EVOLUTION: what about this

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Tim. Run over to Darwin Central. Atheists who have no clue about evolution? The ones who didn’t take High School Biology or missed Richard Dawkins on TV or youtube? I don’t think you can prove such people exist.
Hmm. Darwin Central. I guess that you think that all athiests 1) participate in internet forums, 2) all athiests participate in that specific forum and 3) someone (athiest or not) participating in that forum could possibly have not heard of, um, Darwin.
The scientists I mention are making faith statements and too many people believe them.
People also leave the faith when told that they CANNOT accept science. I think it is time to stop such nonsense.

Peace

Tim
 
Hmm. Darwin Central. I guess that you think that all athiests 1) participate in internet forums, 2) all athiests participate in that specific forum and 3) someone (athiest or not) participating in that forum could possibly have not heard of, um, Darwin.People also leave the faith when told that they CANNOT accept science. I think it is time to stop such nonsense.

Peace

Tim
You know what is real nonsense? Calling evolution science. Plenty of science is done outside of that related to evolution.

People accept the faith by being drawn by the Father of God, by accepting Jesus Christ and by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. You are making the nonsense assertion that: Don’t believe in Evolution? Then I can’t believe in your God.

Here, you are clearly making the connection between science and religion.

Peace,
Ed
 
You know what is real nonsense? Calling evolution science. Plenty of science is done outside of that related to evolution.
The fact that there are other disciplines besides biology does not negate the fact that evolution is science, your protestations not withstanding.
People accept the faith by being drawn by the Father of God, by accepting Jesus Christ and by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. You are making the nonsense assertion that: Don’t believe in Evolution? Then I can’t believe in your God.
Right. I accept evolution AND I believe in God. I believe in God because He has called me and I have answered. I accept evolution because I have seen the evidence.

Peace

Tim
 
Tim. Run over to Darwin Central. Atheists who have no clue about evolution? The ones who didn’t take High School Biology or missed Richard Dawkins on TV or youtube? I don’t think you can prove such people exist.
Evolution is the primary and most essential doctrine supporting atheism today. I cannot imagine an atheist who “does not have a clue” about evolution. The very vast majority are ardent promoters of an evolutionary world-view.
 
The fact that there are other disciplines besides biology does not negate the fact that evolution is science, your protestations not withstanding.Right. I accept evolution AND I believe in God. I believe in God because He has called me and I have answered. I accept evolution because I have seen the evidence.

Peace

Tim
What I believe is taught by the Catholic Church. After Pope John Paul II said “evolution is more than a hypothesis,” (“evolution, a term he did not define,” as mentioned by Cardinal Schoenborn), Pope Benedict said, “But it is also true that evolution is not a complete, scientifically proven theory.”

And that is exactly where I stand. With the Church. I am against scientism, the philosophy that defines reality as only what can be detected by humans and their devices. “There are other areas of reason that we still need.” Pope Benedict

That’s where things stand with me. The Church is able to combine what it calls complementary: faith and reason. This is what Catholics should be aware of. It is critical information. But all I get here is orthodox scientism, with faith a footnote at best. The Church tells us in Human Persons Created In the Image of God that if a process like evolution happened, it could not exist without God’s direct action. By failing to mention that important fact, the biology textbook, and leading scientists, lead the world astray. They tell us we are animals, ambulatory bags of chemicals, accidents, and the product of a cold, uncaring universe that did not have us in mind. I will not be telling anyone they are biological automatons.

Peace,
Ed
 
What I believe is taught by the Catholic Church. After Pope John Paul II said “evolution is more than a hypothesis,” (“evolution, a term he did not define,” as mentioned by Cardinal Schoenborn), Pope Benedict said, “But it is also true that evolution is not a complete, scientifically proven theory.”
As do I and I agree with the Pope. Of course, that is true of ALL scientific theories, isn’t it Ed?
And that is exactly where I stand. With the Church.
Me, too.
I am against scientism, the philosophy that defines reality as only what can be detected by humans and their devices. “There are other areas of reason that we still need.” Pope Benedict
For a writer, your spelling isn’t very good. You wrote “scientism” when you really mean “science”.
That’s where things stand with me. The Church is able to combine what it calls complementary: faith and reason. This is what Catholics should be aware of. It is critical information. But all I get here is orthodox scientism, with faith a footnote at best. The Church tells us in Human Persons Created In the Image of God that if a process like evolution happened, it could not exist without God’s direct action. By failing to mention that important fact, the biology textbook, and leading scientists, lead the world astray. They tell us we are animals, ambulatory bags of chemicals, accidents, and the product of a cold, uncaring universe that did not have us in mind. I will not be telling anyone they are biological automatons.
Those evil biology textbooks again, huh Ed. The ones that DON’T explicitly exclude God as you claimed?

