C
cassini
Guest
Hereunder three letters that sum up the Church’s position on faith and science.
SIR - I should like to second Donal Anthony Foley’s opinion that theistic evolutionism, as conducted inside the Church today, is a complete break from traditional exegesis and hermeneutics. It is one-sided, and consequently has no place in Catholicism.
The problem however - because of opinions from Cardinal Ratzinger in 1981, Pope John Paul II in 1996, Cardinal Schönborn in 2005 and now L’Osservatore Romano’s “there has been no condemnation of evolution” - is that the Catholic world behaves as though there is a “teaching” that says evolutionism is not contrary to the Catholic faith. One can see how theistic evolutionism has found a niche in the Catholic Church.
The above utterances, however, give no such licence in the Church. There has been only one semi-official teaching on the subject, Pope Pius XII’s Humani Generis of 1950. This encyclical is very clear and totally complies with tradition. It only allows debate on evolution but carries warnings that evolutionist beliefs must comply with Catholic dogma, not that they do: “If such conjectural opinions are directly or indirectly opposed to the doctrine revealed by God, then the demand that they be recognised can in no way be admitted.”
These doctrines are those on Creation, Adam as the first man from which Eve and the whole human race descended, and the dogma on Original Sin. In other words, Catholic interest in evolutionism will be discussed and decided on theological grounds, not scientific speculation and theories: “provided that all are prepared to submit to the judgment of the Church, to whom Christ has given the mission of interpreting authentically the Sacred Scriptures and of defending the dogmas of faith”. So evolutionists must compile their theology, submit it to the Church, and then we will see if evolutionism is compatible with Catholic teaching. As yet there has been no Church sanction of any theistic evolutionism.
But there are further ignored prohibitions for theistic evolutionism in Humani Generis: “However this must be done in such a way that the reasons for both opinions, that is, those favourable and those unfavourable to evolution, be weighed and judged with the necessary seriousness, moderation and measure.”
Now consider the recent conference on evolution held in the Pontifical Gregorian University under the high patronage of the Pontifical Council for Culture and organised by a list of high-ranking clerics at which all were evolutionists. The reception Creationism receives inside the Church these days is bordering on zero. I rest my case.
2
.SIR - David Brower, like others before him, has written maintaining that the theory of evolution cannot be true because it is incompatible with infallible declarations by the Magisterium of the Church.
However, the Magisterium has no standing in questions of palaeontological fact, which clearly shows the account of creation in Genesis to be a myth - that is, a fanciful narrative devised to convey an underlying serious point. Its own internal contradictions should be enough to make that evident.
Of course, accepting the gradual emergence of human characteristics may create difficulties with the doctrine of original sin, but resolving them is a problem for theologians to tackle in their own sphere.
I have every confidence in their finding it an easier task than plumping for special creation and then explaining plausibly why the Creator set up the geological record in a way to indicate otherwise.
3
SIR –
Peter Wilson points out that the Church has no competence “in questions of paleontological fact”. Quite so. The Magisterium has no competence or authority to affirm any of the theories of science. She cannot affirm, nor even “accept”, theories of universal gravitation, of electro-magnetism, of nuclear physics or of astronomy. (Though the vast majority of Catholics believe that the earth revolves around the sun, it is not part of the teaching of the Church, and the Church, as the Church, has no means of “accepting” heliocentrism. It is not part of the faith.)
Likewise, the Catholic Church cannot (ever) affirm or accept the theory of evolution, which arose outside of Revelation and is therefore “alien” to the teaching of the Church, as are other theories of science. The Catholic Church, quite simply, does not have a divine “mandate” to affirm the theories of science.
However, the Catholic Church does have a competence, negatively, to deny that any theory of science is true if she judges the theory to be contrary to the faith of the Church. For this, the Church does not require any competence in any particular area of science but makes the judgment from her own divinely given “competence” to infallibly judge matters relating to faith and morals.
Thus the Church does not need to know any of the science involved, or what scientific theories may be contradicted, in affirming that Jesus walked on the water, and that He rose from the dead. Similarly, whereas the Magisterium of the Church cannot affirm that the theory of evolution is true, if she came to believe that the theory of evolution was contrary to Revealed Truth, she has the competence (without any competence in palaeontology) to repudiate the theory of evolution as contrary to the faith.
