| Is Our DNA Sacred?      One Theologian's Perspective on Cloning
 
                and Stem Cell Research
 
                When geneticists Francis Collins and Craig Venter announced the
 
              culmination of the Human Genome Project in 2001, a reporter from
 
              the San Francisco Chronicle asked a memorable question: “So how
 
              did we come to believe that our very soul is encoded in our DNA?”
 
     The question is not only provocative, but it is also significant when 
 
                                    it comes to the heated questions surrounding cloning and stem cell research 
 
                                    today. Somehow we as a society have begun to treat DNA as if it were 
 
                                    sacred  and that makes cloning and stem cell research lightning rods 
 
            for religious people and subjects of intense interest to theologians like me.  In 1953, when James Watson and Francis Crick discovered the “double-helix” 
 
              structure of DNA, scientists were talking about DNA as if it were the 
 
              secret of life. When the Human Genome Project began in the late 1980s, James 
 
              Watson referred to DNA as the “blueprint” of what makes a human being a 
 
                                    human being. There were some scientists who even described the search for 
 
                                    the human genome as the search for the Holy Grail. Religious meanings became 
 
                                    entangled with the scientific research in the cultural consciousness from the 
 
            very beginning.      How does a view of DNA as sacred play out when it comes to cloning? The 
 
                                                cloning controversy began publicly in 1997 when Dr. Ian Wilmut announced 
 
                                                that he had used DNA science to clone Dolly the sheep. The media exploded, 
 
                                                immediately jumping to the question of whether human beings should be cloned.
 
                                                 Within 12 hours, the Church of Scotland had released a statement saying 
 
                                                 that it is against God’s will to clone human beings. Other churches, both 
 
                                                 liberal and conservative, followed suit. President Bill Clinton held a 
 
                                                 press conference on the White House lawn, announcing his plan to cut off 
 
            all federal funding for cloning research  even though none was in progress.  Why such strong reactions? I call it “yuck.” Cloning Dolly made the 
 
                                                            whole world say, “Yuck! I don’t know how to think about this, so therefore 
 
            I’m against it.”  The religious associations with DNA further intensified the debate. 
 
              Time magazine posed the question, “Is it against God’s will to 
 
                                                            clone human beings?” Seventy-four percent of the respondents said yes. The 
 
                                                            culture interpreted the scientific discovery as a religious issue  
 
            and accused scientists of causing society to fall into sin.  I think this condemnation actually had little to do with the Bible;
 
                                                                         instead, I believe it was the ancient Greek myth of Prometheus coming 
 
                                                                         back. You know the story: Prometheus sees that the gods enjoy the use 
 
                                                                         of fire, so he lights his torch from the sun and brings the fire back 
 
                                                                         down to earth. Zeus punishes Prometheus for stealing from the gods by 
 
            chaining him to a rock, where he endures perpetual pain and suffering.                                                                                        Our culture is riddled with the Promethean myth  from Frankenstein
 
              to “Jurassic Park.” But people in the modern world don’t believe in the
 
                                                             gods of Mount Olympus anymore. Many don’t believe in the God of the Bible
 
                                                             anymore, either. What’s come to replace the gods is nature, and the high
 
                                                              priests of nature are scientists. The perceived danger is that scientists
 
                                                  may unlock the secrets of nature and modify them, only for nature to come
 
                                                            back like Zeus and chain us to a rock. It’s a myth that breeds unreasoned
 
            fear.                                                                                                           To participate as reasoned, informed Christians in the debate about 
 
                                                            cloning, we must first differentiate between cloning for reproductive 
 
                                                            purposes and cloning for therapeutic purposes. “Reproductive cloning” 
 
              the use of cloning techniques to create new human beings  is almost 
 
                                                 universally disapproved of in the scientific community, for many reasons.
 
                                                 In the years since Dolly was cloned, scientists have tried  to perfect 
 
                                                 nuclear transfer, the cloning process. The success rate is now 1 percent.
 
