Rather, what we are talking about are “the essential nature of the things of the visible universe, things in no way profitable unto salvation” of which St. Augustine spoke. There has been no reversal of the Church’s teaching in this area. She has upheld and reiterated the teaching of St. Augustine, which was taken up by the medievals and especially St. Thomas, and even acknowledged by St. Bellarmine (although it would seem that he, perhaps understandably but unfortunately, misapplied this in the Galileo incident.) These patristic and medieval principles have been taught officially by the Popes, most notably by Pope Leo XIII in Providentissimus Deus. Cassini himself has acknowledged that geocentrism is the most obvious reference of Pope Leo’s words: “
The only interpretation of note in the history of the Church that the encyclical could be referring to was the fixed sun/moving earth heresy [sic].” Thus, they cannot be the very poison from Hell that Cassini states, since such a view cannot be reconciled with the dogma of the Church’s indefectibility.
It is my view that it is easy to reconcile the error of two Roman congregations in the seventeenth century with the dogma of the indefectibility of the Church. I believe it is impossible to reconcile the treatment of these matters by Cassini and other neo-geocentrists with that dogma. For them the Church has been doling out poison to her children for centuries. I don’t expect an atheist like you (

) to uphold the dogma of the Church’s indefectibility, but it seems that to a man the neo-geocentrists end up attacking the very Church they profess to love and serve.
Well David, I believe gentle atheist might well be able to see better the trees from the woods in the Galileo affair. Indeed his freedom from pro Copernican propaganda means he can see the hypocrisy involved.
You Copernicans hog St Augustine and St Thomas for your cause, both geocentrists, both of who stated the literal understanding of Scripture must be held unless ‘clear and certain’ reasoning deems it untenable. If St Augustine were shown the ‘clear and certain reasoning’ you Copernicans have for a heliocentric reading of a fixed earth and moving sun in Scripture he would have been very angry that you use him to promote what the Church defined as formal heresy.
As fr St Thomas; didn’t he say the following:
‘The knowledge proper to this science of theology comes through divine revelation and not through natural reason. Therefore, it has no concern to prove principles of other sciences, but only to judge them. Whatever is found in other sciences contrary to any truth of this science of theology must be condemned as false.’ — (ST, I, Q 1, a 6, ad 2).
So it seems St Augustine and St Thomas can be better quoted on specifics David, can’t they
As for Pope Leo XIII’s Provintissimus Deus, well he lived in Copernican times so had to include that paragraph to try dodging that 1741-1820 contradiction to all he had written already in his encyclical. Note however he did not mention the Galileo case - why not? Because he could not be seen in an encyclical teach contrary to his predecessors. So, whereas all the Copernicans, like you, insist it ruled on the Galileo case, it did no such thing.
You also think you know better than St Robert Bellarmine, successive professor of theology and preacher at Louvain; director of the course of controversy in Rome; Consulter of the Holy Office (Inquisition) and Master of Controversial Questions. (St. Robert Bellarmine (
‘although it would seem that he, perhaps understandably but unfortunately, misapplied this in the Galileo incident.’) If any do not see the arrogance of this then they too are incapable of understanding the Catholic faith.
Look up your daily St Andrew missal and go to May 13th, the feast day of St Bellarmine. Here is what it says:
‘Born in Montepulciano Italy, the now Saint Robert Bellarmine was made cardinal in 1599 by Pope Clement VIII who said that his equal in learning was not at that time to be found in the Church. By his books, published at the height of the Catholic Church’s reply to the Protestant Reformation, he dealt formidable blows to their heretical doctrines and ecclesiological ideas, , while by his catechism, translated into forty languages, he spread the knowledge of Christian doctrine in all countries of the world.’
These then are the credentials of a man you Copernicans tell us didn’t know faith from science, did not understand the Fathers. What on earth is the daily missal talking about. You Copernicans bring everything into disrepute, even the credentials of St Bellarmine just to support your heresy.
I know this because you say
Rather, what we are talking about are “the essential nature of the things of the visible universe, things in no way profitable unto salvation” No what we are talking about is the credibility of Holy Scripture. If you and granny do not know that then you know nothing about the Galileo case. You dare say such a thing about Cardinal Bellarmine because you have to as a Copernican. How sad.
I have long understood that if you are not familiar with Bellarmine’s Catholic mind, you know nothing about the Galileo case. The dual between faith and science was fought out between Galileo and Bellarmine. It concerned factual statements in Scripture. I have already challenged granny to state her opinion as to the status of factual statements in Scripture. She however continues he role as Pope Granny, defining this and declaring, in one liners, contradicting history itself.
So now I will ask you David, what status do you give factual statements in Scripture, one of these being a moving sun/fixed earth cosmos. Let us see what caused the Galileo affair.