All the talk
in recent years about the possibility of cloning human beings has
everyone a little unsettled. Even those most enthusiastic about the
project speak in cautious, albeit hopeful and optimistic, terms. Most
folks aren’t quite sure what to make of the prospect of "engineering"
human beings, although they are a little troubled by the thought,
while not a few are very concerned, and some even outraged, over the
very idea.
It’s good
that there is a certain amount of tension in the air over the subject
of human cloning, for in many ways it seems we may be about to rush in
to something without giving adequate consideration of the ethical,
moral, and even spiritual aspects of the proposal. It’s one thing to
clone a sheep, or a pig. We’re accustomed to the idea of manipulating
the genes and jeopardizing the well being of beasts for the sake of
possibly improving the lot of human beings. It’s another thing to be
talking about creating new people out of select gene pools for what
can often sound like rather elitist purposes. Alarming terms such as
"eugenics" and "master race" spring to mind.
From a
Biblical and Christian point of view there are at least three problems
associated with the human cloning project. The prospect of engineering
new human beings out of existing gene banks raises serious red flags
in three important areas.
The hubris
of science
First is the
area of scientific hubris. Following the flood the Lord, surveying the
arrogant attempt of fallen men to build a city and tower to celebrate
their own technological genius and ability, lamented that, having
begun on such a hubristic path, humans would not be restrained to do
whatever their fertile—albeit fallen—imaginations might concoct (Gen.
11:6). Modern science has often proceeded on the idea "if we can
do it, we may, and probably even should." That kind
of thinking has produced many of the marvels and wonders of modern
science and technology; it has also contributed to the pollution of
the environment, growing stockpiles of hazardous waste, and the threat
to the continuation of civilization itself posed by the existence, and
growing proliferation of, weapons of mass destruction. It borders on
the realm of presumed omniscience, the kind of attitude that says,
"We’re scientists, and we know what we’re doing; we don’t have to
listen to anybody other than ourselves." Yet such a prerogative surely
belongs to God alone.
At present a
lively discussion is underway over the ethical, moral, and spiritual
implications of human cloning. Just because the technology is
available—or, at least, nearly available—does not mean
scientists should rush to do something the ramifications of which we
have not carefully considered through thoughtful, patient discussions
in the public square. President Bush was wise, in the summer of 2001,
to set the brakes of the engine of the human cloning industry before
it accelerated to runaway speed on a downhill curve with disaster as a
very real possible outcome.
But the
pressure on scientists and labs to be "the first" in scientific
discovery has led many technicians to take their research and
experimentation to other venues, beyond the reach of Uncle Sam (or
Uncle George). Our American culture has, in the past, rewarded the
pride-driven efforts of scientists to be the first on their block with
some new discovery or other. We award lavish prizes, put people’s
faces on the cover of newsmagazines, celebrate them in the schools of
the land, and otherwise make every effort to make them household
names. What informed American does not know the names of people like
Einstein, Pauling, Crick and Watson, and Hawking? Perhaps we should
consider coming up with a prize for scientific restraint,
awarding those scientists with the Mantle of Wisdom, let’s say, who,
after hearing the opinions of sociologists, ethicists, and theologians
(among others) determine that their current research project is better
off left incomplete.
Human
reductionism
The second
problem area, from a Biblical and Christian perspective, relates to
the view of human beings that pervades and drives the human cloning
project. Years of animal experimentation in the development of drugs
and treatments have solidified in the minds of many people that humans
are just like animals, only a little more complex (all those feelings
and stuff). We’ve been conditioned to believe that if we can make this
thing work with animals then it’s probably safe, if not outright good,
for humans. That’s why we sent monkeys up in space capsules before
humans, and why we study lab rats to figure out how to produce happier
and more obedient children. I’m not endorsing this practice across the
board, mind you, just commenting on its ubiquity and general
acceptance as a pathway for applying the knowledge and technologies of
science to questions of human well being.
