
Here are a few important announcements from Debbie Capen of
Charlotte Area Right to Life:
- Meetings will now be on the Second Saturday of each month at 1:00.
We have a new meeting room: Room 202 of
the New Life Center at St. Matthew Catholic church. (Just take the elevator
to the 2nd floor, and the room is directly above where we used to meet.)
Our next meeting is coming up on Saturday, February 9th, 1:00pm.
We will set the plan for our annual Life is Sweet Event, so I hope you can
make it.
- The scholarship application deadline for the Hero for Life award is
February 28th. Please forward the attached flyer to anyone you know with a
pro-life teenager. WE NEED APPLICATIONS! (Or send people to the web site
at
www.CharlotteLife.org)
- The Charlotte Area Right to Life Chapter has adopted a day for the
upcoming 40 Days for Life prayer vigil. Please come out and pray at the
"Family Reproductive Health" abortion clinic at anytime on
Monday,
2/11. I plan to be there at 5:00pm, but more details to come. For
info on the vigil, go to
www.charlottevigil.org.
- A sign of hope. Yesterday I heard from someone who attended the March for
Life in Washington DC that their most memorable moment was a sign of hope
given to the crowds by God. At the end of the March, while the women from
Silent No More Awareness were sharing their personal testimonies about
abortion, the clouds parted and a huge rainbow appeared over the Supreme
Court. I did some searching on the Internet and found 4 different web sites
that posted pictures of this rainbow. So even if the media ignored the
225,000 people who came to the March, God did not. He gave a visible sign
that he was there and heard them. The pictures are attached as well as a
link to a You-Tube video of it at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsD5Jv_mmL0
As always, thank you for your dedication to the Sanctity of Life and I hope
to see you soon.

STEM CELLS AND CLONING: UNDERSTANDING THE SCIENTIFIC ISSUES AND THE MORAL
OBJECTIONS
Click Here for more information.
This information was copied from SJN bulletin inserts during February 2007
.....
CATHOLIC
TEACHING ON STEM CELL RESEARCH
Part I: Introduction to the Ethics
and Science
• This winter the General Assembly will consider legislation on stem
cell research here in NC
• Many are pushing for the state to fund human embryonic stem cell
research.
• We as Catholics need to educate ourselves and respond to this serious issue
Catholic Teaching on Life
The starting point for evaluating stem cell science
Life is sacred
The central fact at the core of our Church’s teaching on life is that life is
sacred. God created us “in his image” and called His creation “very good” (Gn
1: 27, 31); from the beginning of each person’s existence God has given that
person the remarkable gift of life, which reflects His own life. Elaborating on
this gift, the Catholic Church teaches that “human life is sacred because from
its beginning it involves ‘the creative action of God’ and it remains forever in
a special relationship with the Creator” (Donum Vitae, intro 5). This
core value of human life cannot be removed by any circumstance; every patient
dying of cancer, every prisoner on death row, every mentally handicapped person,
every embryo frozen in a fertility clinic, every person in poverty is beloved by
God and each of their lives is sacred.
God’s love calls us to action
God loves us. Christ took on human nature out of love, in order to offer
salvation to us. However, he calls us not only to receive His love, but to give
love to each other; as he says to the apostles at the Last Supper “love one
another as I love you” (Jn 15:12). This love takes many forms, and among them is
love for the sacred life in each person. In this light, the commandment “you
shall not kill” establishes the minimum requirement of what we must not do, but
Christ’s command to love as He loves pushes us to aim for the best we can
accomplish rather than merely avoid the worst. John Paul II captured this when
he wrote that the commandment not to kill “culminates in the positive
commandment which obliges us to be responsible for our neighbors as for
ourselves: ‘you shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Evangelium Vitae 40).
“Who is my neighbor?” (Lk 10:29)
With regard to the pending legislation in North Carolina, our neighbors
are our embryonic brothers and sisters whom researchers propose to create
through cloning or obtain from fertility clinics and to kill in the lab for
embryonic stem cells. Despite the good the researchers hope to accomplish, we
can never use evil as a tool to accomplish good.
Stem Cell
Science
What is a stem cell?
A stem cell is a “precursor” cell, an undifferentiated cell, capable of
producing more specialized types of cells; just as the stem of a plant grows and
becomes leaves and berries, stem cells give rise to the developed cells that
form the organs and tissues of the body, such as brain cells, heart cells, etc.
What are “embryonic stem cells” vs. “adult
stem cells”?
Embryonic stem cells are named for where they come from: embryos. In
the first days after conception the new person develops the embryonic stem cells
that develop into all the organs and different types of tissue in the growing
body. Once these embryonic stem cells have made the first steps in developing
into specific types of tissues, they are then called adult stein cells.
In the analogy to a plant, an embryonic stem cell would be at the base of the
stem while an adult stem cell would be higher up on the stem, where the stem
forks into branches.
Why are researchers interested in stem cells?
The most prominent and most often mentioned reason is treatment of disease.
Because stem cells can form into specialized cell types, the idea is that they
could treat illnesses in which diseased cells and tissues do not work normally.
Adult stem cells already are used to treat many diseases (i.e., bone marrow
transplants are actually adult stem cell transplants!)
Where can you obtain stem cells?
• Adult sterns cells are all over the body: in bone marrow, in blood
from a baby’s umbilical cord, in the liver, in the skin, etc.
• Embryonic stem cells come only from embryos, and obtaining these cells
involves destroying the
• embryo to remove the stem cells. Thus, adult stem cells can come from a tissue
sample from a willing donor, but embryonic stem cells come from killing a human
at the earliest stage of life.
Where would researchers obtain embryos?
1. From the many embryos “left over” after
IVF (in
vitro fertilization). Though frozen in suspended animation, these youngest of
our brothers and sisters are fully human and their lives are sacred.
2. From a process called “somatic cell nuclear transfer”: a scientist removes
the genetic material (the nucleus & DNA) from a woman’s egg and replaces it with
the genetic material from a developed cell (a “somatic” cell) such as a skin
cell. This mixed cell acts like a fertilized egg and grows into an embryo. This
is how Dolly the sheep was made; i.e., this is cloning.
—Recognize this important point: somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT)
equals cloning, and human cloning would be one of the major sources of embryos
for research.
What are the moral issues with stem cell
research?
• Adult stern cells: the
Catholic Church fully supports research and treatment with adult stem cells.
Using adult stem cells for treatment and research is the same as using donated
blood or a donated kidney to study disease or treat a person with kidney
failure.
• Embryonic stem cells: the Church firmly opposes human embryonic stem
cell research because obtaining embryonic stem cells involves killing embryos
and because creating embryos by somatic cell nuclear transfer means cloning
humans. Both cloning and the killing of embryos violate the sacred life we are
given by God and thus are evil.
What can you do about this issue?
More information is located at
www.nccatholicsforlife.org
To contact your legislators by email or phone start here: Go to
www.ncga.state,nc.us/GIS/Representation
Phone for the State Board of Elections: (919) 733-7173 (they will connect
you to your County Board of Elections who will tell you exactly who represents
you and how to contact them).
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