S
Samwise21
Guest
I guess what I’m really hoping for is a sort of mental reconciliation. I’m constantly being set upon by doubt and questions about life, science, morality, mortality. The kind everyone ends up going through. And a big one, THE big one I should think, is the issue of science against faith. A lot of atheists seem to think of it as faith against rationality and reason, but I reject such assertions.
It’s mind boggling, the huge debate of science vs religion, where there’s the camp who says that neither side can ever find common ground and just shut each other away. I can’t reject science. It’s almost impossible. At the same time, I don’t want it to get in the way of my faith, which is still there but hanging on.
It’s a contradiction. At once you have all these people going on about how science is a god, all knowing, indifferent and destroys the supernatural, makes the idea of spiritualism obsolete. But then you have things like accounts of demonic possession, the Miracle of the Sun, historical proof of the existence of Jesus, the Dead Sea Scrolls. And I keep trying to wrap my head around it and whenever there’s a moment where the water feels calm it it always comes back.
I feel sick when I find stuff like what Jerry Coyne keeps pushing forward:
Where does it end? Why can’t I find reliance both in the Bible for spiritual and philosophical truths, and a science textbook for truths about stuff like space-time continuum, atoms, germs and such?
Why must this be so damn hard?
It’s mind boggling, the huge debate of science vs religion, where there’s the camp who says that neither side can ever find common ground and just shut each other away. I can’t reject science. It’s almost impossible. At the same time, I don’t want it to get in the way of my faith, which is still there but hanging on.
It’s a contradiction. At once you have all these people going on about how science is a god, all knowing, indifferent and destroys the supernatural, makes the idea of spiritualism obsolete. But then you have things like accounts of demonic possession, the Miracle of the Sun, historical proof of the existence of Jesus, the Dead Sea Scrolls. And I keep trying to wrap my head around it and whenever there’s a moment where the water feels calm it it always comes back.
I feel sick when I find stuff like what Jerry Coyne keeps pushing forward:
Let us face facts: evolution that is guided by God or planned by God is not ascientific view of evolution. Nor is evolution that makes humans uniqueby virtue of an indefinable soul, or the possession of only a single pair of individualancestors. The Vatican’sview of evolution is in fact a bastard offspring of Biblical creationism and modern evolutionary theory. And even many of Francis’s*own flock don’t buy it:*27 percent of American Catholics completely reject evolution in favor of special creation.
And there is always that ‘stinger’ where Catholics are nothing more than praddlers of medieval superstition.The Catholic Church is in a tough spot, straddling an equipoise between modern science and antiscientific medieval theology. When it jettisons the idea of the soul, of God’s intervention in the Big Bang and human evolution, and the notion of Adam and Eve as our historical ancestors, then Catholicism*will be compatible with evolution. But then it would not be Catholicism.
Where does it end? Why can’t I find reliance both in the Bible for spiritual and philosophical truths, and a science textbook for truths about stuff like space-time continuum, atoms, germs and such?
Why must this be so damn hard?