R
raaucoin
Guest
YES!!
That is not true.All Catholics are required to believe in the actual original parents, Adam and Eve.
Pretty much been my opinion. I don’t think this conflicts with the Catholic position. The point at which man was able to separate good from evil, possessed guilt and operated in his actions beyond just instinct he became man and thus was separate from the animals.I believe that the story of creation in Genesis corresponds with evolution. I think that when the first humans with souls came along (who one would call Adam and Eve), they disobeyed God as Satan tempted them and they felt guilty about it. As Satan tempted them more and more, they kept feeling more and more guilt (or their eyes were opened and they noticed they were naked). They were developing consciences, intelects, and free will. Many say evolution is not compatible with Genesis, but, for most of them, they take everything literally (i.e. God created the world and life in exactly 7, 24 hour days.)
I don’t think soooo…That is not true.
Catholics are certainly ALLOWED to believe that, or to believe that their story is allegory.
I’ll go with the allegory, for two reasons, well, actually, more than two, but chiefly:
- Human beings existed for at least a million years prior to the Biblical timeframe of Adam and Eve.
- BOTH creation stories (Gen 1:1ff and Gen 2:41/2 ff) are adaptations of earlier, clearly fictional pagan myths.
I don’t think soooo…
*]The Doctrine of Revelation Regarding Man or "Christian Anthropology"
*] The first man was created by God. (De fide.)
*] The whole human race stems from one single human pair. (Sent. certa.)
*] Man consists of two essential parts–a material body and a spiritual soul. (De fide.)
*] The rational soul is per se the essential form of the body. (De fide.)
*] Every human being possesses an individual soul. (De fide.)
*] Every individual soul was immediately created out of nothing by God. (Sent. Certa.)
*] A creature has the capacity to receive supernatural gifts. (Sent. communis.)
*] The Supernatural presupposes Nature. (Sent communis.)
*] God has conferred on man a supernatural Destiny. (De fide.)
*] Our first parents, before the Fall, were endowed with sanctifying grace. (De fide.)
*] The donum rectitudinis or integritatis in the narrower sense, i.e., the freedom from irregular desire. (Sent. fidei proxima.)
*] The donum immortalitatis, i.e.,bodily immortality. (De fide.)
*] The donum impassibilitatis, i.e., the freedom from suffering. (Sent. communis.)
*] The donum scientiae, i.e., a knowledge of natural and supernatural truths infused by God. (Sent. communis.)
*] Adam received sanctifying grace not merely for himself, but for all his posterity. (Sent. certa.)
*] Our first parents in paradise sinned grievously through transgression of the Divine probationary commandment. (De fide.)
*] Through the sin our first parents lost sanctifying grace and provoked the anger and the indignation of God. (De fide.)
*] Our first parents became subject to death and to the dominion of the Devil. (De fide.) D788.
*] Adam’s sin is transmitted to his posterity, not by imitation, but by descent. (De fide.)
*] Original Sin consists in the deprivation of grace caused by the free act of sin committed by the head of the race. (Sent. communis.)
*] Original sin is transmitted by natural generation. (De fide.)
*] In the state of original sin man is deprived of sanctifying grace and all that this implies, as well as of the preternatural gifts of integrity. (De fide in regard to Sanctifying Grace and the Donum Immortalitatus. D788 et seq.)
*] Souls who depart this life in the state of original sin are excluded from the Beatific Vision of God. (De fide.)
The above is the constant teaching and understanding of the Church. The Bible did not just fall out of the sky 200 years ago and know we have to apply a particular methodology to study it. We know what it means, because we knew from the beginning.Well, most of those are matters of religious faith, on which science is completely silent.
Only one of them, the one about “,one single human pair” seems to ‘cross the line’ into the realm of anthropology.
My two statements in the earlier post are matters of fact. The Church does not deny that mankind has existed for more than a million years, or that the two mutually contradictory creation tales in Genesis are not original, and if the Church did deny that, the Church would be wrong. But it doesn’t.
Literal interpretation of Scripture is about 200 years out of date, and is today the province mainly of the more extreme manifestations of Protestant fundamentalism.
I know of no instance in modern times in which Catholics are forbidden to believe established facts of science.
As I have grown I need to pin science down more.When I used to take more things in the Bible literally, I once believed in a 6 day, 24 hr creation with the evening and morn being a day… But as I’ve grown, I tend to no longer do.
Me as well…I found it odd to believe in a literal 24hour day when no sun or moon existed for the first few “days”…and the “light” created when God said…“Let there be light” certainly didnt’ wane in 24 hour increments to produce “night and day”…it is a mythic story.When I used to take more things in the Bible literally, I once believed in a 6 day, 24 hr creation with the evening and morn being a day… But as I’ve grown, I tend to no longer do.
What is light? Is it always visible?Me as well…I found it odd to believe in a literal 24hour day when no sun or moon existed for the first few “days”.
Yes…if it’s always visible…how did “evening and morning” get into the picture? Did the newly created light wane and wax in 24hour increments before the sun and moon were created on the 4th day…after vegetation and animal life? Definitely poses problems for me in reading a literal 24hr day cycle…but then…that’s just me.What is light? Is it always visible?
He created light and separated darkness on the first day. calling the light day and the darkness night. that created the first “day”. the moon and sun were created on the fourth day. not necessarily what we would consider a 24-hour “day”. I suppose…Yes…if it’s always visible…how did “evening and morning” get into the picture? Did the newly created light wane and wax in 24hour increments before the sun and moon were created on the 4th day…after vegetation and animal life? Definitely poses problems for me in reading a literal 24hr day cycle…but then…that’s just me.![]()
The chiastic structure of Genesis:Yes…if it’s always visible…how did “evening and morning” get into the picture? Did the newly created light wane and wax in 24hour increments before the sun and moon were created on the 4th day…after vegetation and animal life? Definitely poses problems for me in reading a literal 24hr day cycle…but then…that’s just me.![]()
I understand that the writer of Genesis used very mythic language…“evening and morning” exist for us because of the rotation of the Earth…“evenings” occur as the Earth moves rotates away from the sun…so separating darkness and light have no real meaning in the story in a literal sense…again…unless the “light” waxed and waned…darkness and light could not be separated into 24hour days.He created light and separated darkness on the first day. calling the light day and the darkness night. that created the first “day”. the moon and sun were created on the fourth day. not necessarily what we would consider a 24-hour “day”. I suppose…
Personally, I choose to believe in Adam and Eve as the first humans. As far as evolution, big bang, or intelligent design and what not, if it happened it was through the will of God.