Here is a letter from today’s Times that puts forward the incredibly simple and rational Catholic position on embryo research.
It’s normally bad blog etiquette to post an entire news item, but in this case it’s a short letter and makes the argument in 141 words, so I figured, great, let’s copy and paste it!
Assessing the status of embryos
SECTION: FEATURES; Pg. 22
LENGTH: 141 words
Sir, Pamela Huby (letter, March 27) voices popular misconception that the Roman Catholic Church holds the dogma that the embryo is fully human at the very first stage of conception. On this issue it is non-believers who are dogmatic; the Catholic Church is agnostic and rational.
To the question, “At what point does an embryo become human?” or as Christians put it “When does it acquire a soul?”, the only sensible answer short of a divine revelation is, “We don’t know”, which is the stated position of the Church. So the only safe procedure is to avoid all experimentation on embryos.
Even earlier Catholic thinkers who suggested that embryos gained souls at a later stage pointed out that in killing an embryo you are either killing a human being or robbing something of its chance to become human, both of which are wrong.
(Times March 29, 200
This wonderful freedom of philosophical agnosticism (which is the most rational position and takes into account the full range of evidence, contrary to the assertions of all our prominent scientists!) reminds me of a saying of Chesterton in “What is Right With the World”:
I am an agnostic, like most people with a positive theology. But I do affirm, with the full weight of sincerity, that trees and flowers are good at the beginning, whatever happens to them at the end; that human lives were good at the beginning, whatever happens to them in the end.
The ordinary modern progressive position is that this is a bad universe, but will certainly get better. I say it is certainly a good universe, even if it gets worse. I say that these trees and flowers, stars and sexes, are primarily, not merely ultimately, good. In the Beginning the power beyond words created heaven and earth. In the Beginning He looked on them and saw that they were good.