December 13, 2006 By Linda Bloom
NEW YORK – Should people of faith join the debate on stem cell research, speak
out about questionable methods of human "enhancement" and push for adequate regulation
of the biotechnology industry? The National Council of
Churches, representing some 45 million church members, adopted a policy in November
advocating just that type of action. The policy challenges
the idea that the representatives of the scientific community and the government
"ought to control the discussion simply by virtue of their expertise. ... To be
a responsible church, members must be fully informed, equipped and empowered to
serve the common good." Clare Chapman, an executive with
the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns,
led the committee that developed the policy, allowing the churches to jointly
"bear witness to their beliefs in an age of emerging technologies." Chapman,
who will become the NCC's chief financial officer in January, attributed the successful
adoption of "Fearfully and Wonderfully Made: A Policy on Human Biotechnologies"
to a "stellar committee" and diligent attention by delegates at both the 2005
and 2006 NCC General Assemblies. The committee was named
in 2003. "We worked for a full year just looking at the science and then started
drafting the text," she said. Other United Methodists
on the 16-member committee were Blythe Crissman, a pediatric genetic counselor
at Duke University Medical Center; the Rev. James Fenimore, the Albany District
superintendent for the Troy (N.Y.) Annual Conference; and Victor "Leon" Cyrus-Franklin,
a recent graduate of Gammon Theological Seminary in Atlanta. NCC staff representatives
were the Rev. Eileen Lindner and the Rev. Marcel Welty. Two
resolutions – on cloning and on biotechnology and national security – also were
approved by the 2006 General Assembly. The cloning resolution calls on Congress
"to enact federal legislation that would attach criminal penalties to the creation
of human reproductive clones" and asks worldwide governmental agencies "to regulate
and oversee laboratories with the capacity" to create such clones. The
resolution on biotechnology and national security calls for the creation of a
National Science Advisory Board for Bio-Defense within the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. The board would oversee and regulate bio-defense activities
within the government and private sector. The NCC is
asking its member communions to study and implement the biotechnologies policy
and has developed a curriculum and study guide. The guide grew out of "a request
to the committee from last year's first reading" for a hands-on, easy-to-read
curriculum, according to Chapman. She pointed out that
while some background on the science of biotechnologies is helpful for making
statements of faith on the issue, "you don't have to get in the real deep science
to engage in policy statements." Not in full agreement
"Fearfully and Wonderfully Made" does not represent complete
agreement on biotechnology concerns among NCC members. The section on stem cell
research recognizes the divisiveness of the issue within the Christian community.
"There are places in ecumenical life when you agree it's
not possible to come to agreement on an issue," Chapman explained. In
this case, the policy compares the lack of agreement to a similar lack of consensus
regarding abortion more than two decades ago. "As with the abortion debate, much
of the stem cell debate turns on the differing views we hold on the moral status
of human embryos," the policy notes. While the policy
"neither endorses nor condemns experimentation" on human embryos or the use of
embryonic stem cells for research, "We are, however, in agreement in our recognition
of the irreducible sanctity of human life, as well as the intrinsic moral and
ethical good inherent in efforts to reduce human suffering through medical science."
Recommendations Among
the policy's various recommendations are that NCC members identify scientists
who are church members to interpret biotechnologies; recruit clergy and lay members
who have the health care background to serve as resources on the issue; and develop
worship materials "that address the emerging needs created by the new biotechnologies
and the issues they present." On the congregational level,
priests, pastors and others are encouraged to "recognize that genetics and bioengineering
raise a number of pastoral and theological questions with which they, as clergy,
are frequently and traditionally involved." The committee's
work is done, but Chapman said the NCC is teaming with the World Council of Churches
to sponsor an international consultation on biotechnologies sometime in the fall
of 2007. The idea for such a consultation occurred after
representatives of the NCC committee met in Toronto with their counterparts in
the Canadian Council of Churches "and found a great agreement on much of this
work," Chapman said. More information about "Fearfully
and Wonderfully Made: A Policy on Human Biotechnologies," including downloadable
versions of the policy and study guide, can be found at http://www.ncccusa.org/biotechnology/
on the NCC's Web site. Information also is available
by calling Welty at (212) 870-2379 or writing to the National Council of Churches
Office of Research and Planning, 475 Riverside Dr., Room 880, New York, NY 10115.
United Methodist News Service Linda Bloom is a United
Methodist News Service news writer based in New York. |