T
TRH1292
Guest
Yes. He was a priest.I am the OP.
Forgive, this is so complex.
Did Chardin believe in God as in the Catholic sense?
THANKS!
Yes. He was a priest.I am the OP.
Forgive, this is so complex.
Did Chardin believe in God as in the Catholic sense?
THANKS!
I am the OP.
Forgive, this is so complex.
In what I read of his works,Did Chardin believe in God as in the Catholic sense?
Pope Benedict XVI has spoken positively of his works in his speeches and in his books several times.In what I read of his works,
he spends all his time discussing his theory of matter consciousness and how increasingly complex collections of matter lead to increasingly complex consciousness, human intelliegence, the future “noosphere”![]()
and the ultimate “omega point”
![]()
I can’t find any of that in the New Testament, which Chardin barely mentions if at all.
No wonder the Church allowed this guy to go off doing his paleanthology expeditions in China. Would you want him to be yhour parish priest? :bigyikes:
People who write books filled with weird ideas will find a ready market. Whether they actually accomplish anything positive for their fellow man is another issue.
When Bishop Sheen was a young priest studying in England, some philosopher wrote a best seller about an evolving, growing God. Sheen went to see this guy and pointed out why God is an infinite, unchanging God. The man said, “I never thought about it that way.” Sheen asked if he had read Aquiinas. The man answered, “No, and I don’t think I will. You make your reputation in this world not from truth but from novelty, and my theory is novel.”
:bigyikes: :banghead: :crying:
Well, ok, if all this means that Christ takes up the world to himself just like the Son of God took up the humanity of Christ to himself.Against the background of the modern evolutionary world view, Teilhard de Chardin depicted the cosmos as a process of ascent, a series of unions. From very simple beginnings the path leads to ever greater and more complex unities, in which multiplicity is not abolished but merged into a growing synthesis, leading to the “Noosphere”, in which spirit and its understanding embrace the whole and are blended into a kind of living organism. Invoking the epistles to the Ephesians and Colossians, Teilhard looks on Christ as the energy that strives toward the Noosphere and finally incorporates everything in its “fullness’. From here Teilhard went on to give a new meaning to Christian worship: the transubstantiated Host is the anticipation of the transformation and divinization of matter in the christological “fullness”. In his view, the Eucharist provides the movement of the cosmos with its direction; it anticipates its goal and at the same time urges it on.”