P
Peter_Plato
Guest
This isn’t the way the Apostle Paul saw it and I will accept Paul over your version any time.I’m surprised you never castigate Charles for that tired old tv script he keeps quoting. Now that is out of date, since it’s now known that the universe spent a considerable time in what are called the dark ages before light first shone.
Rather than the pseudo-science of American intelligent design fundamentalism, let’s stick with real science. The real science says the big bang starts from a singularity, so that as Lemaître says “any feature of matter before this beginning has been completely lost by the extreme contraction at the theoretical zero”. That’s not dogma or old-hat, that’s a permanent limit imposed by the theory itself, the complete impossibility of empirical evidence one way or the other.
That seems to be how God wants it, even if you don’t. You want proof, God wants faith. God wins. Tough.
In addition, the Church has condemned fideism as heretical in several Councils and Encyclicals.For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and wickedness of men who by their wickedness suppress the truth. **For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. Ever since the creation of the world his invisible nature, namely, his eternal power and deity, has been clearly perceived in the things that have been made. **So they are without excuse; for although they knew God they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking and their senseless minds were darkened. (Romans 1:18-22)
Now you may think you know "…[t]hat seems to be how God wants it, even if you don’t. You want proof, God wants faith. God wins. Tough."It is not surprising, therefore, that the Church has condemned such doctrines. In 1348, the Holy See proscribed certain fideistic propositions of Nicholas d’Autrecourt (cf. Denzinger, Enchiridion, 10th ed., nn. 553-570). In his two Encyclicals, one of September, 1832, and the other of July, 1834, Gregory XVI condemned the political and philosophical ideas of Lamenais. On 8 September, 1840, Bautain was required to subscribe to several propositions directly opposed to Fideism, the first and the fifth of which read as follows: “Human reason is able to prove with certitude the existence of God; faith, a heavenly gift, is posterior to revelation, and therefore cannot be properly used against the atheist to prove the existence of God”; and “The use of reason precedes faith and, with the help of revelation and grace, leads to it.” The same proposition were subscribed to by Bonnetty on 11 June, 1855 (cf. Denzinger, nn. 1650-1652). In his Letter of 11 December, 1862, to the Archbishop of Munich, Pius IX, while condemning Frohschammer’s naturalism, affirms the ability of human reason to reach certitude concerning the fundamental truths of the moral and religious order (cf. Denzinger, 1666-1676). And, finally, the Vatican Council teaches as a dogma of Catholic faith that “one true God and Lord can be known with certainty by the natural light of human reason by means of the things that are made” (Const., De Fide Catholicâ", Sess. III, can. i, De Revelatione; cf. Granderath, “Constitutiones dogmaticae Conc. Vatic.”, Freiburg, 1892, p. 32 cf. Denzinger, n. 1806).
newadvent.org/cathen/06068b.htm
However, your “knowledge” the “God wants faith” relies on some kind of proof or other, for which you wrongly cite Lemaitre since what your claim is completely opposed to what the Church teaches despite your attempts at “proving” that it teaches what you suppose it does. It would, for certain, not make sense to have to “prove” that God wants faith when “proving” such a thing undermines your very desire to “prove” that faith discounts reason in the first place. Your position is, therefore, self-refuting and incoherent.