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Title: Contemporary issues in Christianity and science


1
Contemporary issues in Christianity and science
  • CATH 322
  • Professor William Sweet
  • Fall 2015

2
Introduction
  • What is religion?
  • What is Christianity?
  • How is Catholicism distinct?
  • What is science?
  • What is distinctive about science (goals, tasks,
    methods)?
  • The role of science in culture

3
What is religion?

4
What IS Christianity?
5
HOW IS CATHOLICISM DISTINCT?
  • Historically
  • A central authority (though 23 different rites)
  • Some doctrinal matters
  • Some practices
  • Relation of scripture and tradition
  • Magisterium

6
MAGISTERIUM
Source Level of Magisterium Nature of what is taught Required Response
Pope (in virtue of his position as pastor and teacher of all) / ex cathedra Extraordinary (i.e., using extraordinary means to declare) and universal Infallible on matters of faith and morals full assent of faith, to be firmly accepted and held
Bishops, in union with the Pope, defining doctrine at General / Ecumenical councils Extraordinary (and universal) Infallible on matters of faith and morals full assent of faith, to be firmly accepted and held
Bishops, in unison, in union with the Pope, proposing definitively, although dispersed Ordinary (i.e., using ordinary means such as encyclicals, letters), and universal Infallible on matters of faith and morals full assent of faith, to be firmly accepted and held
7
MAGISTERIUM
Pope Ordinary Authoritative but not definitive or infallible Religious submission of intellect and will
Bishops in union with the Pope Ordinary Authoritative but not definitive or infallible Religious submission of intellect and will
Roman Curia (e.g., Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith) Ordinary Authoritative but not definitive or infallible Religious submission of intellect and will
Bishops magisterium cathedrae pastoralis - "magisterium of the pastoral chair"   With authority, but not definitive or infallible  
Theologians magisterium cathedrae magistralis / "magisterium of the teaching chair" role is to explain church teaching / assist bishops Neither authoritative nor infallible legitimate disagreement
8
MAGISTERIUM
Priests No magisterial authority
Sensus fidei the supernatural instinct for the faith, so far as the word of God resides in the whole church / the baptized faithful (Lumen Gentium 12 Dei Verbum 8)      
Private revelations No magisterial authority    
9
Theology, dogma, and scripture
  • What is dogma?
  • -- a truth appertaining to faith or morals,
    revealed by God, transmitted from the Apostles in
    the Scriptures or by tradition, and proposed by
    the Church for the acceptance of the faithful.
    Catholic Encyclopedia
  • Other important truths
  • truths proxima fidei
  • truths theologice certa
  • sententia communis
  • Conclusiones theologicae
  • Philosophical truths

10
What is the purpose of scripture?
  • Purpose in general
  • What is scripture (in Christianity)?
  • Finding out the meaning of scripture
  • Different kinds of texts
  • The role of literary devices,.method and metaphor
  • Approaches to texts (Ignatius Loyola, Lonergan)
  • What human beings bring to a text

11
Example of Chiasmus in the Noah / Flood Story   A
Noah (610a)__B Shem, Ham, and Japheth
(10b)___C Ark to be built (14-16)____D Flood
announced (17)_____E Covenant with Noah
(18-20)______F Food in the ark (21)_______G
Command to enter the ark (71-3)________H 7 days
waiting for flood (4-5)_________I 7 days waiting
for flood (7-10)__________J Entry to ark
(11-15)___________K YHWH shuts Noah in
(16)____________L 40 days flood
(17a)_____________M Waters increase
(17b-18)______________N Mountains covered
(19-20)_______________O 150 days water prevail
(21-24)________________P GOD REMEMBERS NOAH
(81)_______________O 150 days waters abate
(3)______________N Mountain tops visible
(4-5)_____________M Waters abate
(5)____________L 40 days (end of)
(6a)___________K Noah opens window of ark
(6b)__________J Raven and dove leave ark
(7-9)_________I 7 days waiting for waters to
subside (10-11)________H 7 days waiting for
waters to subside (12-13)_______G Command to
leave ark (15-17 22)______F Food outside ark
(91-4)_____E Covenant with all flesh
(8-10)____D No flood in the future
(11-17)___C Ark (18a)__B Shem, Ham and
Japheth (18b)A Noah (19)
12
METAPHOR
  • Luke 1334 (see also Matthew 2337 ) Jerusalem,
    Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and
    stones those who are sent to it! How often have I
    desired to gather your children together as a hen
    gathers her brood under her wings, and you were
    not willing!
  • John 1011 Jesus said, I am the Good
    Shepherd
  • John 647-51 I tell you the truth, he who
    believes has everlasting life. I am the bread of
    life. Your forefathers ate the manna in the
    desert, yet they died. But here is the bread that
    comes down from heaven, which a man may eat and
    not die. I am the living bread that came down
    from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he
    will live forever.
  • John 109 I am the gate whoever enters through
    me will be saved. He will come in and go out, and
    find pasture.

