Everything, it seems, is for sale today. Even science is permeated with commercial language. Body parts are harvested, tissue is procured, sperm are banked, cells are patented, and women's reproductive cells and services are bought and sold. The language of commodification is ubiquitous in the assisted reproductive arena. Building primarily on the work of Stanford Law Professor Margaret Jane Radin, I will contest the commodification of women's bodies, even if voluntary. Commodification entails, among other things, the assertion that there is only one scale to which every value can be translated, and that scale is money. Commodification is a worldview. It is not only incompatible with a Christian worldview, but it is inherently objectifying and harmful to human flourishing. Women, and their body parts, ought not be for sale.