seeking personal assurance through study, prayer, and temple attendance.
I do not believe
God will force people into eternal relationships they do not want. In the case
of divorces and re-sealings, I imagine a large counseling session wherein each affected
member states what he or she wants, and it is discussed, in council, until
every righteous person has peace about the makeup of his or her eternal family.
I also do not
believe He will force us out of eternal relationships we do want, provided all
the participants are righteous.
Jon and I wanted
our baby, and we want our baby back. It is a righteous desire, one which I think
will be granted. I believe we will raise Marian in the Millennium, with a truly
deep appreciation for that privilege.
When my oldest
nephew got baptized, an aunt gave a talk about baptism and the atonement. Trying
to model the “chasm” of sin that separates us from God, she said, “Let’s
pretend that you are out riding your bike and you come to a big ditch filled
with water. You need to get across. What do you do?”
Ignoring the
convenient picture of Bob the Builder prominently displayed, Doug answered,
calmly, “I would call my Grandpa Homer. He would build a bridge.”
Doug had
accurately assessed his Grandpa’s personality. If my father decided to build a
bridge, it would get done somehow. He would analyze the problem, research the materials available, develop an
efficient schedule, and pre-stage his resources. It might end up being a
suspension rope walk (though that’s unlikely, since Doug couldn’t ride his bike
across), or a wooden girder bridge, or a metal truss. It would probably be
over-engineered 300%, but not 1000% since that would run way over budget.
Characters drive
stories. A weak character will yield to
temptation; an angry character will lash out at someone; a hyperactive spirit
will drive his mother crazy in utero;
a brilliant engineer who desperately needs to improvise an explosion with only
a first aid kit and a tire iron will Find A Way. The rest of the plot follows
logically from the protagonist’s choices.
It turns out the
real question is not when the spirit enters the body, or when a pregnancy
“counts,” or even why there is no official revelation on the topic. The real
question is “Do I trust God to make this right?” And, really, I do. That is
where the real faith comes in—despite gaps in knowledge, I can rely on the Savior.
After a dozen
pages, I have re-invented the wheel: I believe that Marian “counts,” but there
is no official revelation on the matter. I have amassed evidence to support my
belief, though, and proof that, whatever happens, I can have “the peace of
God which passeth all understanding.”[31]
If I live up to
my covenants, He will find a way to heal my heartache.
Humans are fallible.
God is perfect. I trust His character. I trust in Christ.
[1]
This reminds me of Schrodinger’s cat. Can we argue that on the fourteenth day
of a “married and trying” woman’s cycle, she is simultaneously not pregnant AND
two weeks along?
[2]
Val D. Greenwood, “I Have a Question,” Ensign, September, 1987.
[3] In
medical terms, it was technically a “fetal demise” or an unusual “second
trimester miscarriage.” I delivered and held a completely formed baby. I lactated. Although she was not “viable,”
to me, it was a stillbirth. And you’re all too smart to argue with a mournin’
Mormon mama.
[4]
For more details of the story, go to http://www.burgunbesiegt.blogspot.com/2007/11/in-sorrow-thou-shalt-bring-forth.html
and http://www.burgunbesiegt.blogspot.com/2007/11/grace.html
[5]
Genesis 3:16
[6]
Val D. Greenwood, “I Have a Question,” Ensign, September, 1987.
[7]
Although I did not announce it, neither did I try to keep it secret, exactly. I
never asked my children not to talk about it, and Daniel has, I gather,
mentioned it on several occasions.
[8]
There were several more incidents during General Conference. In particular,
Elder Bowen’s talk about the death of his one-year-old baby boy sent me over
the edge again. “One more dead baby story,” I sobbed, “And I will scream! And then turn off conference and
go watch football.” I didn’t actually do it (though there were more stories),
but I was sorely tempted.
[9] D&C
88:15
[10]
Genesis 25:22
[11] My
grandmother, Marian, was also further developed than her identical twin,
Marguerite, demonstrating that fetal progression is not exact. Some babies born
two months early can breathe independently; others do not have lungs developed
enough. Similarly, most babies walk around one year of age, but with wide
variation.
