On February 24, 1997 scientists at the Roslin
Institute in Scotland announced they had successfully cloned a sheep. As
believers in the Bible, we certainly don’t want to decry all technology. But
Dolly leaves us to wonder how long till someone clones a human being, and what
the ramifications of that are, and whether such is even right. Dolly is a
“Xerox copy” of another sheep. In reality, she has no mother. She is her
“mother’s” identical twin, not her mother’s daughter. A clone (from
Greek klon) is an individual plant, animal, or human being derived by
asexual reproduction from another organism that has the identical hereditary
components.
While the Bible does not specifically deal with the
subject of human cloning, there are principles in Scripture that may shed more
light on the concept. The Christian view of the process of human cloning can be
stated in light of several scriptural principles. First and foremost, human
beings are created in the image of God and, therefore, are unique. Genesis
1:26-28 asserts that man is created in God’s image and likeness and is
unique among all creations. This scripture fairly well covers human propagation
from the scriptural viewpoint, and yet says nothing of molecular biology or
DNA. Neither does any other verse of scripture. So instead of looking for a
direct and specific statement from the Bible (“thou shalt not clone!”), we need
to open the Word of God to search for principles that will help us in the maze
of questions that cloning poses for us.
Cloning is a different means of reproduction from
what God ordained. It does not involve a man and his wife reproducing by the
means God-ordained. That would seem to make it, in general, a violation of
God's intent. It changes what God authorized to something that He did not
authorize (Prov. 3:5,6; 14:12; Jer. 10:23; 2 John 9; Matt. 15:9; Col. 3:17).
It is important to note that science or scientists
did not create life. Some in the media frenzy that surrounded Dolly went way
overboard in their statements and reporting, making it sound almost as if the
Roslin team grew Dolly in a Petri dish out of modeling clay and pipe cleaners.
This is simply not true. They grew a sheep in a sheep just like every other
sheep has ever been grown. All they did was transplant some DNA, and then use
the exact natural reproductive processes that God set in place at the
beginning.
Human cloning intentionally copies the genetic code
of a person for the purpose of creating another person with the same genetic
material. This creates a new human life and an individual genetic model based
on a single donor or a single parent instead of two.
Current attempts to clone humans use the same
technique used previously to clone animals such as was done with Dolly. The
method used is called somatic cell nuclear transfer, which results in the
creation of a new organism by fusion rather than fertilization. The result of a
successful somatic cell nuclear transfer in animals is the creation of an
individual member of the species containing the full complement of genetic
material, and the same result is obtained by fertilization. As the cloned sheep
is one hundred percent, so the cloned human embryos would be one hundred
percent human.
The somatic cell nuclear transfer involves removing
the nucleus of an egg that has not been fertilized and replace it with the
nucleus from a donor somatic cell to be cloned. A somatic cell, a skin cell, or
a white blood cell, containing the DNA or genetic code of the donor. Then,
instead of fertilization occurring, a small electrical vibration is applied to
stimulate the cell to start the process of division. The result is a new cloned
individual begins the same process of human development which we all go through.
All human cloning is reproductive because it
involves the creation of human life. Both the "reproductive" and
"therapeutic" cloning requires the nuclear transfer of somatic cell
to duplicate the genetic material of the donor. The difference between
"reproductive" and "therapeutic" cloning has to do with the
purpose of the action and not the method, considering the question, "What
do you intend to do with the clone?" Once the human embryo has been cloned,
it can be implanted in the womb of a woman with the purpose that after nine
months she will give birth to a child (reproductive cloning) or allowed to
develop for several weeks, and then destroyed for their stem cells in order to
investigate it (therapeutic cloning).
It is speculated that embryonic stem cells may be a
promising source to cure a variety of human diseases. Some scientists want to
expand research of embryonic stem cells using the genetic material of a patient
to clone a human embryo, which would be destroyed for their stem cells. These
cells would be used to create personalized therapies that the patient's body
would not reject. To date, the scientists who are trying to clone embryos for
the purpose of obtaining stem cells for research have failed to develop an
animal or human model to confirm their theory.
Other researchers say it is unnecessary to do cloning
just to study embryonic stem cells. They point out that there is another more
effective type of immunosuppressant medicine to prevent transplant rejection
and they point out that the existence of a record that contains information on
alternative sources have been verified, through which stem cells can be obtained,
bone marrow and umbilical cord blood, which can provide patients real medical
therapies.
A steady stream of published research shows that
there are high hopes in the area of sources through which you can obtain the
cells called "adult" or non-embryonic. Therapies using sources such
as bone marrow, umbilical cord blood, and pancreas, to obtain stem cells and
have successfully treated patients with diseases such as diabetes, heart
disease, and multiple sclerosis. These therapeutic benefits for patients
demonstrate that the use of adult stem cells surpasses any animal research
being carried out at present and that uses embryonic stem cells.
One of the examples includes the research done on
Parkinson's disease. A recent study, published in the United States, reported
on the success achieved by using embryonic stem cells obtained from mice, as a
treatment for some of the symptoms exhibited by rats with Parkinson's disease.
Although this sounds promising, it is minimal when compared to the research
done on Parkinson's disease using adult stem cells. For example, in April 2002,
a doctor in Los Angeles reported having effectively treated a patient who had
Parkinson's disease using stem cells from the same patient neuron.
