O
Orogeny
Guest
My Catholicism is questioned by most on these threads simply because they require all “true Catholics” to support the YEC position, not because of my ideas.Ok, with all due respect this leads me to some ideas on why your Catholicism is questioned so often. You are in a tiny minority – an orthodox Catholic believer in a field dominated by atheists. But I’ve asked you why so many scientists are atheist and you don’t know, or you blame the YEC position for causing them to be atheist…
What? That doesn’t reflect what I said at all. There are plenty of protestant faiths that don’t care what the Church teaches or supports. When one is told over and over that the earth was created as described in Genesis and that any belief otherwise is un-Christian, there is a conflict when that person finds out that there is overwhelming evidence from multiple scientific disciplines that the universe and the earth are old and that life has evolved. If that person believes what they have been taught, then the choice is to abandon faith or reason. That is a false choice, but not understanding the faith side, that person will have to decide. The vast majority would choose reason it would seem.The Catholic Church supported YEC for centuries (not taught formally but supported). This would mean that when the Church opened to evolution, all those Catholics would become atheist. But that didn’t happen.
I never questioned my faith, nor was I ever challenged by my professors or the subject matter regarding my faith. How can that be if science is the cause for the high number of non-believers?What does it say something about, if not science?
I don’t understand why anyone is an athiest. My understanding of the problem isn’t relevant. You claim that it is science that causes athiesm. If that is true, shouldn’t the Church be vigorously opposing science? Do you oppose science?How is it that a ridiculous number of atheists collect in the field of science, but that fact alone doesn’t say anything about the science (or philosophy of science) that they’re attracted to?
This does not line up with reality. Again, if you want to convince ordinary people I think you should reflect on this point. People see that a vast majority of scientists are atheist. They talk to a Catholic scientist (yourself) about this and you say that the atheism has nothing to do with the field of science. But you also don’t have much of an idea or opinion on why a disproportiate number of scientists are atheistic.
By the way, I did give you an opinion as to why such a large number of scientists are non-believers.
Um, why wouldn’t you? That sounds like you write us off because we are a “tiny minority” (which I don’t believe is an accurate description on the number of scientists who accept God).Yes, but why relish a tiny number of Christian scientists - many who actually sound just like the atheists (never talking about God’s role, taking liberal-modernist views of the Bible and Catholic doctrine, and ridiculing the belief of the Church)?
Well, I guess I should be happy that your idea of orthodoxy isn’t the rule for all of us.An orthdox Catholic, as I see it, should be outraged that science is dominated by unbelief and hatred of God.
Your requirement of outrage is your own. Is outrage a good apologetics tool?But all the Catholic-Darwinists I’ve seen on CAF are not outraged. They accept it as “normal” that there are so many atheistic scientists – and some of those Catholics never have even mild criticism of the atheistic culture of science.
Of course you are not surprised. I don’t agree with what you consider to be a good Catholic (I’m not outraged), therefore, I’m not a good Catholic. Others don’t consider me to be a good Catholic because I don’t accept a literal reading of Genesis and others because I don’t accept fake footprints as evidence that man and dinosaurs co-existed. Every YEC/creationist has their reason to think of themselves as better Catholics than I am.I don’t think this is a good thing, but I"m also not suprised for reasons I gave. You don’t distinguish your position from atheistic-science very clearly. Obviously, a believer in God will have to view evolution differently than an atheist.
Peace
Tim