13
DIFFERENT HISTORIES OR DIFFERENT STORIES?
  • Two Genesis stories, and the possible influence
    of two authors/editors
  • Genesis 11-23
  • Genesis 24-324

14
SUMMARY
  • When we talk about Christianity, we need to be
    precide
  • What people believe?
  • Teachings / dogmas?
  • Scripture
  • Literally (including literary devices)
  • Metaphorically
  • The purpose of a text?

15
What is science?
  • Definitions
  • Science as any systematic, rigorous,
    rationally-pursued investigation
  • Who is a scientist?
  • Science today
  • Goals, tasks, and methods of science today
  • Subject matter
  • Method
  • World view

16
What is science?
  • Scientific method
  • Usually causal
  • Usually empirical (observation and experimental)
  • Falsifiable (testable) Popper, replicability
  • Objective ( but observer effect / quantum theory)
  • Probabilistic v demonstrative

17
What is science?
  • World view
  • Materialist / naturalist
  • Nature as an object
  • Value rooted in human ends
  • Claims to be disengaged /impartial
  • Instrumentalist model of reasoning

18
What is to be learned from this?
  • What counts as science?
  • Astrology, alchemy, phrenology, necromancy
  • One method or many?
  • Science and culture
  • Science as a part of culture
  • Science as shaping culture (UNESCO / evolutionary
    humanism)
  • universalistic
  • Is science impartial, value neutral, autonomous?
    (Tuskagee case)

19
An ambiguous history
  • Tertullian (c. 160 c. 225 CE)
  • After Jesus Christ, we have no need for
    curiosity nor do we need inquiry after the
    Gospel. When we believe, we desire to believe
    nothing more. For we believe this before all
    else that there is nothing else that we ought to
    believe. De praescriptione haereticorum ("On
    the Rule of the Heretics). Ch 7
  • Augustine (354430 C.E.)
  • "Usually, even a non-Christian knows something
    about the earth, the heavens, and the other
    elements of this world, about the motion and
    orbit of the stars and even their size and
    relative positions, about the predictable
    eclipses of the sun and moon, the cycles of the
    years and the seasons, about the kinds of
    animals, shrubs, stones, and so forth, and this
    knowledge he holds to as being certain from
    reason and experience. It is a disgraceful and
    dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a
    Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy
    Scripture, talking nonsense on these topics and
    we should take all means to prevent such an
    embarrassing situation, in which people show up
    vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to
    scorn. (The Literal meaning of Genesis (De
    Genesi ad litteram), 401 AD)

20
An ambiguous history
  • Still, human beings seek to know
  • Augustine crede, ut intelligas, "believe so
    that you may understand" (Tract. Ev. Jo., 29.6)
  • Anselm (10331109)
  • faith seeking understanding / Fides quaerens
    intellectum
  • Credo ut intellegam - I Believe That I
    Might Understand
  • Benedict XVI
  • The path of theology is indicated by the saying,
    "Credo ut intelligam" I accept what is given in
    advance, in order to find, starting from this and
    in this, the path to the right way of living, to
    the right way of understanding myself 