Ambulatory bags of chemicals. Hmm. Can you put that into context with a citation?

Peace

Tim
 
Here, you are clearly making the connection between science and religion.
Excellent point. If they leave the Faith because they hear criticisms of evolution, then they connected science and religion.
 
Those evil biology textbooks again, huh Ed. The ones that DON’T explicitly exclude God as you claimed?
The Papal document stated that they cannot explicitly exclude “divine providence” as a causal. When textbooks state that evolution is “undirected” and “purposeless”, it excludes Divine Providence as a causal and is incompatible with Catholicism.
 
I believe that the common understanding is that nature was horribly warped after the Fall of Adam and Eve. All systems on Earth have been irreparably damaged and nothing is in the pristine condition in which it was created.
Do you have evidence to support this claim?
 
A story that we *know *cannot be literally true based on the fact that multiple lines of genomic data preclude the possibility of humans having descended from two sole parents and on the fact that talking snakes do not exist.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
You find it difficult to believe that a demon could posses a snake and make it talk, but have no problem with a monkey (or “MRCA”) being able to talk without help from anything (except evolution).
 
You find it difficult to believe that a demon could posses a snake and make it talk, but have no problem with a monkey (or “MRCA”) being able to talk without help from anything (except evolution).
And here, on a Catholic forum, the comment by hecd2 or Alec goes to the heart of the matter. Did a man who was also the Son of God, live, die and rise from the dead for the remission of the sins of all men? Yes. But I’m betting that orthodox scientism will find no evidence for that either.

Peace,
Ed
 
You find it difficult to believe that a demon could posses a snake and make it talk, but have no problem with a monkey (or “MRCA”) being able to talk without help from anything (except evolution).
Monkey? C’mon now, you know full well that homo sapiens is not descended from monkeys.

Th evolution of human speech can clearly be seen in the development of the hyoid bone, FOXP2 gene, Broca’s area, and the descended larynx.

You of course are free to believe that magical talking snakes are more valid. Whatever.
 
And here, on a Catholic forum, the comment by hecd2 or Alec goes to the heart of the matter. Did a man who was also the Son of God, live, die and rise from the dead for the remission of the sins of all men? Yes. But I’m betting that orthodox scientism will find no evidence for that either.Peace,
Ed
Ed, what sort of scientific evidence prove to you that a man was the Son of God? Should we look toi science for this evidence, or should we rely on faith instead?

StAnastasia
 
Ed, what sort of scientific evidence prove to you that a man was the Son of God? Should we look toi science for this evidence, or should we rely on faith instead?

StAnastasia
I think you know the definition of faith as it is written in the Bible.

I think you should know that science should not be barring the door to Christ. It is wrong to believe that. And what did the early Christians find regarding the intellectuals of their day when they heard the gospel message? Many of them did not believe.

Evolution has become the new circumcision. A requirement for entry into the House of God.

May God forbid that men should bar the path to the truth of the gospel and make the gospel to none effect.

Peace,
Ed
 
I think you know the definition of faith as it is written in the Bible. May God forbid that men should bar the path to the truth of the gospel and make the gospel to none effect.
Peace,Ed
Ed, you didn’t answer my question: what sort of scientific evidence would prove that a man was the Son of God? Blood or genetic analysis? Fingerprints? Dental records? Would this evidence need to be quantitative?

Or are we perhaps talking about something other than what science can measure?

StAnastasia
 
A Scientist wants to become a Catholic but he’s afraid he’ll have to ‘leave his brain at the door’ before entering the Church. But…

He’s going have to believe the bread and wine become the body and blood of Jesus Christ. He’s going to have to believe that Mary, mother of God, was assumed, bodily, into heaven. He’s going to have to believe that two miracles were attributed to every saint in the book. Things that literally happened.

But if he’s told the Church is “iffy” about evolution, that’s a problem? Give me a break.

Peace,
Ed
 
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