|
Comment on News and Issues by R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
Barbarism in the Laboratory: The British Consider Cloning
by R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
"We
are the first species to have taken evolution into our own hands," claimed
the late Carl Sagan. His words sounded chillingly prophetic last week when
the British government proposed the legalization of "limited" human cloning.
Defenders of human dignity had better take quick notice.
The
British decision came after a group of medical experts recommended that
therapeutic cloning be allowed with human embryos. If approved by
Parliament, the legislation would allow the cloning of human embryos for the
sole purpose of removing the powerful "stem cells" for purposes of
research—a procedure that destroys the embryo.
"Stem
cell research opens up a new medical frontier," said Dr. Liam Donaldson,
Britain's chief medical officer. He is certainly correct, for the isolation
of stem cells by American researchers in 1998 has led to hopes for
break-through treatments for Parkinson's Disease and other serious
illnesses. But those hopes are tempered by serious ethical concerns.
Stem
cells produce the specialized tissues and organs of the entire human body.
Their discovery may hold the key to understanding how cells can be
therapeutically transformed into custom replacements for tissues or organs
damaged by accident or disease.
Scientists want to experiment with stem cells drawn from human embryos—known
as "pluripotent stem cells," because these cells have not yet begun to
specialize. Researchers theorize that they may soon be able to direct these
cells into a desired specialization, even replacing brain cells damaged by
disease. Some hope to create specialized "killer" cells designed to attack
cancerous tumors.
Nevertheless, the ethical concerns are ominous, and those who defend the
sanctity of human life now face a serious new threat. Controversy over
experimentation with human embryos reaches a new level with demands for
access to stem cells. At present, pluripotent stem cells are available only
from "spare" human embryos produced by in vitro fertilization
treatments (IVF). The British government currently allows experimentation
with embryos under 14 days old. Once they reach the 14-day threshold, they
are destroyed.
Of
course, removing the stem cells also destroys the embryo. The U.S.
government currently denies federal funding to researchers using human
embryos in experimentation, but the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and
the president's National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) are pressing
to drop this regulation.
The
current British proposal takes these experiments one frightening step
farther. The Brits want to be allowed to clone human embryos for the sole
purpose of experimentation. Cloaking their proposal in language about "cell
nuclear replacement," the British scientists want permission to clone human
embryos in order to produce stem cells identical to those in a living human
patient. They deny any intent to implant a cloned embryo in a woman's womb.
Some scientists doubt that the British researchers will be able to produce
viable embryos in the near future.
The
"slippery slope" toward a culture of death is clearly evident in the
arguments put forth by the British panel of medical experts. Since British
law currently allows for the experimentation on living human embryos up to
14 days old, the shift to cloning "does not raise any new ethical issues."
In other words, once the moral repugnance of destroying human embryos is
crossed, it really doesn't matter how the embryos are produced. The British
report also proposes that germ cells could be removed from aborted fetuses,
though these may not hold as much potential as cells drawn from embryos.
The
British and American researchers pressing for legalization and funding of
this research share a common argument—the great potential for the treatment
of intractable illnesses outweighs the value of the human embryo. This
argument is very persuasive to the public. The Clinton administration is
inclined to accept the NIH and NBAC proposals, and Vice President Gore has
signaled his intention to allow the research and funding if elected.
The
issue may erupt in the presidential election debates. John Gearhart of Johns
Hopkins University, a leading proponent of stem cell research, told the
New York Times: "If there is a President (George W.) Bush, by executive
order he could stop these things."
If
so, America would be heeding the warnings issued by Germans. Given their
horrible memories of Nazi medical experiments on humans, the Germans outlaw
any removal of genetic material from human embryos. As
Evangelical
Church spokesman Thomas Krueger reflected, "Our barbaric past is one more
reason to oppose it."
A
culture that allows the manufacture, manipulation, and destruction of human
embryos—plus the abortion of its unborn young and the assisted suicide of
its old and ill—is headed toward the wholesale redefinition of human life
and human dignity. This brings us to the frightening prospect of an even
more barbaric future.
© R.
Albert Mohler, Jr. - All Rights Reserved
Fidelitas may be reproduced in whole or in part, but must include the
attribution statement printed above. For further information, contact the
Office of the President, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2825
Lexington Road, Louisville, KY 40280. Phone 502.897.4121, Fax 502.899.1770.
Or, contact by e-mail at
presoffice@sbts.edu
http://www.sbts.edu/mohler/FidelitasRead.php?article=fidel003
|