21
An ambiguous history
  • Charlemagne (742 814) 1st Holy Roman Emperor
  • edicts of 787 and 789
  • "Let every monastery and every abbey have its
    school, in which boys may be taught the Psalms,
    the system of musical notation, singing,
    arithmetic and grammar / Trivium and Quadrivium
  •  
  • Education in the Middle Ages
  • seeking to understand scripture, but also nature
    (in which Gods handiwork is revealed) 
  • Robert Grosseteste (c.11751253) empirical
    method
  • Roger Bacon, ofm (c.12141294)
  • Nicolaus Copernicus (14731543)

22
An ambiguous history
  • Aquinas (1225-1274)
  • no two truths
  • Jean Calvin (1509 1564) - we see both
    approaches
  • a) earth is no more than 6000 years old (e.g.
    Institutes 1.14.1).
  • -- creation days are normal days. (Commentary on
    Gen. 15),
  • -- creation accomplished in six days, not in one
    moment (e.g. Institutes1.14.2) God creating the
    world in six days, resting on the seventh,
    manifests His works and creates a model for us to
    imitate (Commentary on Fourth commandment Ex.
    208)
  • -- criticizes those who seek to reconcile the
    doctrine of Scriptures with the dogmas of
    philosophy to avoid teaching anything which the
    majority of mankind might deem absurd.
    (Institutes 2.2.4)

23
An ambiguous history
  • Jean Calvin
  • b) Nothing is here i.e., in Genesis treated of
    but the visible form of the world. He who would
    learn astronomy and other recondite arts, let him
    go elsewhere. (Comm on Genesis 16)
  • Undoubtedly were one to attempt to speak in due
    terms of the inestimable wisdom, power, justice,
    and goodness of God, in the formation of the
    world, no grace or splendor of diction could
    equal the greatness of the subject. Still,
    while we contemplate the immense treasures of
    wisdom and goodness exhibited in the creatures as
    in so many mirrors, we may not only run our eye
    over them with a hasty, and, as it were,
    evanescent glance, but dwell long upon them,
    seriously and faithfully turn them in our minds,
    and every now and then bring them to
    recollection. But as the present work is of a
    didactic nature, we cannot fittingly enter on
    topics which require lengthened discourse."
    Institutes, Book I, ch. XIV, S. 21

24
An ambiguous history
  • Some would say Christianity made modern science
    possible, but sometimes a troubled relationship
  • Galileo  (15641642)  See The Crime of Galileo
    Indictment and Abjuration of 1633
    http//www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1630galileo.asp
  • Charles Darwin (1809 1882) - On the Origin of
    Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the
    Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle
    for Life (1859)
  • "I have never been an atheist in the sense of
    denying the existence of a God. I think that
    generally ... an agnostic would be the most
    correct description of my state of mind. (1879)

25
An ambiguous history
  • Bl. J.H. Newman (1801 1890)
  • It does not seem to me to follow that creation is
    denied because the Creator, millions of years
    ago, gave laws to matter. He first created matter
    and then he created laws for it laws which
    should construct it into its present wonderful
    beauty, and accurate adjustment and harmony of
    parts gradually. We do not deny or circumscribe
    the Creator, because we hold he has created the
    self acting ,originating human mind, which has
    almost a creative gift much less then do we deny
    or circumscribe His power, if we hold that He
    gave matter such laws as by their blind
    instrumentality moulded and constructed through
    innumerable ages the world as we see it. If Mr
    Darwin in this or that point of his theory comes
    into collision with revealed truth, that is
    another matter but I do not see that the
    principle of development, or what I have called
    construction, does. As to the Divine Design, is
    it not an instance of incomprehensibly and
    infinitely marvellous Wisdom and Design to have
    given certain laws to matter millions of ages
    ago, which have surely and precisely worked out,
    in the long course of those ages, those effects
    which He from the first proposed. Mr Darwin's
    theory need not then to be atheistical, be it
    true or not it may simply be suggesting a larger
    idea of Divine Prescience and Skill.
  • -- John Henry Newman to J. Walker of Scarborough,
    May 22, 1868 / http//www.disf.org/en/documentatio
    n/Newman_Walker_eng.asp