                                                  Wilmut and other scientists agree that unless we can be 100 percent sure 
 
                                                            that we’ll have success, we should never try this on humans. They also 
 
                                                            generally agree that until and unless society’s ethical questions about 
 
            human reproductive cloning are resolved, it’s not something we should pursue. It is still possible, even likely, that human reproductive cloning will 
 
                                                 take place. If anyone does it, however, it’s likely to be a rogue scientist,
 
            not the scientific mainstream.  Whatever one may say about reproductive cloning, I think the far more 
 
                                                 significant issue for us today is actually “therapeutic cloning,” a process
 
                                                 closely tied to stem cell research. This is all part of an emerging area of
 
                                                  medical research called “regenerative medicine” that seems to hold enormous
 
            promise for healing damaged tissue and alleviating any number of serious diseases.  Right now, when there is serious deterioration of an organ, such as your heart,
 
                          the best we can do is to prevent its continued deterioration. But what if we 
 
                                    could place cells within your heart that would regenerate the tissue, making 
 
                                    it even stronger than it was before? There is some scientific evidence that 
 
                                    “pluripotent” stem cells  special undifferentiated cells with the capability
 
            of producing any of the cells in our bodies  can have such positive effects.                                                                                                   Much research remains to be done, however, before this kind of treatment would
 
                         be safe and readily available. And despite its potential benefits, stem cell 
 
                         research is the focus of controversy because pluripotent stem cells, believed 
 
                         to be the most stable and useful stem cells for research, are found in early 
 
                         embryos and can be removed only by destroying the embryo. While the embryos 
 
                         currently being used for research are “extras” left over from in vitro fertilization
 
                        procedures and would be destroyed anyway, many view this as the destruction of
 
                        potential human beings.               
 
             How, then, does therapeutic cloning fit into the debate? Since our body tissues
 
                        tend to reject foreign invaders, ideal regenerative treatments would use stem cells
 
                        that had your own DNA. These could not be derived from surplus embryos. The hope is
 
                        that we could refine techniques like those employed to clone Dolly the sheep to 
 
                        provide a source for matching stem cells. This would involve taking an ovum, 
 
                        removing the nucleus, placing a nucleus from one of your body cells in it, and
 
                        activating the egg. After about five days, the in vitro embryo would be terminated
 
                        and the stem cells removed, ready to be used for treating your diseased or damaged
 
                        organs and tissues. It is important to note that in therapeutic cloning there 
 
                        would never be any intention of implanting the cloned embryo and allowing it to
 
            become a fetus. The current U.S. administration, however, takes the view that a cloned embryo
 
                        is also a potential human being. It has banned the harvesting of new embryonic
 
                        stem cells for research, and instead advocates the use of adult stem cells, though
 
                        most scientists believe these are far less promising for use in regenerative 
 
            medicine. What does the church make of all of this? Positions vary widely. For instance,
 
                        the Vatican opposes all embryonic stem cell research on the basis that an early
 
                        embryo has an immortal soul and should be protected, while some Catholics argue
 
                        that it’s  OK to conduct research on ectopic embryos  embryos that develop 
 
                        in a woman’s fallopian tube but will never actually come to term. The Orthodox
 
                        Church and the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod basically agree with the Vatican.
 
                        The Southern Baptist Convention, although recognizing the potential of embryonic
 
                        stem cells to help people, states that scientists should not be allowed to create
 
                        and destroy human embryos to obtain stem cells. The Evangelical Lutheran Church
 
                        of America, for the most part, has kept out of the debate; the Presbyterian 
 
                        Church USA supports the use of embryonic stem cell research “that may result in
 
                        restoring of health”; and Jewish ethicists, as a whole, see embryonic stem cell
 
                        research as a way of making the world a better place. Muslims are adamant with 
 
            regard to protecting nature as it is. President George W. Bush and the President’s Advisory Council on Bioethics asked
 
                        social theorist Leon Kass to study the cloning and stem cell research controversies
 
                        in 2001. When he concluded his investigation, Kass announced that such science
 
                        was “playing God.” Now, the phrase “playing God” is not a theological term.It’s
 
            a secular term, and I think it belongs to the myth of Prometheus. What I  call “yuck” Kass calls “repugnance.” Repugnance, he says, is the 
 
                                    expression of deep wisdom beyond our ability to articulate it, and he believes
 
                                    we should construct our ethics on the basis of this repugnance. I admire Dr. 
 
                                    Kass very much, but I strongly disagree. Yuck is a form of hysteria, and the 
 
                                    last thing we want to do is found our ethics on hysteria. I think we should found
 
            our ethics on reason and  understanding. Furthermore, I think that based on reason and understanding we must agree
 
                                     with Craig Venter when he stated at the conclusion of the Human Genome Project, 
 
                                     “Genes  can’t possibly explain all of what makes us what we are.” In other
 
            words, DNA is not sacred.  An article about cloning in Time asked, “Can souls be Xeroxed?” 
 