[12]
My other babies also exhibited personality in
utero; Eric was immensely hyper, while Daniel and Jeff were more mellow. I
just didn’t get detailed special ultrasounds of them.
[13]
Apparently she developed to sixteen weeks and then died. We discovered the
fetal demise several weeks later and I gave birth at almost twenty weeks, or
halfway into the pregnancy. As I did feel occasional “movement” and continued
to vomit (the placenta was still viable), I had no idea something was wrong.
[14]
Most of my research on fetal development comes from the Mayo Clinic: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/prenatal-care/PR00112/NSECTIONGROUP=2
or the NIH: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002398.htm
[15] Nothing
makes a baby feel “real” like constant nausea and vomiting. After all that
misery, Marian had better “count!” If
she doesn’t, I’ll certainly have strong words for—um. I just had a picture of me yelling at an
imaginary, non-existent spirit. Facing a blank wall, with celestial people
glancing at me in concern while bypassing me with a wide and awkward arc, I say “And how DARE you put me
through that pregnancy and then turn out not to be real!!!—wait a minute…” No,
it doesn’t make sense. Motherhood frequently doesn’t.
[17] Questions surrounding
fertilization and implantation also impact our choices regarding certain
methods of birth control and embryonic stem cell research. I have a personal
opinion on those points, but they exceed the scope of this essay.
[18]
Russell M. Nelson, “Reverence for Life,” April General Conference, 1985.
[19]
Doctrines of Salvation, 2:280
[20]
Journal of Discourses, 17:143
[21]
Daniel spent an extra few days in the NICU because he was “breathing
strangely,” in a kind of see-saw motion: heaving chest morphing into heaving
stomach and back again. My mother, defending her latest grandson, pointed out
that it was unreasonable for the nurses to expect him to be perfect at
respiration when he’d had less than forty-eight hours of practice. I can well
imagine Daniel thinking “What? I’m getting oxygen. Quit nagging. When do I get
to drive this thing? Why haven’t they
developed a robotic exoskeleton I could control through blinking…?”
[22]
Luke 1:41
[23] 3 Nephi 1:13
[23] 3 Nephi 1:13
[24] Joseph
F. Smith, IE 7 [June 1904]:623-24. I can’t interpret the original
sourcing; I admit I found the quote at the BYU webpage for the Encyclopedia or
Mormonism: http://eom.byu.edu/index.php/Resurrection
[25]
John 3:4
[27] I’m
envisioning a meddling mom saying “Oh! Mother Theresa would be perfect for him!
Let’s snatch her up before anyone else steals her!”
[28]
L. M. Montgomery, Anne’s House of Dreams, Chapter 19.
[29]
For Halloween of 2007, I impersonated Anne Boleyn, whose pregnancy changed
history. (Her condition caused King Henry VIII to precipitate his country’s
break with Roman Catholicism and form the Church of England so he could divorce
his first wife and marry Anne. The pregnancy resulted in the baby who would
grow up to become Queen Elizabeth I.) At
the time, I enjoyed incorporating my belly into a Halloween costume.
Afterwards, I thought wistfully, “At least I got to play ‘dress up’ with my
princess one time.”
[30] Preach
My Gospel: A Guide to Missionary Service (2004), 52.
[31]
Philippians 4:7
5 comments:
I read it all. Thanks for sharing. I cant pretend to understand but I can assure you I care and I believe as you do. blessings
I love you Gail!! And I at least am confident that I will have an adorable niece to play with and watch grow up in the millennium :)
Gail,
This essay is beautifully written and very moving.
Grandparents grieve, too. Losing Marian was very hard on Dad and me, but we are so grateful that we had time to come to Raleigh before you delivered. I remember holding her in the hospital room with you and Jon. I wouldn't have missed that choice experience, and I have felt confident since then that I will see my granddaughter again.
Mom
I have a theoretical solution which works in either doctrinal scenario, but you won't like the second variant.
Thank you sweetheart. I love you.
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