I believe that life begins at conception because the Church, the Body of Christ, told me so. Science has just confirmed what God had told men for millenniums, not in the same words as today, but God taught men about the sanctity of life when still in the womb of the mother.
That’s why I believe it too. But the science verifies that belief, as it well should if it is true. Truth cannot contradict itself. God gave us divine revelation in the words of the Bible. God also gave us the natural world. The Church is the authority over scriptural interpretation, and science is the authority over matters of the natural world. But, because they have the same Source, they can never, EVER contradict each other.
Rather than being an adversary, science is faith’s wingman, and vice versa. That’s why the scientific method was developed under a Christian worldview.
In the case of science I choose to believe one group of scientists over the other, one interpretation of the data over the other. With the Bible we have no options, we have to believe the Church, because the Church has the true and only valid interpretation of the Bible. Luke 10:16, “Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me; and he who rejects me, rejects the one who sent me.”
In a human field, science, as a Catholic I have an option “to believe” one group or the other. Not so in Church matters.
Right you are in this matter. The buck stops with the Church in biblical matters, based upon the authority granted it by its Founder, our Lord Jesus. The Church will guide us inerrantly in matters of faith and morals. But we live in a physical world, and that is the other half of the equation. What we do in this world (as a product of our faith in morals) is based upon our knowledge of the physical world. Jesus teaches us to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, aid the ill, comfort the hopeless. Do not the findings of science better enable us to do these things?
By the way, if you’re wondering how earth sciences plays into all of this, know that whatever is not grown is mined. Everything comes out of this beautiful Earth of ours: the metals, the jewels, the fuel, the building materials, etc. Even the type and amount of food that can be grown is dependent upon the soil type, landscape topography, climate and rainfall, geographical position, proximity to water and plate boundaries, and the like.
"The point I am trying to make is this: the field of medical laboratory science is rigorous and strict. And such demanding and exacting methodology is absolutely necessary for correct diagnosis and treatment of sick people. However, such exacting methodology makes the earth sciences fields look rather careless when it comes to the supposed age of a pyramid or the earth. Woodmorappe has retrieved and logged the numerous results of radiometric age dating of the earth. He summarizes these as follows:
…isotopic dates from the earth’s crust span a considerable range–from negative values to ones in excess of 10 billion years. The vast majority of dates, however, fall within the range of a few million years to about 2.5-billion years.
The first thing we must note is the enormous range involved here. First, some of these published values for the age of the earth are NEGATIVE numbers (which means that the earth is yet to be born). Second, some of the values are “older than the earth.” Third, the majority of these studies do not support a date of 4.5 billion years. Clearly we have major problems with shifts and trends that would indicate methodological problems with significant errors and/or outliers for the data."
Something tells me you’ll find a reason to reject this evidence. Look again at the range of the readings, it’s huge!
I’m sorry, but this is so ridiculous it is not even funny any more. This guy is saying that there have been negative numbers in radiometric age dates. This is not possible. If you understood how scientists date rocks, then you’d know that negative numbers in a radiometric age date are a mathematical impossibility.
I’ll try to be brief in explaining it here. Age dates are based upon half-lives, the time it takes for one half of one element to decay into another. Decay rates are known and have been documented repeatedly in the lab. They do not change, even with external changes in temperature, pressure, or chemistry. If you can measure the ratio between a parent element and a daughter product in a rock, and you know the half-life, you can calculate the age of the rock.
For instance: if a known half-life for element A to decay into element B was 50 million years, and if I found a rock that contained 25% element A and 75% element B, then I know 2 half-lives have past (1/4 (25%) is 1/2 of 1/2). Thus, the rock in question is 100 million years old. It is a simple concept. But based upon these calculations, even if you had a barely traceable parent element, that ratio is still multiplied by the half-life, always resulting in a positive value.
The wide range of radiometric ages is due to things being of drastically different ages! And there is not just one radiometric dating technique, there are dozens, all with different capabilities for dating. And the different techniques verify the dates of the others.
Finally, the precision of radiometric dating is actually quite astonishing. Most techniques give an accuracy of +/- 1 or 2 million years. Meaning that in my example above, the rock in question would be between 98 and 102 million years old. Given that that is a lot of years to account for, I’d say that is quite good. And do note that it does not leave room for an Earth that is 6,000 years old.