Thursday, June 25, 2015
Youcat commented through CCC. Question n. 42 – Part III.
(Youcat answer - repeated) Yes. Although it is a
different kind of knowledge, faith is open to the findings and hypotheses of
the sciences.
A deepening through
CCC
(CCC 286) Human intelligence is surely already capable of
finding a response to the question of origins. The existence of God the Creator
can be known with certainty through his works, by the light of human reason
(Cf. Vatican Council I, can. 2 § I: DS 3026) even if this knowledge is often
obscured and disfigured by error. This is why faith comes to confirm and
enlighten reason in the correct understanding of this truth: "By faith we
understand that the world was created by the word of God, so that what is seen
was made out of things which do not appear" (Heb 11:3).
Reflecting and
meditating
(Youcat comment)
Theology has no scientific competence,
and natural science has no theological competence. Natural science cannot
dogmatically rule out the possibility that there are purposeful processes in
creation; conversely, faith cannot define specifically how these processes take
place in the course of nature’s development. A Christian can accept the theory
of evolution as a helpful explanatory model, provided he does not fall into the
heresy of evolutionism, which views man as the random product of biological
processes. Evolution presupposes the existence of something that can develop.
The theory says nothing about where this “something” came from. Furthermore,
questions about the being, essence, dignity, mission, meaning, and wherefore of
the world and man cannot be answered in biological terms. Just as
“evolutionism” oversteps a boundary on the one side, so does “creationism” on
the other. Creationists naïvely take biblical data literally (for example, to
calculate the earth’s age, they cite the six days of work in Genesis 1).
(CCC Comment)
(CCC 287) The truth about creation is so important for all
of human life that God in his tenderness wanted to reveal to his People
everything that is salutary to know on the subject. Beyond the natural
knowledge that every man can have of the Creator (Cf. Acts 17:24-29; Rom
1:19-20), God progressively revealed to Israel the mystery of creation. He who
chose the patriarchs, who brought Israel out of Egypt, and who by choosing
Israel created and formed it, this same God reveals himself as the One to whom
belong all the peoples of the earth, and the whole earth itself; he is the One
who alone "made heaven and earth" (Cf. Isa 43:1; Pss 115:15; 124:8;
134:3).
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