R
Rogerteder
Guest
Well, if you read the official statments from the magisterium they clearly say that God created EACH organism(evolution says the opposite of that) out of nothing. Pius XII clearly taugh that Adam’s sin was a historical fact. I think the best you can say(about evolution) is just what Pius XII said about polygenism. That we cant see a way it could be compatible with scripture and Church teaching.Roger << But Phil they aren’t Church teaching or of the magisterium. They are books or speeches given by the individuals. >>
Hey nice talking with you on the phone!
Keating (or the author of the Catholic Answers tracts) is not the magisterium either, but individuals. Although their tracts have been given the OK (Nihil Obstat, etc). I was presenting what I think are positions of the other prominent Catholic apologists or writers out there (the orthodox, conservative kind at least). Most of them are not scientists of course, it is kind of split among them, with anti-evolution (and the standard well-answered creationist objections) being dominant.
Science will never be a matter for the magisterium, I think we all agree. Although there is cross-over between science and dogma of course (Adam/Eve and original sin). The ITC statement from 2004 is probably the best we have on the whole creation-evolution issue (endorsed by Ratzinger shortly before he became Pope). There is a lot in there about the accepted science, the image of God, “design” and divine providence.
The “we are not some casual or meaningless product of evolution” etc of Pope Benedict is certainly true, but it does not contradict what he has written on the science of evolution (he accepts the science). His position is that God is behind evolution every step, or at least he sees an over-arching intelligence behind all of life, which is a philosophical-theological take on evolution (e.g. see the end of In the Beginning… and the book Creation and Evolution the 2006 conference with the Pope).
Phil P