26
An ambiguous history
  • Tennessee's Butler Act, 1925 (1926 Mississippi
    1928 Arkansas)
  • That it shall be unlawful for any teacher in any
    of the Universities, Normals and all other public
    schools of the State which are supported in whole
    or in part by the public school funds of the
    State, to teach any theory that denies the Story
    of the Divine Creation of man as taught in the
    Bible, and to teach instead that man has
    descended from a lower order of animals.
  • Similarly
  • unlawful for any teacher or other instructor in
    any university, college, normal, public school or
    other institution of the state which is supported
    in whole or in part from public funds derived by
    state or local taxation to teach the theory or
    doctrine that mankind ascended or descended from
    a lower order of animals, and also that it be
    unlawful for any teacher, textbook commission, or
    other authority exercising the power to select
    textbooks for above-mentioned institutions to
    adopt or use in any such institution a textbook
    that teaches the doctrine or theory that mankind
    ascended or descended from a lower order of
    animal. Arkansas
  • Challenged in The State of Tennessee v. John
    Thomas Scopes (1925) repealed 1967 Epperson v.
    Arkansas, 393 U.S. 97 (1968),

27
An ambiguous history
  • Gaudium et spes (Vatican II - 1965)
  • 7. new conditions have their impact on religion.
    On the one hand, a more critical ability to
    distinguish religion from a magical view of the
    world and from the superstitions which still
    circulate purifies it and exacts day by day a
    more personal and explicit adherence to faith. As
    a result many persons are achieving a more vivid
    sense of God. On the other hand, growing numbers
    of people are abandoning religion in practice.
    Unlike former days, the denial of God or of
    religion, or the abandonment of them, are no
    longer unusual and individual occurrences. For
    today it is not rare for such things to be
    presented as requirements of scientific progress
    or of a certain new humanism. In numerous places
    these views are voiced not only in the teachings
    of philosophers, but on every side they influence
    literature, the arts, the interpretation of the
    humanities and of history and civil laws
    themselves. As a consequence, many people are
    shaken.

28
An ambiguous history
  • Gaudium et spes (Vatican II - 1965)
  • 33. Through his labors and his native endowments
    man has ceaselessly striven to better his life.
    Today, however, especially with the help of
    science and technology, he has extended his
    mastery over nearly the whole of nature and
    continues to do so. Thanks to increased
    opportunities for many kinds of social contact
    among nations, the human family is gradually
    recognizing that it comprises a single world
    community and is making itself so. Hence many
    benefits once looked for, especially from
    heavenly powers, man has now enterprisingly
    procured for himself.

29
An ambiguous history
  • Gaudium et spes (Vatican II - 1965)
  • 36. If by the autonomy of earthly affairs we mean
    that created things and societies themselves
    enjoy their own laws and values which must be
    gradually deciphered, put to use, and regulated
    by men, then it is entirely right to demand that
    autonomy. Such is not merely required by modern
    man, but harmonizes also with the will of the
    Creator. Therefore if methodical investigation
    within every branch of learning is carried out in
    a genuinely scientific manner and in accord with
    moral norms, it never truly conflicts with faith,
    for earthly matters and the concerns of faith
    derive from the same God. Indeed whoever labors
    to penetrate the secrets of reality with a humble
    and steady mind, even though he is unaware of the
    fact, is nevertheless being led by the hand of
    God, who holds all things in existence, and gives
    them their identity. Consequently, we cannot but
    deplore certain habits of mind, which are
    sometimes found too among Christians, which do
    not sufficiently attend to the rightful
    independence of science and which, from the
    arguments and controversies they spark, lead many
    minds to conclude that faith and science are
    mutually opposed.
  • But when God is forgotten, however, the creature
    itself grows unintelligible.

30
summary
  • The key questions Do science and religion
    conflict? Are they compatible?
  • Need to know What are they? What exactly
    conflicts/is compatible?
  • What does each assert?
  • Are there broader issues? (institutions, world
    views, politics/economics)

31
summary
  • The key questions Do science and religion
    conflict? Are they compatible?
  • Need to know What are they? What exactly
    conflicts/is compatible?
  • What does each assert?
  • Are there broader issues? (institutions, world
    views, politics/economics)

