E
edwest211
Guest
Ah, the old God picked two random, almost humans and dropped souls into them. No evidence.
Most people do have to sleep at some point.Nice avoidance tactic.
My faith is based on reason, logic and evidence.Religion is about BELIEF, not evidence! My belief doesn’t effect anyone but myself and I’m quite comfortable with that…Bless you.
They do? Who was there to witness creation? When exactly did time begin?Creation follows the scientific timeline from Big Bang to the present…Human intelligence on the other hand was bestowed upon a promising creature by God at some point. The whole young earth hypothesis requires the violation of the known laws that govern the universe, and I feel even God sticks within them (he doesn’t have to, but he does!)
Does it effect day to day life? Not really. IMHO
John Paul II, “Humans are Spiritual and Corporeal Beings”, April 16, 1986.There are no difficulties in explaining the origin of man in regard to the body by means of the theory of evolution. According to the hypothesis mentioned it is possible that the human body, following the order impressed by the Creator on the energies of life, could have gradually been prepared in the form of antecedent living beings [i.e. living beings that existed prior to humanity].
Neither do most of us. The issue is Universal Common Descent and Eve coming from Adam.Clearly, clearly, CLEARLY, the Catholic Church has no problem, in principle, with the idea that biological organisms, including the human body, have evolved over time.
Choose to be a young earth creationist — fine. That is your choice. But stop speaking for the magisterium. The Church has been clear. Though cautious and prudent, the Holy Fathers have been precise to say that evolution as such does not contradict Genesis, the notion of Creation and Divine Providence, design, or the Catholic Faith.
And now, we can move on…
Yes. The firm and constant Catholic teaching. The fall is responsible.So God created all those trilobites and ichthyosaurs and archaeopteryx and australopithecines, the sabre-toothed tigers and pteranodons and belemnites, and when one human couple fell, annihilated them? You think that’s Christian theology?
Now we are getting to your meat and potatoes.And now you have the gall to claim that incessant scientism and science deception has served to make Scripture implausible to the masses. Maybe not. Maybe they just don’t care for such a wasteful God, who visits the sins of a couple of wholly unrelated, unconnected hominids on millions of innocent creatures, creatures only created a few days before, when God saw that it was good!
Wheeee! Heads down chaps, it’s an Edwest quotebomb. On with the tin hats and load the mortar! Ready, Aim, Fire!“69. The current scientific debate about the mechanisms at work in evolution requires theological comment insofar as it sometimes implies a misunderstanding of the nature of divine causality
I’m not commenting; I’m seeking clarification. Your characterisation of the theology of a Creationist interpretation of Genesis is frightful. Somebody must be able to do better than that. No? … sigh …And why, since you are so wedded to methodological naturalism even qualified to comment outside its strict boundaries?