
A same-sex couple in Canada is now suing the woman who gave birth to their son—not for any crime, but because she refused to abort him when doctors diagnosed a potential minor birth defect and a cleft lip.
According to the lawsuit, the “intended fathers” demanded the termination at 22 weeks’ gestation. When the surrogate mother pushed back, the relationship collapsed. The same-sex couple is now accusing the surrogate of failing to keep them informed about the baby’s health, putting the child at risk, causing emotional distress, and violating confidentiality—all of which the birth mother has denied.
As this legal battle unfolds in Canada, it spawns a number of ethical questions regarding the commodification of human life in an era of advancing reproductive technologies.
Many pro-life advocates see this case, and others like it, as a call for society to prioritize the rights of the vulnerable unborn and the women who carry them over the whimsical desires of prospective parents, and to erect stricter guardrails around surrogacy so that no child is ever treated as disposable.
Evangelical Christian commentator Allie Beth Stuckey captured the outrage many felt when she posted on X: “These ‘dads’ are suing their surrogate because she refused to murder their baby, who had a cleft lip. The little boy is now 2 and still in their custody!” She added that “When children are bought and sold, we can’t be surprised when they’re treated as disposable. Lord have mercy.”
This case is no isolated tragedy. It highlights a troubling pattern gaining national attention: the growing willingness to abort babies diagnosed with potential birth defects or health conditions (see the Ridgeway story for another heartbreaking example). At the same time, it is surfacing difficult conversations about the ethics of surrogacy itself.
The reality remains that same-sex couples often turn to surrogacy because they cannot conceive biologically. “No one should be able to buy a baby through surrogacy,” said Katy Faust, president and founder of Them Before Us, on X. Yet she went further: “Children have a right to be known and loved by their mother. Gay marriage makes that woman legally optional in [the child’s] life.”
Others have warned about the inherently transactional nature of commercial surrogacy, even as many enter it with sincere intentions. As Arizona pastor of Redeemer Bible Church, Darrell Harrison emphasized, “From the moment of conception a child is an image-bearer of God, not merchandise to be bought or sold.”
Christian, actor, director and pro-life advocate Kevin Sorbo also reacted, drawing from his own experiences: “My kid brother has a cleft lip, and he served 23 years in the army before retiring as a lieutenant colonel. If you think ending a life over something like that is up for debate, then we have nothing else to talk about.” He asserted that “children should NEVER be up for sale.”
Sally Rhoads-Heinrich, owner of Surrogacy in Canada Online, specifically noted how the once-cooperative relationship fell apart after the same-sex couple “wanted a termination” and the surrogate refused. Tensions escalated even more when the surrogate mom “insisted on a home birth”—the original plan—“performed by midwives rather than in a hospital, as the [same-sex couple] requested due to the cleft lip.”
Despite the soured relationship, the [same-sex couple] ultimately agreed to “proceed with the pregnancy” after they were informed by doctors at Mount Sinai Hospital that the baby was “generally healthy and had no major problems beyond the cleft lip.” The little boy, now 2 years old, experienced only minor breathing difficulty at birth. After a brief period on oxygen, he was stable and transported to the hospital.
“What I find most difficult in this is they are suing the woman who brought their son to them,” Rhoads-Heinrich added. “How is their son going to feel some day if he learns that?”
After the birth, the couple took the child home and immediately cut off all contact with the surrogate—even ignoring her request for reimbursement of roughly $10,000 in out-of-pocket expenses, including lost wages, transportation, and missed pension contributions.
With communication severed, the surrogate filed in small-claims court to recover her costs. But the contract required arbitration for such disputes, so instead she faced a lawsuit from the couple in May demanding approximately $600,000.
Meanwhile, bioethics professor Juliet Guichon at the University of Calgary, said Canadian law is clear that pregnant women have the final say over abortion, regardless of the intended parents’ wishes.
Guichon raised a piercing question: whether it is in the best interests of the child “to be raised by these people”—the very people who “earlier sought to end the [baby’s] life for a medical condition that … can be completely overcome by surgery and therapy.”
Bible passages to ponder: Jeremiah 1:5, Exodus 20:13, Proverbs 31:8-9.



