32
Origins cosmology, cosmogony, and creation
  • 1. Introduction / Background
  • a) Why are we interested in origin stories?
  • b) Who/what can be a cause? How does the
    existence of the universe occur?
  • 2. How does Science approach origins?
  • - method (naturalism)
  • - 3 theories
  • 3. How does Christianity approach origins?
  • - Scripture
  • - Philosophy/theology
  • Catechism
  • Speculative Metaphysics

33
Origins
  • Why are we interested in origin stories?
  • Who/what can be a cause? How does the existence
    of the universe occur?
  • What is a cause?
  • What caused that (event)? e.g., a bomb blast
    at an embassy
  • the bomb itself (material)
  • the idea that the bomber has in mind (formal)
  • the bomber (efficient)
  • her ideal liberating her country (final)

34
Origins
  • What is a cause?
  • What caused the sculpture?
  • the stone (material)
  • the image / form in mind (formal)
  • the sculptor (efficient)
  • the goal a beautiful object (final)

35
Origins
  • How does science approach origins?
  • Naturalism
  • a) methodological naturalism
  • naturalism is committed to a methodological
    principle within the context of scientific
    inquiry i.e., all hypotheses and events are to
    be explained and tested by reference to natural
    causes and events. To introduce a supernatural or
    transcendental cause within science is to depart
    from naturalistic explanations.

36
Origins
  • b) metaphysical naturalism
  • maintains that
  • (1) nature is all there is and whatever exists or
    happens is natural
  • (2) nature (the universe or cosmos) consists only
    of natural elements, that is, of spatiotemporal
    material elements--matter and energy--and
    non-material elements--mind, ideas, values,
    logical relationships, etc.--that are either
    associated with the human brain or exist
    independently of the brain and are therefore
    somehow immanent in the structure of the
    universe
  • (3) nature works by natural processes that follow
    natural laws, and all can, in principle, be
    explained and understood by science and
    philosophy and
  • (4) the supernatural does not exist, i.e., only
    nature is real, therefore, supernature is
    non-real.

37
Origins
  • c) supernaturalism
  • maintains that
  • there are supernatural beings (gods, goddesses,
    lesser deities, angels, devils, fairies, trolls,
    leprechauns, ghosts, wood nymphs, etc.), who
    act in the world (miracles, raising from the
    dead, faith healing, virgin birth, life after
    death, communication between living and dead,
    communication between human and god), and who
    have concerns such as (sanctification, salvation,
    sin, immortal souls, spirits, etc.)
  • Since everyone agrees that the natural exists,
    it is the responsibility of the supernaturalists
    to demonstrate the existence of the
    supernatural. This they have not done.
  • From Steven Schafersman "Naturalism is Today
    -- By History, Philosophy, and Purpose -- An
    Essential Part of Science".

38
Origins
  • Definition of Cosmology
  • is the study of the structure and changes in the
    present universe, while the scientific field of
    cosmogony is concerned with the origin of the
    universe. Observations about our present universe
    may not only allow predictions to be made about
    the future, but they also provide clues to events
    that happened long ago when ... the cosmos began.
    So the work of cosmologists and cosmogonists
    overlaps. http//genesismission.jpl.nasa.gov/educ
    ate/scimodule/Cosmogony/CosmogonyPDF/CosCosmolTT.p
    df
  • ? Three theories of cosmogony steady state, big
    bang, bang bang bang

39
Origins
  • 1. Steady state theory
  • Sir James Jeans (1877-1946), in the 1920s
    revised in 1948 by Fred Hoyle, Thomas Gold,
    Hermann Bondi J. Narlikar
  • A steady-state universe has no beginning or end
    in time
  • the universe is always expanding
  • but maintaining a constant average density
  • matter is continuously created to form new stars
    and galaxies at the same rate that old ones
    become unobservable as a consequence of their
    increasing distance and velocity of recession
  • On the grand scale, the average density and
    arrangement of galaxies is the same.
  • Since the universe is unchanging throughout time,
    the universe needs no complicated explanation
    of its beginning.

