First
Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany
"On the Beginning and Ending of
Life"
Rev. Samuel A. Trumbore
December 9, 2001
SERMON
Every
human being values life. No matter
what language is used to speak our beliefs, no matter in what culture those
beliefs find their expression in worship, everywhere life is greatly valued and
revered. We have complete agreement
on this. Now, I don't want to sound
like I'm disrespecting inanimate objects but I think everyone values that which
is alive more than that which is not alive. I'm afraid sometimes people get confused
on this and value objects like gold and guns more than other people. And, come to think of it, I guess I value my tie over the living
bacteria and dust mites that may now be making my tie their home Still, the ethical analysis is
unambiguous. We value people before
things. Where we have disagreement
is defining when an individual life acquires that value and when it loses that
value.
Abortion,
cloning and stem cell research have challenged us to figure out when a potential
for human life becomes valuable and worth protection. Advances in medical technology have
forced us to ponder when the value of a life ends even if the organism continues
to exist. It is on the edges of
life that we struggle with what to value.
My goal this morning is to bring clarity to those who are confused and
new questions to those who think they understand these issues
clearly.
A
good place to begin is with definitions.
What separates that which is alive from that which is not alive? Time for a short course in biology. Currently, there are four categories of
things we classify as alive. First
there are the familiar one-celled bacteria that overrun our planet. The
total weight of all the bacteria on Earth is greater than the combined weight of
every other living thing on the planet!
Second are all the organisms that contain
cells with a nucleus and specialized structures within the cell boundaries such
as chloroplasts and mitochondria.
Third are the recently added archaeabacteria that live in extremely
hostile habitats like thermal volcanic vents, saline pools, and hot
springs. Finally we have viruses
which some question whether they are actually alive or
not.
What
qualities do they all share? A
basic requirement is high molecular complexity. Every living thing reproduces
itself. Each has the ability to use
energy for the purposes of transformation.
While viruses do not have the ability to metabolize food, they do consume
the host cell they invade for reproduction. Everything that is alive has some kind
of homeostasis that allows it to retain and maintain definable boundaries and
regulate internal processes, generate biomass and create waste. Over time, entities grow and
develop. Living things have
mechanisms, primitive as they may be, to adapt to change. Even viruses participate in the
evolutionary engine of mutation and natural selection.
Using
this criteria, sperms and eggs don't quite meet the criteria for being
alive. They can't reproduce
themselves. They can't metabolize
food. They don't grow and change over time. Yet to watch sperm under a microscope
lashing their tails desperately seeking an egg, one can only be awed by the
passion of life to exist. And when
the two do meet, a truly profound process is initiated.
Someplace
between the moment before egg and sperm meet and the first breath of a newborn
baby, this individual life process acquires tremendous value. Many of the controversies around stem
cell research have to do with determining when a collection of cells attains the
status of personhood.
First,
let me add two great high tech words to your vocabulary: Pluripotential and totipotential. Pluripotential is a twentieth century
adjective describing plasticity (another twentieth century word). A pluripotent cell is not fixed in its
developmental possibilities. It
could be a skin cell, or a liver cell or bone marrow cell. Totipotential is another twentieth
century adjective that describes the capability of developing into a complete
organism or differentiating into any of its cells or
tissues.
The
transition from totipotential to pluripotential cells is very important in our
ethical analysis. The first cell
division occurs approximately 36 hours after fertilization, when the fertilized
egg begins to cleave into two cells called blastomeres. At about 60 hours
following fertilization, the two blastomeres divide again to form four
blastomeres. At three days postfertilization, the four blastomeres divide to
form eight cells. Each blastomere becomes smaller with each subsequent division.
These first cells are totipotential.
One or more of the blastomeres can be removed without affecting the
ability of the other blastomeres to develop into a fetus. In fact, if an embryo
separates in half during this early stage of cell division, identical twins—two
genetically identical individuals—will develop.
