In the recent movie The Happening, plants, threatened by the growing human population, release a toxin into the air that causes people to kill themselves. A nursery owner tells the hero that plants can not only âtarget specific threats,â they can also communicate with each other and coordinate their âdefense.â
While The Happening was panned by audiences and critics, one country appears to have taken the threat from plants seriously enough to sue for peace with the plant kingdom. Thatâs Switzerland.
How? By enshrining the âdignityââtheir word, not mineâof plants in their constitution.
A molecular biologist at the University of ZĂźrich recently sought permission to field test wheat that had been genetically modified to resist a particular kind of fungus. He not only had to prove that the test wouldnât have unintended environmental consequences, he also had to âdebate the finer points of plant dignity with university ethicists.â Then, he had to satisfy government officials that the trial âwouldnât âdisturb the vital functions or lifestyleâ of the plants.â
Dignity? Lifestyle? Of plants? Like many a farcical road, this one was paved with good intentions. In the 1990s, Switzerland amended its constitution to require that âaccount to be taken of the dignity of creationââSwitzerlandâs word, not mineââwhen handling animals, plants and other organisms.â
Then, last spring, the parliament asked a panel of âphilosophers, lawyers, geneticists and theologiansâ to determine how this requirement applies to plants. The panelâs report concluded that people do not have âabsolute ownershipâ over plants and that âindividual plants have an inherent worth.â Therefore, they concluded, âwe may not use them just as we please, even if the plant community is not in danger.â
Plant community?
As ethicist Wesley J. Smith has pointed out, phrases like âplant communityâ and the âdignityâ of plants is evidence that our rejection of the biblical worldview âis driving us crazy.â Having rejected the âunique dignity and moral worth of human beings,â it was logical that âwe would come to see fauna and flora as entitled to rights.â
More than that, this shift in worldview, Smith writes, regards âtreating people differently from animals simply because they are human beingsâ as âinvidious discrimination.â
Unfortunately, the damage from this worldview isnât limited to making Alpine countries look silly or creating more paperwork for researchers. While some of the sought-after parity between man and the rest of creation is achieved by raising the status of animals and plants, most of it comes through lowering our status as humans.
Thatâs where the real danger lies. Research that could help feed countless millions is made more difficult and even impossible because of concerns over plant âdignity.â Even worse, carrying the logic to its conclusion, the sanctity of human life becomes a matter of what you can do, not who you areâthat is, someone created in the image of God.
By the end of The Happening, the threat from the plants creates a renewed appreciation for human life. For once, I wish that life would imitate the movies.
From BreakPointÂŽ, November 12, 2008, Copyright 2008, Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. âBreakPointÂŽâ and âPrison Fellowship MinistriesÂŽâ are registered trademarks of Prison Fellowship