40
Origins
  • 1. Criticisms of Steady state theory
  • - Edwin Hubble showed that the universe was
    expanding (general relativity theory excluded the
    possibility of a static universe)
  • discovery of the cosmic microwave background
    radiation (in 1965) thought to be left over from
    the Big Bang
  • quasars and radio galaxies were found only at
    large distances (therefore existing only in the
    distant past), not in closer galaxies, whereas
    the Steady State theory predicted that such
    objects would be found everywhere, including
    close to our own galaxy.
  • the mechanism for the creation of new matter
    was never found
  • But quasi steady state cosmology

41
Origins
  • 2. The Standard Hot Big Bang Model of the
    Universe
  • Time t  0 (about 15 billion years ago)
  • Radius r  0.Temperature T  Infinite.Density
    mass per volume Infinite.
  • t  0.01 seconds
  • T  100,000,000,000 0C.Energy is mostly
    radiation.
  • t  2 seconds
  • T  10,000,000,000 0C.Density 100 million kg
    per cubic meter.Proton-antiproton and
    neutron-antineutron pairs begin forming.

42
Origins
  • 2. The Standard Hot Big Bang Model of the
    Universe
  • t  3 minutes
  • T  1,000,000,000 0C.Protons and neutrons begin
    forming hydrogen and helium.
  • t  20 minutes
  • About 25 of the protons and neutrons in the
    universe are now helium.
  • t  10,000 years
  • T  10,000 0C.Density 0.000,000,000,000,000,01
    kg per cubic meter.
  • t 15 billion years (now)
  • T -270 0C. (This temperature from Penzias and
    Wilson experiment.)
  • Density 10-27 kg per cubic meter.

43
Origins
  • 3. Bang Bang Bang Theory
  • a. a new string-theory-based cyclical model (Paul
    Steinhardt (Princeton) Neil Turok (Cambridge)).
  • b. "eternal inflation" theory (Andrei Linde
    (Russian/American, Stanford) Alan Guth
    (Physics, MIT) Guth makes the Higgs field the
    agent for cosmic inflation.
  • Linde If it starts, this process can keep
    happening forever It can happen now, in some
    part of the universe."
  • So, eternal inflation a greater universe
    unimaginably large, chaotic and diverse
  • Linde "Chaotic inflation allows us to explain
    our world without making such assumptions as the
    simultaneous creation of the whole universe from
    nothing"

44
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • 1. Cosmogony and Creation in Scripture
  • creation narratives
  • Genesis 11 through Genesis 23 / God creates by
    spoken command ("Let there be...")
  • Genesis 2424 / Yahweh shapes the first man from
    dust, places him in the Garden of Eden man names
    the animals and God creates the first woman,
    Eve, from the man's body.
  • Other creation narratives / flood stories
  • ancient Near East -- Atra-Hasis epic
    (Babylonian/Akkadian) Canaanite
  • Mesopotamia /Epic of Gilgamesh (2100 BC)
  • What is their purpose? (Why written? What was the
    intent/the message that the authors had in mind?)
    How was / is it read?

45
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • 2. Historically
  • James Ussher (1581-1656)
  • A chronology Annales veteris testamenti, a prima
    mundi origine deducti ("Annals of the Old
    Testament, deduced from the first origins of the
    world") 1650,
  • Continued 1654 Annalium pars posterior,
    published in 1654.
  • Creation starts "the entrance of the night
    preceding the 23rd day of October... the year
    before Christ 4004 i.e., 6 pm, 22 October 4004
    BC
  • Is this a religious belief or a scientific belief
    (orboth)?

46
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • 2. Scripture and hermeneutics
  • "What is the literal sense of a passage is not
    always as obvious in the speeches and writings of
    the ancient authors of the East, as it is in the
    works of our own time. For what they wished to
    express is not to be determined by the rules of
    grammar and philology alone, nor solely by the
    context the interpreter must, as it were, go
    back wholly in spirit to those remote centuries
    of the East and with the aid of history,
    archaeology, ethnology, and other sciences,
    accurately determine what modes of writing, so to
    speak, the authors of that ancient period would
    be likely to use, and in fact did use. For the
    ancient peoples of the East, in order to express
    their ideas, did not always employ those forms or
    kinds of speech which we use today but rather
    those used by the men of their times and
    countries. What those exactly were the
    commentator cannot determine as it were in
    advance, but only after a careful examination of
    the ancient literature of the East"
  • -- Pius XII, Encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu,
    30 September 1943

47
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • a) Creation stories explain something though
    not necessarily historical or scientific
  • i) questions of meaning and purpose
  • ii) assurance of order
  • iii) indicating value the value of nature,
    of human beings (in relation to other things), of
    animal life/the environment
  • iv) to affirm / a reminder of who is
    responsible.