A large amount of evidence that exists of apparent
healing power of adult stem cells makes research using embryonic stem cells
unnecessary. Furthermore, the moral implications are staggering which leads to
creating human embryos for the purpose of destroying them for stem cells. It is
never morally or ethically acceptable to kill a human being to possibly save
another. A cloned embryo is a genetically identical twin of the donor, except
different age, and therefore is fully human. Human embryos deserve the same
protection that humans are at other stages of development. Every human life
begins as an embryo and is expected to grow from then on to other stages of
life: fetal, infant, child, and so on. The size or location does not determine
human nature.
This is not a matter of being a person or not; it is
a matter of whether humanity will protect weaker humans that are among us or
allow young humans to be used as if they were raw material for scientific
experiments.
Another thing to consider is the undoubted
possibility that the scientists fail in their attempts to use in their
research, embryonic stem cells that have been cloned. Currently, a general
definition of "therapeutic" cloning, as proposed in public policy,
including the destruction of cloned embryos within the first 14 days of its
existence. What if scientists discover that stem cells from a fetus at eight
weeks is more promising than those of a two-week embryo? This question is not
entirely speculative: Recently, researchers working for the company Advanced
Cell Technology (Advanced Cell Technology) in the U.S., reported having cloned
cattle embryos implanted in uteruses, allowing embryos to grow to eight weeks
before they were destroyed to obtain stem cells more developed. The researchers
say that this experiment succeeded because fetal cells were more mature.
How do you respond to claims made by some people in
favor of "therapeutic" cloning who argue that cloned embryos are just
"unfertilized eggs," inferring that it is morally acceptable to
destroy them to obtain embryonic stem cells?
"Unfertilized ova" is a misnomer.
Supporters of "therapeutic" cloning are trying to correlate with
unfertilized eggs the products of cloning by somatic cell nuclear transfer.
Technically, it is correct to say that the eggs formed by this method have not
been fertilized with sperm but that is the purpose of cloning: ignore sexual
reproduction. However, the result of somatic cell nuclear transfer is not
"eggs" (before fertilization or otherwise) but embryos that contain
all the genetic material necessary to become a developing human being. By using
the term "unfertilized eggs", proponents of cloning to obtain
embryonic stem cells go against your own argument because the eggs before
fertilization are not, nor contain stem cells, stem cells exist only in human
beings who are genetically complete. The fact that the final result of human
cloning is a being with stem cells validates the human nature of the embryo. If
cloning products were equivalent to the egg before fertilization, stem cells
would not be collected, and thus would not have any profit potential for
research.
Proponents of "therapeutic" cloning also
say that the products of human cloning are not able to become humans. If this
were true, there would be no need to ban "reproductive" cloning. The
reality is that somatic cell nuclear transfer creates a human embryo if
implanted in a womb would develop into a fetus and give birth as any newborn.
BIBLICAL
PROBLEMS AND OBJECTIONS TO CLONING HUMANS
If we look carefully we will see that cloning humans
are destined to be a disaster, both ethically and morally.
Our first objection is that cloning is not wise.
Wisdom is knowing the end of a matter from the beginning (Proverbs 14:15). We
should count the cost before we do something.
Our second objection to human cloning is that it can
be outright sinful. This is true for several reasons. First, cloning results in
abortions. Cloning is a complicated procedure that often does not work, so many;
many cloned embryos must be made. In the case of Dolly It took 277 trials and
errors to produce Dolly the sheep, While toying with (and destroying) sheep
embryos is not troubling to anyone what if that were done with human embryos?
Further, cloning could be used to have a child
outside of the family unit. God’s order for the family is clearly outlined in
Ephesians 6:1-4. Children need parents, both a mom and a dad. Who is it that is
most thrilled with cloning, the homosexual community? With cloning, there’d be
no need for men. A single woman might choose to clone herself rather than
involve a man in any way. God forbid that we should design such technology in
order to allow homosexual couples to produce a family, or even to allow the
unmarried to reproduce outside of marriage.
Perhaps worst of all, cloning will inevitably result
in exploited children. When the experts are pressed to explain what cloning could
be used for, what do they talk about? How about producing a child as “spare
parts”? Children are a gift from the Lord, not something to be exploited for
our or another’s benefit!
Humans were created separately, in God’s image,
unlike the animal kingdom (Genesis 1:27). Our existence extends beyond physical
death (Luke 16:19-31, Philippians 1:23). This is nowhere indicated for animals.
Apparently, there is universal support for a ban on
"reproductive" cloning, then why not just ban such cloning? A ban on
"reproductive" cloning does not prohibit cloning, it only prohibits
the implantation of a cloned human embryo in the womb of a woman (or in an
artificial womb), for the purpose of giving birth. It does allow
"therapeutic" cloning or cloning for embryonic stem cell research,
the technology developed, because of this, add to the scientific knowledge of
those who want to clone in order to give birth to this clone. The challenge has
to do with cloning the embryo not implanting. Inevitably, a human embryo
created for research on stem cells would be implanted in the womb of a woman.
The only way to ensure this does not happen is that each nation or all nations
together prohibit all forms of human cloning.
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