John Paul's 'Miracle' Shows Catholic Church's Hypocrisy
Michael Kinsley: If we used stem cells, we wouldn't need miracles
By John Johnson,  Newser Staff

Posted Jan 20, 2011 12:28 PM CST | Updated Jan 20, 2011 1:57 PM CST

(Newser) - News that the Vatican has given the late pontiff John Paul II
credit for a miracle related to Parkinson's leads Michael Kinsley-who has
Parkinson's himself-to one conclusion: "The Roman Catholic Church has either
a very good or a very bad sense of humor." After all, if the church dropped
its opposition to stem cell research, maybe miracles for other sufferers
wouldn't be necessary, he writes in Politico. In John Paul's feat, a nun
says she prayed to him after he died, and, poof, her Parkinson's vanished.
Vatican doctors say divine intervention is the only logical explanation.

Er, fine, writes Kinsley. "But I could use a miraculous cure for
Parkinson's, too, as could millions of others around the world who have the
disease or will develop it. And the main force preventing such a miracle is
the Roman Catholic Church." Stem cell research offers the best hope for a
cure, but the church opposes it because it uses human embryos. "They are not
fetuses; they are clumps of a few dozen cells," Kinsley writes, but the
Vatican won't budge. Kinsley can only hope that, for his next miracle, John
Paul "will do something to rectify this situation." 


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