G
Glark
Guest
On second thoughts, what is one to make of this?The Cardinal is correct. Science hasn’t found evidence to support the claim. It is a religious story.
A story that reveals truth about the origin of modern humans. I’m sure the Cardinal believes that.
In a television debate on April, 2012, an interviewer asks Cardinal George Pell: “So you are talking about a kind of Garden of Eden scenario with an actual Adam and Eve.”
The Cardinal responds, “Well, Adam and Eve are terms - what do they mean: Life and earth. It’s like every man.”
Adam and Eve are “terms”? Do these sound like the words of someone who believes Adam and Eve are literal people? I seriously doubt it.
The Cardinal continues (about the creation account in Genesis) … “It’s not science, but it’s there to tell us two or three things. First of all that God created the world and the universe. Secondly, that the key to the whole of the universe, the really significant thing, is humans. And thirdly, it is a very sophisticated mythology to try to explain the evil and suffering in the world.”
I suspect that when he says the creation account “is not science”, he means it’s not literal history - meaning Adam and Eve weren’t real people. The rest of his response seems to indicate that the Genesis account is just a story and isn’t to be taken literally.
The interviewer then asks, “But it isn’t a literal truth. You shouldn’t see it in any way as an historical or literal truth?”
Cardinal Pell answers, “It’s certainly not a scientific truth and it’s a religious story told for religious purposes.” Here he seems to be repeating what he said earlier - the account is “not scientific”, and I don’t think he’s talking about genetics or anything like that. I think what he means is it’s not real history - in other words, he doesn’t believe Adam and Eve are real, historical people.
It is not so that all Catholics are obliged to belief that Adam and Eve were indeed real people?