G
Ghosty
Guest
All doctrines are infallible, actually, by definition. The Ordinary Magisterium hasn’t spoken doctrinally on the issue because it can’t directly address scientific issues. It CAN address interpretation of Scripture, however, but the Church has only done so as a matter of discipline in the instances you speak of, not dogmatically or doctrinally.
Yes, this does indeed fall under the Church’s charter, and the Church has stated that the language used in Genesis is figurative, not literalist, though it describes reality. This is from the CCC. There are certain aspects of Genesis that are not figurative, but the Church has specifically laid out which parts are literalist and says the rest is figurative. We can read those parts figuratively without concluding that humanity is just a speck of scum floating through the universe.I wonder why God chooses to start the Pentanuch with a detailed description of how He created the universe, animals, man, etc.? What does this have to do with salvation? Is this not part of the Church’s charter?