United Methodist Church2019-09-252019-09-252015-10-152000http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/228444"As United Methodists, our reflections on these issues emerge from our faith. We remember that creation has its origin, value, and destiny in God, that human beings are stewards of creation, that technology has brought forth both great benefit and great harm to creation. As people of faith, we believe that our identity as human beings is more than our genetic inheritance, our social environment, or the sum of the two. We are created by God and have been redeemed by Jesus Christ. We recognize that our present human knowledge on this issue is incomplete and finite. We do not know all of the consequences of cloning (psychological, social, or genetic). It is important that the limits of human knowledge be considered as policy is made."engWith permission of the license/copyright holderbioethicsmethodist churchhuman cloninghuman embryoReligious ethicsMethods of ethicsBioethicsChristian denominationsMethodistHuman cloningPreprint