OK, this has gone far enough. My forehead has a permanent impression of the brick wall it’s been bashing against. (and yes, the switch is back at “Pesci.” Thanks for asking.)
You read the wrong portion of that or you’re reading selectively to read what you want to read. From your own link:
“We may assume, I believe,
that God would create souls for clones if technicians present viable biological materials. God does not usually stop evil by intervening visibly. He asks us to desist from doing evil in the first place.
Dr. Luc Gormally, Director of the Linacre Centre, London, observes that when human biological materials are all in place, they are in a condition ready to receive a rational soul (Dolentium Hominum 28 (1995) pp. 27-31).”
Not to mention, all that your quote says is that HUMANS cannot create the soul. It does not speak about whether or not God would coopoerate in ensouling a child conceived through an illicit process.
Also, look – I can cite sources too!
catholic.com/quickquestions/would-a-human-clone-have-a-soul
ewtn.com/expert/answers/frozen_embryos_and_clones.htm
From HIS HOLINESS Bl. John Paul II:
The Holy See looks upon the distinction between “reproductive” and so-called “therapeutic” (or “experimental”) cloning to be unacceptable. This distinction masks the reality of the creation of a human being for the purpose of destroying him or her to produce embryonic stem cell lines or to conduct other experimentation. Human embryonic cloning must be prohibited in all cases regardless of the aims that are pursued. The Holy See supports research on stem cells of post-natal origin since this approach - as has been demonstrated by the most recent scientific studies - is a sound, promising, and ethical way to achieve tissue transplantation and cell therapy that could benefit humanity…
Cloning a human embryo, while intentionally planning its demise, would institutionalize the deliberate, systemic destruction of nascent human life in the name of unknown “good” of potential therapy or scientific discovery…
Since embryonic cloning generates a new human life geared not for a future of human flourishing but for a future destined to servitude and certain destruction, it is a process that cannot be justified on the grounds that it may be able to assist
other human beings.
Intervention by the Holy See Delegation to the United Nations, at the Special Committee of the 57th General Assembly on Human Embryonic Cloning (2002)
(source:
old.usccb.org/prolife/tdocs/cloning.shtml)