Yours faithfully,
Fr. Neil Evans
St Benedict’s church,
Sketty, Swansea
SIR - I should like to second Donal Anthony Foley’s opinion that theistic evolutionism, as conducted inside the Church today, is a complete break from traditional exegesis and hermeneutics. It is one-sided, and consequently has no place in Catholicism.
The problem however - because of opinions from Cardinal Ratzinger in 1981, Pope John Paul II in 1996, Cardinal Schönborn in 2005 and now L’Osservatore Romano’s “there has been no condemnation of evolution” - is that the Catholic world behaves as though there is a “teaching” that says evolutionism is not contrary to the Catholic faith. One can see how theistic evolutionism has found a niche in the Catholic Church.
The above utterances, however, give no such licence in the Church. There has been only one semi-official teaching on the subject, Pope Pius XII’s Humani Generis of 1950. This encyclical is very clear and totally complies with tradition. It only allows debate on evolution but carries warnings that evolutionist beliefs must comply with Catholic dogma, not that they do: “If such conjectural opinions are directly or indirectly opposed to the doctrine revealed by God, then the demand that they be recognised can in no way be admitted.”
These doctrines are those on Creation, Adam as the first man from which Eve and the whole human race descended, and the dogma on Original Sin. In other words, Catholic interest in evolutionism will be discussed and decided on theological grounds, not scientific speculation and theories: “provided that all are prepared to submit to the judgment of the Church, to whom Christ has given the mission of interpreting authentically the Sacred Scriptures and of defending the dogmas of faith”. So evolutionists must compile their theology, submit it to the Church, and then we will see if evolutionism is compatible with Catholic teaching. As yet there has been no Church sanction of any theistic evolutionism.
But there are further ignored prohibitions for theistic evolutionism in Humani Generis: “However this must be done in such a way that the reasons for both opinions, that is, those favourable and those unfavourable to evolution, be weighed and judged with the necessary seriousness, moderation and measure.”
Now consider the recent conference on evolution held in the Pontifical Gregorian University under the high patronage of the Pontifical Council for Culture and organised by a list of high-ranking clerics at which all were evolutionists. The reception Creationism receives inside the Church these days is bordering on zero. I rest my case.
2
.SIR - David Brower, like others before him, has written maintaining that the theory of evolution cannot be true because it is incompatible with infallible declarations by the Magisterium of the Church.
However, the Magisterium has no standing in questions of palaeontological fact, which clearly shows the account of creation in Genesis to be a myth - that is, a fanciful narrative devised to convey an underlying serious point. Its own internal contradictions should be enough to make that evident.
Of course, accepting the gradual emergence of human characteristics may create difficulties with the doctrine of original sin, but resolving them is a problem for theologians to tackle in their own sphere.
I have every confidence in their finding it an easier task than plumping for special creation and then explaining plausibly why the Creator set up the geological record in a way to indicate otherwise.
3
SIR –
Peter Wilson points out that the Church has no competence “in questions of paleontological fact”. Quite so. The Magisterium has no competence or authority to affirm any of the theories of science. She cannot affirm, nor even “accept”, theories of universal gravitation, of electro-magnetism, of nuclear physics or of astronomy. (Though the vast majority of Catholics believe that the earth revolves around the sun, it is not part of the teaching of the Church, and the Church, as the Church, has no means of “accepting” heliocentrism. It is not part of the faith.)
Likewise, the Catholic Church cannot (ever) affirm or accept the theory of evolution, which arose outside of Revelation and is therefore “alien” to the teaching of the Church, as are other theories of science. The Catholic Church, quite simply, does not have a divine “mandate” to affirm the theories of science.
However, the Catholic Church does have a competence, negatively, to deny that any theory of science is true if she judges the theory to be contrary to the faith of the Church. For this, the Church does not require any competence in any particular area of science but makes the judgment from her own divinely given “competence” to infallibly judge matters relating to faith and morals.
Thus the Church does not need to know any of the science involved, or what scientific theories may be contradicted, in affirming that Jesus walked on the water, and that He rose from the dead. Similarly, whereas the Magisterium of the Church cannot affirm that the theory of evolution is true, if she came to believe that the theory of evolution was contrary to Revealed Truth, she has the competence (without any competence in palaeontology) to repudiate the theory of evolution as contrary to the faith.
Yours faithfully,
Fr. Neil Evans
St Benedict’s church,
Sketty, Swansea