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grannymh
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Originally Posted by wmw forums.catholic-questions.org/images/buttons_khaki/viewpost.gif
When we accept that God is infinite we have to also accept that we will never know all the why’s. We understand some better than others. Some are more straightforwardly stated in the Bible. These seem as layers of understanding to us. Each more difficult to grasp. Is the first we know the more important? To some people’s faith and understanding it would seem that way, but in the eye’s of God none of us will know if the 2 millionth reason of God is the most important or the 3rd.
More to the point of your question the thinking in the last 4 or 5 posts of mine are working on the point of view of the Genesis early Chapters. Independent of who took reed in ink or stylus to clay the View of the first story is God the Father’s and the second as Adam saw it.
When we read the Gospels in the NT we are seeing view points of different apostles and accept that each saw it in their own way. Some of the events are told differently and in slightly different orders. This seems a disater to those who are fixated on literal perfection, but to those seeing the writting as an account of witnesses memories they are stunningly accurate, detailed, and complementary.
*When we look at the second creation story of Adam do we then say Adam saw his own making? No, but we can see Adam’s understanding in how he and Eve came to be. That this was first and paramount in his story is quite natural and has Thelogical reasons. Then he adds that God made all the other things too in the place of Eden where God brings them together. *
The modern scientific mind wants to parce, disect, and re-assemble the two stories into one full understanding, but they are made to be seperate, to be two views that are complemetary. Also, neither fits our modern format of an unbiased news report or scientific journal. Yet, with full conviction of faith, in total union with rational fact we can say both are true and that either one without the other is a much lesser truth than having both as truthful cannon of scripture.
I started to read this excellent link… then it hit me that different does not necessarily mean contradiction of Catholic doctrines.For a more complete answer with references to Authoritative Church documents go to this ask as apologist answer:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=12966
What verses in the first three chapters of Genesis actually contradict Catholic Doctrines?
Figurative language would not necessarily contradict a Catholic doctrine.
Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second Edition, paragraph 390
**390 **The account of the fall in *Genesis *3 uses figurative language, but affirms a primeval event, a deed that took place at the beginning of the history of man. Revelation gives us the certainty of faith that the whole of human history is marked by the original fault freely committed by our first parents.
Do any of the verses contradict
- God as Creator exists.?
- God as Creator interacts with humans.?