In the minds
of many of our contemporaries cloning humans should be no problem once
scientists have proven that we can clone animals safely and with
beneficial results. But for Christians this is a serious problem, for
we understand the Scriptures to teach that human beings are not
simply advanced animals; they are the image-bearers of God, and
whatever else that means, it is a designation unique to human beings,
one that animals do not share (Gen. 1:26-28). As the image-bearers of
God certainly we would expect some kinds of deference, some deeper
considerations to be given before we apply the fruit of animal
research directly to human beings and communities. The reductionist
approach of modern evolutionary science to the question of the nature
of human beings has, as recently as the last century, led to human
disaster on a massive scale. Tyrants of many stripes, having reduced
certain humans to a sub-human level—if only because of ethnic,
philosophical, or religious differences—felt no qualms about
systematically eradicating those people who had been reduced to
sub-human status by their particular worldview. It is not hard to
imagine that cloned human beings—for example, some that might "go
wrong" —could be easily disposed of, like lab rats, or that certain
types of human beings, because of "deficient gene pools" (or
whatever), might be disqualified from cloning. And, hey, if they
aren’t worth cloning for the betterment of humankind, then what good
are they? I recall Francis Schaeffer’s chilling observation regarding
the straight line from abortion to euthanasia of the elderly to
culling the population for whatever reason: "If the fetus gets in the
way, ditch it. If the old person gets in the way, ditch it. If you
get in the way…"
Human
degradation and devaluation
Finally, the
problem of human reductionism leads to the degradation and devaluation
of human life. If the human being amounts to little more than a
shopping mall of genes, available on demand for the future betterment
of the race, then the genes are more important than any individual
carrier thereof. There are scientists today who insist that everything
about us, everything we think, do, are, aspire to, or become, is
determined by our genes. Find the right genes, the best genes, and
learn to control and combine them, and you can make life better for
someone…or for their gene pool. It would be easy to lose sight of the
forest (the human person) for the sake of the trees (the genes) in
such a situation, and we would be back to classifying people by
recognizable gene traits—like color of skin or eyes, shape of skull,
ability to reason, or whatever anybody in authority determined to be
the desirable traits. People would no longer matter, just traits—just
as the young people Hitler rounded up for his breeding camps did not
matter as individuals, only as possible conveyors of better genes for
the future realization of the "master race."
Further, the
fixation on genes can lead us to believe that things like affections,
minds, and consciences—the very stuff of the soul (1 Tim. 1:5)—do not
exist, and, thus, need not be taken seriously in seeking to solve
problems relevant to the human situation. When everything can be
reduced to genes, we don’t need such archaic and useless notions as
compassion, self-control, aesthetic delight, forgiveness, love, and
the like. All we need are better genes. We’ll figure out how to make
those genes available—perhaps in gelcaps or chewable tablets—and
you’ll be better in no time! And if such "gene therapies" don’t seem
to take hold in you, well then, it’s apparent you are beyond help.
Your gene pool can’t be improved. We’ll therefore have to rethink your
status, what "class" of human—or sub-human—you might be. And then…
If human
beings are not the image-bearers of God, if they are only animals, to
be manipulated, improved, refined, and, yes, cloned, then there is no
reason to think that any of those notions of "humanity," "humaneness,"
or "human-kindness," ideas that had their origins in the days when we
thought otherwise about the kind of beings people are, should have any
more utility in the brave new world we are creating.
Which makes
it extremely important that Christians not sit out the current debate
about cloning. The hubris of science and the momentum of an
evolutionary age are stoking the boilers of the cloning industry, and
the engine is building steam for a full-speed-ahead-no-holds-barred
plunge over the cliff and into the abyss of postmodern anthropology.
For now, the brakes are set. But the present engineer won’t always be
in the cabin. The time for Christians to be speaking and working for a
change in the consensus of thinking about cloning is now, and, as a
former president once asked of his cabinet, "If not us, who; if not
now, when?"
(T. M. Moore
is a Fellow of the Wilberforce Forum and Pastor of Teaching Ministries
at Cedar Springs Presbyterian Church in Knoxville, TN. His latest
books are A Mighty Fortress (Christian
Focus, 2003) and Redeeming Pop Culture (P & R, 2003). He is the
general editor of the series, Jonathan Edwards for Today’s Reader
(P & R). He and his wife, Susie, live in
Concord, TN.)