This book deals with the second of
the five great challenges facing the Christian community today,
biotechnology. It proclaims hope for life today and tomorrow, and
yet how it operates offers great threats and challenges to our
very existence as human beings. Biotechnology is a diverse field,
as in: stem cell research (either embryonic or adult stem cells),
therapeutic cloning or reproductive cloning, gene patenting,
genetic discrimination, germ line intervention, nanotechnology,
and cybernetics. Christians cannot afford to be ignorant of this
field because it touches our lives, directly or indirectly.
The contributors to this book are
people very much involved in the biotech field. They confront
their topics in a manner that underscores the challenge sounded by
Chuck Colson in the introduction,
"Christians must bring that influence to bear in public
policy in order to keep moral truth attached to scientific
progress. The whole idea of producing humans for body parts or for
stem cells may sound appealing to some, but it will lead
inevitably to the abolition of humankind and the ultimate end of
Western civilization as we know it" (page 18).
There are three things that come
through clearly from each writer. First, we must not take the
route of the naturalists and attempt to dichotomize bioethics from
biotechnology. We also must encourage and do whatever is necessary
to establish legislation that will create guidelines as we move
forward with biotech. Finally, Christians must bring their focus
into the public arena and to impact the culture with Christian
thought. Biotechnology is the challenge to the question,
"what is human life?" Cameron clearly states the
progression of this kind of thinking-if we can make life, then we
can take life, and if we can do that, then we can "fake"
life.
Presently there are as many as one
half million to one million frozen embryos. What is an embryo?
What can we do with the surplus? Can and should they be used for
things like stem-cell research? Do we just let them live out their
shelf life then discard them? These are the kinds of questions we
face when we fail to ask up front if we should even produce
embryos, especially in excess.
Then there is germ line
intervention, which sounds appealing at first glance because it is
similar to the science of eugenics, of attempting to improve
people. Germ line intervention seeks to alter certain inherited
disease-causing genes. However, is it moral and ethical to do
something to a person's germ line that not only touches that
person's life now, but also impacts children and grandchildren for
generations to come?
Christians are required to believe
in the sanctity of life, which must not be sacrificed in biotech.
Cameron says in this book, "The human race faces a challenge
of a new kind, for which our churches are ill-prepared and which
poses enormous problems to governments." Basically he was
referring to problems such as cloning and stem cell research.
There is also a uniform caution
throughout the book that challenges this idea, 'if you can do it,
it is right to do it." We can clone, but is it right? We can
create embryos in vitro or the petri dish, but is it right to do
so?
There is another warning sounded
clearly about the lure of biotechnology as a solution for such
diseases as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, diabetes, and other chronic
conditions. We often hear the positive side of biotechnology in
this respect. However, in the reporting on the cloning of Dolly,
the sheep in England, we did not often hear about the down side of
such endeavors-tumor formations, failed attempts, transplant
rejection, etc. A Christian cannot allow the idea that the human
embryo is a commodity, a piece of property, or "raw
materials" for experimentation to discard.
Is it ethical and morally right to
attempt to eliminate those humans who are genetic defects? Should
employers use genetic discrimination based on genetic defects? Is
the philosophy, "the ends justify the means" a valid
approach for Christians? It is no longer science fiction to think
about a child who, because of genetic engineering, may have as
many as five parents. This not only raises ethical and moral
questions, but legal ones as well. Leon Kass, now chairman of the
President's Council on Bioethics, called it right when he said,
"We …would be taking a major step into making man himself
simply another one of the man-made things." There must be
strong laws in place, legislating and creating ethical boundaries.
The risk is so enormous that without them, we could destroy
ourselves, create monsters, and change the course of history.
It is so frustrating to try to
write enough about this book to encourage you to read it, study
it, and teach it to the covenant community. It will challenge,
frighten, and yet lay out a course that will help you think and
pray from an intelligent base of knowledge and truth. It must be
integrated into the church's curriculum of equipping kingdom
disciples, if we are indeed committed to training and discipling
God's people to live in this world.
Back
to Equip Page
|