This
developing collection of cells is called a zygote. After reaching the uterus three to four
days following fertilization, the developing zygote usually remains in the
uterine cavity an additional four to five days before it implants in the uterine
wall. The first cell specialization event occurs just before the zygote attaches
to the uterus, when approximately 100 cells have developed. This specialization
involves the formation of an outer layer of trophoblast cells, which will give
rise to part of the placenta, surrounding a group of about 20 to 30 inner cells
(called the inner cell mass) that remain undifferentiated. At this stage, these
inner cells are pluripotent. They
can no longer give rise to all of the cells necessary to form an entire organism
and therefore are incapable of developing into an entire human being. In
general, as cells further differentiate, they lose the capacity to enter
developmental pathways that were previously open to them. It is these pluripotent cells that can
be cultured, creating immortal cell lines that can then be used for stem cell
research.
Science
can minutely observe, measure, define and predict this developmental process but
it cannot tell us what the value of this process is or whether or not it should
be interrupted, interfered with or harvested. The people who accept responsibility to
give us these answers are our theologians.
The
National
Bioethics Advisory Committee created by President Clinton issued a report in
June of 2000 titled: Ethical Issues in Human Stem Cell Research. Volume III of the report records the
testimony of various religious perspectives and makes for interesting reading
(and is available on the web) recording Jewish, Christian and Islamic
reflections on this question.
The
most resistant to stem cell research are the Orthodox Christians. Father Demetrios Demopulos, a Greek
Orthodox priest testified:
We
believe that this process toward authentic human personhood begins with the
zygote. Whether created in situ or in vitro, a zygote is committed
to a developmental course that will, with God’s grace, ultimately lead to a
human person. The embryo and the adult are both potential human persons,
although in different stages of development. As a result, Orthodox Christians
affirm the sanctity of human life at all stages of
development.
Even
though not yet a human person, an embryo should not be used for or sacrificed in
experimentation, no matter how noble the goal may seem. For me, then, the
derivation
of
embryonic stem cell lines is immoral because it sacrificed human embryos, which
were committed to becoming human persons.
That the embryos donated for this work were not going to be implanted and
had no chance of completing their development cannot mitigate the fact that they
should not have been created.
Officially,
Roman Catholics join their orthodox brothers and sisters in condemning
harvesting embryonic stem cells.
The respected medical ethicist, Dr. Edward Pelligrino of Georgetown
University, argues that we need not even be forced to look to embryos as a
source of stem cells since they can be harvested from adult donors arguing an
immortal cell is an immortal cell.
But
there isn't complete agreement among the Catholics. One of their controversies surrounds
another source of stem cells - aborted fetuses. Especially in the case of spontaneous
abortion or miscarriage, harvesting cells could be morally good. Dr. Margaret Farley of Yale University
explains:
A
growing number of Catholic moral theologians … do not consider the human embryo
in its earliest stages (prior to the development of the primitive streak [of
cells that will become the spine] or [prior] to implantation) to constitute an
individualized human entity with the settled inherent potential to become a
human person. The moral status of the embryo is, therefore (in this view), not
that of a person, and its use for certain kinds of research can be
justified.
The
Islamic perspective comes from Quranic interpretation as there is no
authoritative body or person like the Pope who can make a pronouncement on what
all Muslims believe. What can be
deduced from the Prophet's words is that the embryonic journey must be seen
developmentally. Ensoulment doesn't
happen, in their view, until the fourth month of pregnancy. This is the time that the first
movements can be felt in the womb.
Up until that time, its personhood has not been established. Thus for the Sunni and Shi'ite jurists,
there is no problem endorsing ethically regulated research provided that the
expected therapeutic benefits are not simply speculative.
These
potential therapeutic benefits are the determining factor for Jewish
Theologians. Genetic
materials outside the uterus have no legal status in Jewish law, for they are
not even a part of a human being until implanted in a woman’s womb, and even
then, during the first 40 days of gestation, their status is “as if they were
simply water.” The argument for stem cell research can
be made from its potential to save lives rather than the embryo's right to
exist. Dr. Laurie Zoloth of San
Francisco State University presented this argument:
[The
justification for this research] stems largely from the defining moment in the
Talmud in which the rabbinic authorities debate whether one can violate the
mandate to rest and to sanctify the Sabbath in order to rescue a man trapped in
the rubble of a collapsed building. From this vivid (and, I might add,
graphically obvious) source text springs a whole set of cases that are then
defined as like being trapped—by illness, catastrophe, hunger, war, or threat.
