The RenewaNation Review 2017 Volume 9 Issue 2 | Page 31

A COUPLE OF MONTHS ago, I was walking through an antique shop with a good friend. I came across some old editions of Life magazine. As I shuffled through the pile of copies, one cover caught my eye. The date on the cover was April 30, 1965. What was unique about this particular copy of Life was a picture that would not have been common at that time. It was a picture of a baby in its mother’s placenta. This was the first time anyone was able to capture pictures showing the embryonic development of a baby. The pictures in this 14-page article were quite breath- taking. However, it was not the pictures that surprised me but the descriptions that accompanied them. On the cover were the following captions (emphasis mine): “DRAMA OF LIFE BEFORE BIRTH” “LIVING 18-WEEK OLD” I also found the following statements in the article (emphasis mine): “This is the first portrait ever made of a living embryo inside its mother’s womb.” “By studying pictures like these, embryologists get a deeper and more detailed understanding of life before birth.” “The birth of human life really occurs at the moment the mother’s egg cell is fertilized by one of the father’s sperm cells.” "Drama of Life Before Birth," Life Magazine, April 30, 1965. 31