Surrogacy is legal in most states, and according to Fortune, the surrogacy industry is “booming,” worth over $14 billion in the U.S. in 2022. Surrogate mothers who agree to carry other individuals’ babies are typically paid between $50,000 to $60,000 to do so, according to the group SENSIBLE Surrogacy.

Barron echoed the pope’s words, saying that “a child is a gift and as such can ‘never [be] the basis of a commercial contract.’” 

“It might be the case that couples earnestly want to have children without resorting to surrogacy, but painful and even life-threatening medical obstacles make childbirth hazardous or impossible,” he granted.

“The Church teaches that married couples are not obliged to actually have children, but to be open to any life that might be the fruit of their union.”

The Church, he went on, has a “responsibility to accompany these couples [struggling with infertility] in their suffering.”

Nevertheless, he said that the “commercialization of women and children in surrogacy is underlined by the belief that there is a right to have a child. The child becomes an object for the fulfillment of one’s desires instead of a person to be cherished.”