This has provided the warrant text for virtually all experimental therapy,
including genetic research…Hence, even if otherwise proscribed actions are
involved (taking the organs of the dead, for example), the use is permitted if
[a] life can be reliably saved.
Jewish medical ethics is nearly entirely constructed around the principle
of pikuach nefesh, to save a life.
To save even one life… is permissible, and in fact mandated, that all
other mitzvot can be abrogated …Using this consideration alone, the
technology could be considered ethical.
What
do Unitarian Universalists say about stem cell research? I was interested to read that our new
President, Bill Sinkford, decided to make a pronouncement on the subject last
month. Anticipating debate at our
yearly meeting in June, he said: "Because I do not consider human embryos to be
people, and because Unitarian Universalists insist that reproduction is a
personal and private matter, I believe that there should be no ban on embryonic
stem cell research."
What
do I think? I too am a strong
supporter of stem cell research but I'd like to argue the case slightly
differently than any of these theologians have. I'm not worried about whether a zygote
has a soul or not because I believe that all living things have soul and even
inert substance has soul capacity.
I believe soul or, alternately expressed, personhood, is an emergent
phenomenon of systemic complexity.
From the atom to the person, I see no demarcation where the Spirit of
Life starts or stops. My body is
full of calcium, magnesium, iron, water and gaseous molecules. Are they dead or part of a living
system. Just about everything you
see around you has been part of a living system at one time or
another.
So
to focus on a little collection of cells in a petri dish and give it the status
of personhood is roughly parallel to holding a tiny seed in a handful of dirt
and giving it the same status as a flower.
Yes, the potentiality is there in both cases but not the
reality.
The
second perspective that must be added is balancing the value of the community
with the value of the individual.
This planet cannot support an infinite number of people. Clearly every egg and every sperm do not
have the right to unite and grow into adulthood. The fact that they might find each other
in a petri dish doesn't give them the right to be born. These extra blastocysts are wonderful
potential embryos for infertile couples interested in adopting them but we must
never confuse a potential person with an actual person.
The
vitality of personhood grows with the fetus until it is born and I believe
continues to grow and change throughout its life. In one aboriginal culture with a high
infant mortality rate, children were not even named until they'd completed a
year of life. Changes in personhood
status are formally recognized for children in many religions as they mature
into adults. Our personhood might
peak with economic success, social responsibility and status, creative
expression, political power, and/or religious insight and practice. And at the end of life as one's
faculties and health begin to decline, there can be a parallel sense of decline
in personhood status, particularly in the final days of a terminal illness. I'm arguing that personhood isn't a
discrete state. It isn't a yes or
no choice. It is a pluripotent
state that is constantly in flux till we take our last
breath.
Using
this definition of personhood offers a reason to grow throughout our lives. Adding value to our personhood is
reflected in the quality of our lives.
Making real our potential personhood is what this congregation is all
about. This is what we mean when we
say in the chalice lighting: We gather to excite the human spirit and inspire
its growth and development. Our
personhood can continue to gain value till the end of our lives compensating to
some degree for the inevitable physical decline that comes with aging. And I fully expect stem cell research
will extend our personhood by providing effective treatments for some of those
conditions.
Stem
cell research is just the beginning of the many bioethical challenges ahead of
us. Cloning will be particularly
vexing as that technology becomes viable.
Add to that, the day when Bicentennial Man style robots are smarter than
we are, figure out how to make copies of themselves and demand personhood. Then we'll need to redefine what it
means to be alive. The will to be
is extremely powerful. That energy
to my mind is holy and merits our encouragement and protection. Stem cell research opens another avenue
for this living energy, this spirit if you will, to express itself in the
world.
Where
we must be extremely cautious is determining how we use the new knowledge we
acquire.
BENEDICTION
The
Spirit of Life's intense drive
to animate the material world is unstoppable.
It seeks greater and
greater complexity
and greater and greater diversity.
We are created in its
image
and our creative energy springs from the same source.
Natural
selection will determine if we become gods or ghosts.
May we use our spirit
filled creative energy wisely
seeking the good of all living and non-living
beings.
Go
in peace. Make peace. Be at Peace.
Copyright
©2001 by Rev. Samuel A. Trumbore. All rights
reserved.