<< Then what is drpmjhess talking abut then? >>
Something along the lines of John Haught, let’s re-define what immortal soul is, and allow it to “evolve” to…
“Perhaps, then, Darwinian science compels us now to reconsider what we mean by the ‘soul.’ … But even in a scientific age it is not too speculative to attribute an interior aspect to each living being. Maybe all living organisms have an aspect of ‘subjectivity’ hidden from scientific objectification. In each of us this interiority would be associated with a distinctively human soul. But other living beings may possess a hidden ‘subjectivity’ – widely varying in the degree of experiential awareness – where they are intimately touched by and participate in the divine Spirit whom we may refer to as Life-Itself. Once we allow for this broader understanding of soul, we may interpret evolution as the momentous story of soul-emergence. Evolution is the adventure of life gradually becoming more conscious, centered, free and capable of love – but also capable of great evil. This understanding allows us to move beyond the artifice of thinking that God abruptly ‘injects’ prefabricated ‘souls’ into our species or into our bodies at certain artificially defined points in evolution or embryogenesis. Instead we may understand the Spirit of God as present in all of life, animating each species in a manner proportionate to its characteristic mode of organic or informational complexity. The emergence of the human soul, then, would not be a glaring exception to this animating process, but instead a most intense exemplification of a general aspect of creation and evolution.” (Haught,
Responses to 101 Questions on God and Evolution [Paulist Press, 2001], question 19, page 27-28)
I dunno, we can also re-define the resurrection of Jesus as meaning “he is bodily dead” but the apostles “experienced” mass hallucinations. We’re walking a fine line here… I may be too fundy Catholic to understand what Haught is talking about.
By fundy Catholic I mean of course: Catechism, Ludwig Ott, Denzinger, etc.
Phil P