H
Hope1960
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What exactly is it and are Catholics allowed to believe in it?
Thank you! You helped me, not only with my OP, but as well as my interest in a non denominational church I’ve recently been interested in. I may have offended them and won’t be hearing back from them, but, if that isn’t the case, I don’t have to force myself into believing as literally as they do.For the most part, Gap Theory is 100% ridiculous. It’s the result of people trying to take the Genesis account too literal and failing to understand that it it written in poetic / figurative language. Genesis is 100% correct and happened, but it’s not written as a history book.
It is something unrelated to “god of the gaps.”I dont know if they call it God Of The Gaps or not but this explains it.
I guess so. I don’t think it would harm one’s faith, but I also don’t think it would help.are Catholics allowed to believe in it?
This seems contradictory. You say Genesis shouldn’t be taken “too literal” and that it is figurative language; then you say Genesis is 100% correct. So given that, is the story of Noah and The Flood in Genesis “100% correct and happened” or is it “figurative”?It’s the result of people trying to take the Genesis account too literal and failing to understand that it it written in poetic / figurative language. Genesis is 100% correct and happened, but it’s not written as a history book.
“Correct” doesn’t imply literal or figurative. Rather, it just means that it’s an account of something that happened. In the Bible, these accounts are theologically “correct” – they accurately teach the lessons that God wishes to teach us.This seems contradictory. You say Genesis shouldn’t be taken “too literal” and that it is figurative language; then you say Genesis is 100% correct. So given that, is the story of Noah and The Flood in Genesis “100% correct and happened” or is it “figurative”?
No, and it is also unnecessary from a Catholic perspective.are Catholics allowed to believe in it?
Wisdom!For the most part, Gap Theory is 100% ridiculous. It’s the result of people trying to take the Genesis account too literal and failing to understand that it it written in poetic / figurative language. Genesis is 100% correct and happened, but it’s not written as a history book.
Jesus is the Word Made Flesh and when He was on the Earth, what did He do? He spoke in figurative language a lot. He used parables. He did not lay out a step by step user manual. As much as Protestants like to believe the Bible is a user manual, it isn’t. It’s a book of faith and wisdom that gives us insight into God’s love for us. It is not a basic user’s guide to salvation.
This is how God speaks to us. He wants us to have faith, trust and love for Him. He
I believe St. Thomas and a few others believed there was a spiritual meaning implicit in these verses referring to the fall of the angels.The only part of “Gap Theory” that might make any sense is the idea that the devil and the demons rebelled between verses 1:1 and 1:2. (
It is not St Thomas nor any of the Fathers of the Church that I’m aware of (except possibly Origin in some sense and possibly a few fathers who followed him though I’d have to reread what he wrote) who interpreted even in a spiritual sense the first two verses of Genesis 1 as referring to the fall of the angels. St Augustine interpreted verse 3 ‘And God said, “Let there be light”’ as referring to the creation of the whole host of the angels and verse 4 “…And God separated the light from the darkness” as referring to the distinction between the good and bad angels, ‘the darkness’ referring to the fall of the bad angels.phil19034:![]()
I believe St. Thomas and a few others believed there was a spiritual meaning implicit in these verses referring to the fall of the angels.The only part of “Gap Theory” that might make any sense is the idea that the devil and the demons rebelled between verses 1:1 and 1:2. (
My belief is that the fall of the angels happened even before or shortly after the beginning of Creation, and their fall somehow effected the entire universe… Or maybe prefigured the fall of Adam… Not sure, just spitballing here. My theology on this isn’t fleshed out in the least.
I erred, I appreciate your fraternal correction. Thank you kindly.St Augustine interpreted verse 3 ‘And God said, “Let there be light”’ as referring to the creation of the whole host of the angels and verse 4 “…And God separated the light from the darkness” as referring to the distinction between the good and bad angels, ‘the darkness’ referring to the fall of the bad angels.
Which is one good reason why you shouldn’t be considering leaving the Church and joining them…At the risk of being off topic, the ND church I’d been considering says that all of the Bible is historical.
Wrong. That has been condemned as heresy.Catholics are encouraged to read Genesis 1-11 for what it is: a poetic Hebrew creation myth which God intended to convey theological truth, not a biology textbook or historical chronology
Gorgias? Take this one, please.Wrong. That has been condemned as heresy.
http://kolbecenter.org/the-traditional-catholic-doctrine-of-creation/
I have other sources if you’d like.
Sure!Gorgias? Take this one, please.