Last week, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that embryos frozen in in vitro fertilization procedures are “children” under state law, and that a person responsible for their destruction can be held liable. The opinion is a staggering attack on every facet of reproductive health, including the freedom of people experiencing infertility who use assisted reproductive technologies. It represents the culmination of a movement to enshrine into law the unscientific and purely religious claim that life begins when a sperm fertilizes an egg, supplanting secular laws with supposedly “biblical” beliefs.
This theocratic dystopia is not an outlier, confined to a single state, but rather a roadmap should Donald Trump return to the White House. Recent reporting in Politico and The New York Times exposes further expansions of plans by Trump allies to Christianize the federal government, including the restriction and even criminalization of abortion.
There could scarcely be a better encapsulation of Christian nationalist jurisprudence.
At issue in the Alabama case was an 1872 state law allowing civil lawsuits for wrongful death of children and, more crucially, a 2018 anti-abortion amendment to the state constitution. The amendment, approved in a referendum, made it state law to “recognize and support the sanctity of unborn life and the rights of unborn children, including the right to life.” In last week’s case, the court’s majority reasoned that Alabama law equally protects “children” and “unborn children,” including frozen fertilized eggs, which the court referred to as “extrauterine children.”
Even more astonishing than the majority opinion, though, was the concurring opinion of the court’s chief justice, Tom Parker, a longtime proponent of citing biblical law to undergird his jurisprudence. Parker is a protegé of former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, who first rose to national prominence for his unsuccessful battle in the early 2000s to install a 5,280-pound granite replica of the Ten Commandments inside the courthouse. (In his failed campaign for U.S. Senate in 2017, multiple women accused Moore of grooming or sexually assaulting them, with most alleged incidents occurring when he was an adult and the women were teenagers.)
Parker, like Moore, holds Christian reconstructionist beliefs; in a dissent in a 2005 child custody case, for example, he asserted that only God is “the ultimate source of all legitimate authority” for government. When I saw him speak at a neo-Confederate gathering in 2011, he told the crowd, “When judges don’t rule in fear of the Lord, all the foundations of the earth are shaken.”
Parker’s 22-page concurrence in the IVF case cites four Bible verses (Genesis 1:27 and 9:6, Exodus 20:13, and Jeremiah 1:5) and spans a millennium-and-a-half of Christian theology, including Thomas Aquinas, Saint Augustine and John Calvin. Based on this expansive review, Parker concludes that, in passing the 2018 constitutional amendment, the people of Alabama adopted “the theologically based view of the sanctity of life” that “God made every person in His image;” that each person “has a value that far exceeds the ability of human beings to calculate;” and that no human life can be “destroyed without incurring the wrath of a holy God, who views the destruction of His image as an affront to Himself.” There could scarcely be a better encapsulation of Christian nationalist jurisprudence.
Should Trump win in 2024, those staffing his administration will deploy the same philosophy for the same brutal outcomes. Politico reports that the Center for Renewing America, a think tank run by Trump’s former director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell Vought, has developed a draft document that includes “Christian nationalism” as an explicit goal of a second Trump term. Vought is a key adviser to Project 2025, the plan released by a coalition of right-wing groups that, among other initiatives, proposes sweeping anti-abortion and anti-LGBTQ policies.








