M
mpartyka
Guest
CatholicDude has written an excellent article that might offer a Catholic solution to the evolution problem:
As CatholicDude points out elsewhere in the article, Protestants have come to interpret “original sin” as the corruption of something originally perfect – God created mankind perfect in and of itself (i.e., having a perfection existing independent from sanctifying grace), and the sin of Adam and Eve corrupted this original design. The Catholic view, on the other hand, is that the “perfection” that Adam and Eve had was not something they possessed in and of themselves but was something “twofold” – namely, Adam and Eve’s perfection consisted not only in their perfect design but also in their possession of something external to themselves (i.e., sanctifying grace).
Now, one of the biggest problems raised by those who oppose evolutionary theory is the problem of human death. Death is a direct consequence of original sin, they say, so before Adam and Eve sinned, they were immortal by nature (i.e., by design). Evolution, on the other hand, says that death has been around for as long as life has been around – death is part of life’s “design” – so there’s a clear contradiction.
So, here’s my $64,000 question:
What if the physical/mental/emotional perfection of Adam and Eve were another effect of the sanctifying grace they possessed rather than a part of their design?
That is, what if death, pain, suffering, and concupiscence were naturally inherent to Adam and Eve but were supernaturally corrected by the presence of sanctifying grace?
Put still another way, instead of saying, “Adam and Eve sinned, thus causing the loss of sanctifying grace and the degradation of their design,” could we possibly say, “Adam and Eve sinned, thus causing the loss of sanctifying grace, the loss of which in turn caused the degradation of their design”?
The scenario I’m seeing goes something like this:
Life evolves on earth naturally, eventually resulting the rise of humanity. When the time is finally right, God takes a human couple and bestows sanctifying grace upon them, making them perfect humans (i.e., God-oriented and immortal) and commissioning them to spread this grace to the rest of humanity (by some unknown means). However, this original pair of perfect humans sinned, resulting in their loss of sanctifying grace and the return to their original state of “merely human”, leaving mankind with only a natural capacity to do good rather than the supernatural capacity to do good via the help of God’s sanctifying grace.
Thoughts?
–Mike
P.S.: The other thing I like about this hypothesis is that it gets rid of the “monogenism” problem (i.e., we don’t all have to be the biological descendants of Adam and Eve to have inherited the consequences of original sin).
From the CCC:
The two consequences we see resulting from the first sin was (1) a loss of “the original holiness and justice he had received from God” and (2) human nature becoming weakened (man is now subject to pain, suffering, death and concupiscence). The second consequence remains a part of fallen human nature, even after Baptism in life of all Christians, yet it must be noted these characteristics (pain, suffering, death, concupiscence) are not themselves sin.416-418: By his sin Adam, as the first man, lost the original holiness and justice he had received from God, not only for himself but for all human beings. Adam and Eve transmitted to their descendants human nature wounded by their own first sin and hence deprived of original holiness and justice; this deprivation is called "original sin.” As a result of original sin, human nature is weakened in its powers, subject to ignorance, suffering and the domination of death, and inclined to sin (this inclination is called “concupiscence”).
The first and most serious consequence, the loss of “original holiness and justice,” is popularly called the loss of "sanctifying grace.” The CCC teaches:
Sanctifying grace is a special gift, it is an “addition” to Adam as a human creature, though indispensable for Adam to act properly towards God. It would be like saying gasoline is an addition to a car, the car can exist apart from gasoline, but it cannot function according to its designed potential without gasoline. Adam started out with sanctifying grace in his soul, by this grace his soul was alive and Adam was an “adopted son” of God and capable of carrying out God’s commands to the level He requires. Through his sin he lost this grace, and as a result his soul became spiritually dead, and as long as he lacked that sanctifying grace he was no longer an adopted son of God and in this state he could not act in such a way as to please or obey God to the level He desires.2021, 2023-2024: Grace is the help God gives us to respond to our vocation of becoming his adopted sons…Sanctifying grace is the gratuitous gift of his life that God makes to us; it is infused by the Holy Spirit into the soul to heal it of sin and to sanctify it. Sanctifying grace makes us “pleasing to God.”
The Catholic doctrine of Original Sin is basically this: All men and women born after Adam and Eve lacked sanctifying grace in their souls, they lacked the status of sons of God and essentially orphaned. From here Catholics realize that the first and most important part of salvation is to have that sanctifying grace restored, making our souls “pleasing to God” which causes us to become adopted sons of God…Original Sin also includes the consequence of a fallen human nature (pain, suffering, death and concupiscence), though these effects themselves are not sin, and in this discussion are not as important as the first consequence (loss of sanctifying grace).
As CatholicDude points out elsewhere in the article, Protestants have come to interpret “original sin” as the corruption of something originally perfect – God created mankind perfect in and of itself (i.e., having a perfection existing independent from sanctifying grace), and the sin of Adam and Eve corrupted this original design. The Catholic view, on the other hand, is that the “perfection” that Adam and Eve had was not something they possessed in and of themselves but was something “twofold” – namely, Adam and Eve’s perfection consisted not only in their perfect design but also in their possession of something external to themselves (i.e., sanctifying grace).
Now, one of the biggest problems raised by those who oppose evolutionary theory is the problem of human death. Death is a direct consequence of original sin, they say, so before Adam and Eve sinned, they were immortal by nature (i.e., by design). Evolution, on the other hand, says that death has been around for as long as life has been around – death is part of life’s “design” – so there’s a clear contradiction.
So, here’s my $64,000 question:
What if the physical/mental/emotional perfection of Adam and Eve were another effect of the sanctifying grace they possessed rather than a part of their design?
That is, what if death, pain, suffering, and concupiscence were naturally inherent to Adam and Eve but were supernaturally corrected by the presence of sanctifying grace?
Put still another way, instead of saying, “Adam and Eve sinned, thus causing the loss of sanctifying grace and the degradation of their design,” could we possibly say, “Adam and Eve sinned, thus causing the loss of sanctifying grace, the loss of which in turn caused the degradation of their design”?
The scenario I’m seeing goes something like this:
Life evolves on earth naturally, eventually resulting the rise of humanity. When the time is finally right, God takes a human couple and bestows sanctifying grace upon them, making them perfect humans (i.e., God-oriented and immortal) and commissioning them to spread this grace to the rest of humanity (by some unknown means). However, this original pair of perfect humans sinned, resulting in their loss of sanctifying grace and the return to their original state of “merely human”, leaving mankind with only a natural capacity to do good rather than the supernatural capacity to do good via the help of God’s sanctifying grace.
Thoughts?
–Mike
P.S.: The other thing I like about this hypothesis is that it gets rid of the “monogenism” problem (i.e., we don’t all have to be the biological descendants of Adam and Eve to have inherited the consequences of original sin).