Skip to main content

What Supreme Court ruling on genes means to you?


Last week, the Supreme Court ruled that naturally-occurring DNA may not be patented.  The methods by which genes are isolated may be patented, as may applications of knowledge gained from genetic research.  But the Court found that genetic materials themselves are "products of nature" that may not be patented.  However, synthetically created "strands of nucleotides known as composite DNA (cDNA)" are "patent eligible," since they do not occur naturally.

Why does this ruling matter to you today?


Medical science is undergoing "the greatest
revolution since Leonardo," according to one
of the world's leading scientists....
Read more
Francis Collins, head of the National Institutes of Health and arguably America's best-known scientist, calls genetic medicine "the greatest revolution since Leonardo." In his view, research based on human genetics will soon transform the practice of medicine.  I serve as a trustee for the Baylor Health Care System, where I have been working on the ethics of genetic medicine.  I find this field to be enormously exciting and challenging at the same time.

Our genetics can tell doctors if we are susceptible to certain cancers or other diseases, enabling us to take preventive steps (as Angelina Jolie famously did last month).  Genetics can help doctors prescribe chemotherapies or other medicines which will be especially effective for us.  Gene therapy will soon be much more common as well.

But enormous ethical questions are in our future as well.  As genetics are increasingly used in the process of conception, will gender selection and "designer babies" become common?  Will advances in neonatal testing motivate even more abortions?  Will new embryonic stem cell procedures escalate the creation and destruction of embryos for scientific purposes?  Will human cloning become a reality?  What about life insurance and family implications for those discovered to be at higher risk of disease?

Now that the Court has ruled that naturally-occurring genes cannot be patented, observers expect the cost of genetic tests, scientific research, and medical testing to go down.  Pharmaceuticals and other businesses may be more willing to invest in genetics.  And a medical future transformed by genetics may be closer than ever.

The best news is that none of this is news to our Creator.  The God who made us with six billion base pairs of DNA in 400 trillion cells in our bodies knows us better than science ever will.  If he can call each of the 70 thousand million, million, million stars in the observable universe by name (Psalm 147:4), he knows your name and mine.  The Father who knit you together in your mother's womb while his eyes saw your unformed body (Psalm 139:13, 16) knows that you're reading these words now.

Why is his omniscient love good news for you this morning?

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

COMMIT TO

In the face of widespread insecurity, fear, and hopelessness, our nation desperately needs your prayers. Join us in praying for our nation, that God will heal our land.

Pablo reprende a Pedro

Pero cuando Pedro vino a Antioquía, le resistí cara a cara, porque era de condenar. Pues antes que viniesen algunos de parte de Jacobo, comía con los gentiles; pero después que vinieron, se retraía y se apartaba, porque tenía miedo de los de la circuncisión. Y en su simulación participaban también los otros judíos, de tal manera que aun Bernabé fue también arrastrado por la hipocresía de ellos. Pero cuando vi que no andaban rectamente conforme a la verdad del evangelio, dije a Pedro delante de todos: Si tú, siendo judío, vives como los gentiles y no como judío, ¿por qué obligas a los gentiles a judaizar? Nosotros, judíos de nacimiento, y no pecadores de entre los gentiles, sabiendo que el hombre no es justificado por las obras de la ley, sino por la fe de Jesucristo, nosotros también hemos creído en Jesucristo, para ser justificados por la fe de Cristo y no por las obras de la ley, por cuanto por las obras de la ley nadie será justificado. Y si buscando ser justificados en Cristo, tamb...

El quebrantamiento de Pedro

If you are unable to see the message below, click here to view .     Leer | Lucas 22.54-62 11 de noviembre de 2014 El orgullo de Pedro era un obstáculo para los propósitos de Dios. Cristo buscaba a un siervo-líder para que guiara a los creyentes una vez que Él regresara al cielo. El antiguo pescador era un impulsivo sabelotodo, pero el Señor vio su potencial a pesar de su arrogancia. Por eso, el gran Artesano utilizó una filosa herramienta —la humillación— para quebrantarlo. Cuando las palabras del Señor estuvieron en conflicto con la opinión de Pedro, el discípulo reprendió temerariamente a Jesús. El Salvador respondió con una virulenta reprimenda, tanto para silenciar como para enseñar ( Mt 16.21-23 ; Jn 13.5-8 ). Inclusive, Pedro incumplió su promesa de morir por el Señor cuando lo negó tres veces ...