Yeah, I know about the “T” in “Truth.” I made a mistake. I was getting groggy from meds and I was really hoping something like that wouldn’t happen. And when I re-read my post later I realized that it was probably wrong but at that point I was *really * groggy, actually falling asleep and dreaming about these posts I had been reading and so I wasn’t sure and that’s why I didn’t post an addendum (I usually do when I write something dumb like that).
That’s why I’m trying to get off the pain meds.
Sorry; I went off topic there. You are indeed correct; Truth never changes. Our understanding of Truth can be clarified over time and science can play a role in this, although there is no proof using scientific method.
If there is evidence obtained using scientific method and that evidence is replicated many, many times it counts for something but not proof. Never. But science does lead to breakthroughs in many areas; one is that children born at younger and younger gestational ages are being saved. That is something we can look at and examine and it provides evidence that what the Church has always stated is true: A new human being is formed at conception. The development of ultrasound (definitely a scientific breakthrough) caused one very well-known former Planned Parenthood director to become an avid pro-lifer and also a Catholic.
I know you’re not anti-science. I thought I made it clear that when if scientific findings conflict with Church dogma the scientific findings are thrown out the window. If it comes from God it is Truth and as the Church is the Body of Christ if it comes from the Church as dogma it has come from God and I accept it, even if I can’t understand it for the life of me. Sometimes I have to just accept dogma as something divine that there is no chance I will understand while I’m living here on earth. If it comes from science it’s maybe a significant correlation, evidence, a high probability, but there is always a possibility that the results were obtained because of chance.
I agree with everyone you say. I’m sorry I wasn’t clear.