We, as Catholics, have to ask: Once we gain knowledge, how do we use it? Scientists do not simply do science and then put it away for no one to see. That knowledge is meant to be shared.
If our view of life is that it is finite and ends only in a final death, then what is our attitude toward all work, including science? If our attitude is that we live, or should live, in communion with God and that bodily death is not the final death, then what?
Each of us chooses, and no one that I know, perfectly. Mistakes are made. For Catholics, that means confession and repentance.
And for Catholics, in order to be saved from the consequences of Original Sin, we know we cannot pay the price. Jesus did that for us.
Now enter Science, which springs from the work of the mind and senses of man, usually aided by instruments created by men. Great stuff. Things have been discovered. It can be quite intoxicating to read about the literally incredible things that have been invented. But to who do we give honor and glory? Men? Yes, the inventors and discoverers should get their due praise from everyone, especially when they make or do something genuinely good for the rest of us. But what about God?
Currently, the purely atheist framework works like this:
You are an individual, beholden to no one.
The mind of man is the source of Reason which = Science.
Facts are not democratic, so a dictatorship of Reason=Science would be desirable.
Religion and religious belief is a big problem and definitely harmful. Its influence should be diminished. The fallacy being that religious people have held high office and have done great good as little known servants of the rest of us, even while holding to “irrational” beliefs.
Evolution = Science = Reason. It is unreasonable to reject Evolution=Science=Reason. The hair thin difference between the atheist and the Christian is this - the mind of man, along with his senses and devices are all. Everything. The Christian, while recognizing plainly visible scientific discoveries, should defer to the judgement of our shepherds in the Church. We should also be keenly aware of the clearly contradictory message being given here. The one that says, Your Church is about faith and morals. It is not competent to say anything about Science.
But, the same people will quote Church leaders to convince Catholics that, Hey, Evolution is OK. Your Pope said such and such in support of it. But, when the Church says anything negative about Evolution, it is back to being called incompetent.
So, the danger for Catholics is not knowledge. The danger for Catholics is the same danger for non-Catholics – a deception being sold as the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. The human capacity to lie and omit and deceive exists in all men. No man is righteous. No not one.
So when I read that science has discovered this or that, and the Church and my fellow Catholics - must - accept the Evidence (we have no choice, ya know), I say - No. If Science = Evolution and that’s all you’ve got, we need to remind ourselves, as Pope Benedict has stated, that we must look beyond science. That there are questions that cannot be answered inside it. And that there are other areas of reason we still need. God is the rest of the story. The Church offers the whole and complete answer, and tells us, clearly, that science cannot do that.
Peace,
Ed