              My answer is no; souls can’t be Xeroxed. I believe the soul is that dimension
 
                                      of your being that overlaps with God. So the soul is not merely some product
 
                                     of our DNA or genetic code. Our souls have everything to do with our relationship
 
                                      with God. I’m not worried that if I were a cloned human being that somehow
 
                                     my brother would have gotten the soul and not me, or that our souls would be
 
            identical.  I’d like to be able to solve the controversy over therapeutic cloning 
 
                                                and stem cell research, but I don’t have it within my power. I do know that
 
                                                 after much prayerful theological and scientific study, I have come to the
 
                                                 conclusion that research on human embryonic stem cells and the potential for
 
                                                 therapeutic cloning should go forward. I want to mention three things that 
 
            I think are worth considering for Christians struggling with this issue. Relationship.  First, a human being is not defined strictly as an individual.
 
                         Who we are always includes a relationship. I am fascinated by the fact that it
 
                         is only when an embryo attaches to the uterine wall of the mother that its genes
 
                          begin to be expressed. And it’s a fundamental principle in Christian theology
 
                         that who we are is defined in a relationship with God, with our environment, and
 
            with those to whom we are  biologically and culturally attached.  Almost everybody in our society believes in human dignity,the concept that each
 
      person is valued as an end and not merely as a means to some further end. I 
 
                                    think the reason we have dignity is because God decided to bestow it upon us 
 
                                    by sending his son, Jesus Christ, to live among us and to die for us. So our
 
                                     value is rooted in relationship with him, not in a chain of nucleotides that 
 
            makes up our DNA. Origins. Second, there’s a tendency for humans to look for the value
 
                         of something in terms of its origin. Some argue that if we can go back to the 
 
                         earliest stage of human development, that’s where nature will tell us what’s 
 
            right and wrong, and what is and is not a human being.  Based on my reading of the Bible, I don’t think that’s how we should be 
 
                                    thinking. I believe the most important thing is the future  the future 
 
                                    that includes our promised resurrection. St. Paul writes in Chapter 5 of Romans 
 
                                    that our essential and original nature is to be found not in Adam  our
 
                        past  but in Christ  our future. You and I, as human beings before 
 
                        God, are anticipating a redeemed life, a new creation. So our nature is not 
 
            something we should just leave alone. Beneficence. Third, for me a problem in this debate is that many of 
 
                         those who want to be ethical rely on the principle of non-maleficence  a 
 
                         $5 word that stems from the Hippocratic oath and means “do no harm.” It’s what 
 
            medical doctors think about: “No matter what we do, don’t do harm.”  But it’s not the only bioethical principle we have. There is also the principle
 
                                    of beneficence, which stems from the word “benefit.” Beneficence says, “If you 
 
                                    have an opportunity to do good, do good  and go out of your way to do it.” 
 
              Our responsibility before God is to use our creativity to make the world a 
 
              better place, and I think that applies to scientific research which leads to 
 
              the improvement of human life. As I see it, that is as important ethically as 
 
            protecting people from harm.  I know these observations will not solve the problem, but I hope they 
 
                                                will be taken into consideration. I believe identity, uniqueness and dignity
 
                                     should be grounded not in a concept of the “sacred” nature of our DNA, but in 
 
                                     our relationship and in our future with God. And I believe Christian bioethics
 
                         should begin with a beneficent vision, not a do-no-harm recalcitrance that 
 
            shows itself in easy answers to difficult bioethical questions.  We are at a place now where scientific researchers, ethicists and public-policy
 
             makers are coming together to engage in this important conversation  and 
 
             Christians need a seat at that table. Let’s come prepared.    
    
 Ted Peters 
 
                                                is professor of theology and interim president at Pacific Lutheran 
 
                                                Theological Seminary in Berkeley, California. An ordained minister in the 
 
                                                Evangelical Lutheran Church, Peters co-edits the journal  Theology and 
 
                                                Science and has authored several books on the intersection of science, 
 
                                                faith and ethics. His work spans government and industry; he is the recipient 
 
                                                of a grant from the National Institutes of Health and a consultant to the 
 
            Geron Corporation’s Ethics Advisory Board.
 — BY TED PETERS,INTERIM 
 
                                                PRESIDENT, PACIFIC LUTHERAN THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
 — PHOTO BY SETH AFFOUMADO
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