BISHOPS
STATEMENT ON HUMAN CLONING AND RESEARCH ON HUMAN EMBRYOS
Massachusetts Catholic Conference
http://www.macathconf.org
March 2, 2005
- See 2-sidedPDF version with signatures, and other materials at
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is in the midst of a debate about
human cloning and embryo research. As the
Roman Catholic Bishops of this state we affirm that a deeply rooted respect for human life
should always guide our public policy. We
should not stray, even for the most noble of reasons, from the commitment to protect every
human being. If the means are wrong, then the
ends cannot justify them. Human life is
sacred; presuming this truth at every level of our society is a basic moral obligation.
We call on our policymakers to affirm the dignity of human life
by banning human cloning in all its forms. Cloning
involves the laboratory creation of an individuals identical twin at the embryo
stage through means other than the natural union of a mothers egg and a fathers
sperm. Some scientists are working towards the
day they can clone to bring new life to full maturity.
Others are already cloning new human life only for destruction, harvesting
embryonic stem cells through methods that kill the cloned embryo. The cloning process itself denies a cloned child
the right to come into existence with and through a mother and a father, and distorts
biological and familial relationships. Creating
life only to destroy it adds to the offense against human dignity. The Catholic Church opposes human cloning for any
purpose.
Some argue that human embryos created by the joining of sperm
and egg through in vitro fertilization, and abandoned in frozen storage at IVF clinics,
should be donated to science. We disagree. The intrinsic worth of human life is not affected
by whether one is wanted or abandoned.
We urge that our laws be strengthened to clearly prohibit the
killing for research purposes of any human embryos, however created. We oppose any bill that endorses or funds such
unethical experiments on human life.
Our Commonwealth should join the United Nations which gave
initial approval this February to a declaration condemning all human cloning and embryonic
research as incompatible with human dignity and the protection of human life. This international move demonstrates that the
debate cannot be reduced to a disagreement between religion and science. Rather, as the UN declaration states, the core
concern is that scientific and technical progress in life sciences should be sought
in a manner that safeguards respect for human rights and the benefit of all.
Ethical research involving adult stem cells has already achieved
great success and gives patients real hope for cures.
Adult stem cells can be obtained from a persons own bone marrow, blood
supply and other organs of the body without harming the donor. Thanks to good science, therefore, society does not
need to stray from its commitment to life in order to alleviate human suffering.
Science aids the drive to cure and the need to know, and for
that we are grateful. These objectives,
however, cannot be pursued at all costs. Scientific
research and biomedical technology must, like all human endeavors, fit within a moral and
legal framework.
Supporters of legislation in Massachusetts that favors embryonic
stem cell research want to downplay any connection between this research and the cloning
and destruction of human life. They argue that
a process that researchers are using to get embryonic stem cells, called somatic
cell nuclear transfer, does not involve the cloning of human embryos, and they claim
that following up this process with the harvesting of embryonic stem cells does not result
in the loss of embryonic life.
We hope that the general public and our public officials are not
fooled by such false claims. Two different
federal bioethics commissions made up of scientists acting under former President Bill
Clinton in 1996 and current President George W. Bush in 2004 both concluded that somatic
cell nuclear transfer involves the laboratory creation of human embryos, and is a
form of cloning. Joining other scientific
authorities, the 2004 commission expressly found that embryos formed either naturally or
by cloning are living and human, sharing the same biological nature. Cloned human embryos are human beings with a claim
on our conscience; they deserve the respect and protection accorded to the human person. Extracting embryonic stem cells from any embryos,
whether cloned or otherwise created, will kill the embryos.
The lethal connection between cloning for research purposes and harvesting
of embryonic stem cells can neither be denied nor wished away.
Legislators have already heard moving testimony from patients
with Parkinsons Disease and other disabling conditions who, despite their
circumstances and desire for a cure, would refuse any treatment produced at the expense of
anothers life. These patients are
seeking, and finding, effective treatments using adult stem cells and other life-affirming
methods.
The world also has been deeply affected by the profound moral
witness of Pope John Paul II, who struggles with Parkinsons-like disabilities, and
yet continues to plead with scientists to pursue research only through ethical means. Science does not have to kill in order to cure. We join the Holy Fathers appeal to members of
the biotechnology and scientific communities to turn away from research that is both
unethical and unnecessary.
We, the Roman Catholic Bishops in Massachusetts, urge all
Catholics and other citizens of good will to register your concerns about destructive
research on human embryos by contacting Governor Romney and your state legislators as soon
as possible. Call on them to support
legislation that bans all forms of human cloning and any research that destroys human
life. Ask them to oppose legislation that
endorses or funds these unethical acts.
- Most Rev. Seán P. O'Malley, O.F.M. Cap.
- Archbishop
- Archdiocese of Boston
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- Most Rev. George W. Coleman
- Bishop
- Diocese of Fall River
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- Most Rev. Timothy A. McDonnell
- Bishop
- Diocese of Springfield
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- Most Rev. Robert J. McManus
- Bishop
- Diocese of Worcester
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- Massachusetts Catholic Conference, West End Place, 150 Staniford St., Suite 5, Boston,
MA 02114-2511