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Morally
evil and socially dangerous, human cloning devalues human
life by removing a child's God-given uniqueness.
A
Statement from The Office of the President
The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod
1333 South Kirkwood Road
St. Louis, Missouri 63122
United States of America
St. Louis, March
7, 2001--First a sheep, then a pig, then a monkey. Now a human
being? In this still-new millennium, our efforts should be
directed toward improving, protecting and cherishing human
life, not trying to manufacture it in the laboratory.
Cloning human life
is troubling for many reasons--most importantly because it
is contrary to the Word of God, which teaches that a child
is given to a husband and wife as a blessing from Him. Cloning
is not merely another "reproductive choice" for
infertile couples and others. It is a moral evil and grave
social danger. It devalues human life by removing one of the
most important things that make us human: our God-given uniqueness.
When a child is
cloned, he or she is made not through the loving, personal
union of a committed husband and wife. Rather, the clone is
made through a process by which one person's genetic materials
are injected mechanically into a host egg, thus producing,
in effect, a copy of another human being. Because a clone
is biologically related to only one person, couples must decide
which of them will generate the "better" set of
characteristics--looks, intelligence, athletic ability, etc.--to
bestow on the clone.
And the clone,
of course, will not be "their" child. Rather, genetically
speaking, it will be the identical twin of one of them--the
person who donated the genetic material used for the cloning.
Far from being a new and unique creation like other children,
the clone will be that person's "duplicate."
What sort of identity
is this to give to any child? God makes us--each and every
one of us--in His own image. It is not His plan that we should
create ourselves in our own. Our goal should be to become
ever-more fully human, ever-more fully conformed to His image.
Not less.
In the Bible (Genesis
1 and 2), God tells us that a child is begotten, not made.
The begetting of new human life is best accomplished in the
context God intends--in the loving relationship between a
husband and wife. It is they, not a laboratory and a dish
of donated cells, who are given the joy and blessing of being
parents who love and nurture their child.
Clearly, human
cloning is a temptation to avoid. Instead of trying to play
God or become like Him, we should receive children as a gift
from the Lord, who sent His Son, Jesus Christ, so that we
might have life, and have it more abundantly. |