48
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • "The account of the fall in Genesis 3 uses
    figurative language, but affirms a primeval
    event, a deed that took place at the beginning of
    the history of man. Revelation gives us the
    certainty of faith that the whole of human
    history is marked by the original fault freely
    committed by our first parents" (CCC 390).

49
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Genesis 618 But I will establish my covenant
    with you and you shall come into the ark, you,
    your sons, your wife, and your sons' wives with
    you.
  • Genesis 9 1 Then God blessed Noah and his
    sons, saying to them, Be fruitful and increase
    in number and fill the earth. 2 The fear and
    dread of you will fall on all the beasts of the
    earth, and on all the birds in the sky, on every
    creature that moves along the ground, and on all
    the fish in the sea they are given into your
    hands. 3 Everything that lives and moves about
    will be food for you. Just as I gave you the
    green plants, I now give you everything.
  • 8 Then God said to Noah and to his sons with him
    9 I now establish my covenant with you and with
    your descendants after you 10 and with every
    living creature that was with youthe birds, the
    livestock and all the wild animals, all those
    that came out of the ark with youevery living
    creature on earth.

50
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Genesis 17
  • As for Me, behold, My covenant is with you,
  • And you will be the father of a multitude of
    nations.
  • 5 No longer shall your name be called Abram
    exalted father
  • But your name shall be Abraham
  • For I have made you the father of a multitude of
    nations.
  • 6 I will make you exceedingly fruitful, and I
    will make nations of you, and kings will come
    forth from you. 7 I will establish My covenant
    between Me and you and your descendants after you
    throughout their generations for aneverlasting
    covenant, to be God to you and to your
    descendants after you. 8 I will give to you and
    to your descendants after you, the land of your
    sojournings, all the land of Canaan, for an
    everlasting possession and I will be their God.

51
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • The approach of philosophy / theology
  • The difference between Cause and creation
  • What does God create?
  • - Not just How does God create? but Why does he
    create?
  • Not just an efficient cause but a final cause
  • And usually ex nihilo material cause
  • And God sustains

52
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Catholic Catechism
  • 293 The world was made for the glory of God."
    St. Bonaventure explains that God created all
    things "not to increase his glory, but to show it
    forth and to communicate it", for God has no
    other reason for creating than his love and
    goodness "Creatures came into existence when the
    key of love opened his hand."136 The First
    Vatican Council explains
  • This one, true God, of his own goodness and
    "almighty power", not for increasing his own
    beatitude, nor for attaining his perfection, but
    in order to manifest this perfection through the
    benefits which he bestows on creatures, with
    absolute freedom of counsel "and from the
    beginning of time, made out of nothing both
    orders of creatures, the spiritual and the
    corporeal. . ."137

53
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Catholic Catechism
  • 282. Catechesis on creation is of major
    importance. It concerns the very foundations of
    human and Christian life for it makes explicit
    the response of the Christian faith to the basic
    question that men of all times have asked
    themselves Where do we come from? Where are
    we going? What is our origin? What is our
    end? Where does everything that exists come
    from and where is it going? The two questions,
    the first about the origin and the second about
    the end, are inseparable. They are decisive for
    the meaning and orientation of our life and
    actions.
  • 283. The question about the origins of the world
    and of man has been the object of many scientific
    studies which have splendidly enriched our
    knowledge of the age and dimensions of the
    cosmos, the development of life-forms and the
    appearance of man. These discoveries invite us to
    even greater admiration for the greatness of the
    Creator, prompting us to give him thanks for all
    his works and for the understanding and wisdom he
    gives to scholars and researchers. With Solomon
    they can say It is he who gave me unerring
    knowledge of what exists, to know the structure
    of the world and the activity of the elements
    for wisdom, the fashioner of all things, taught
    me (Wis 717-21).

54
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Catholic Catechism
  • 284. The great interest accorded to these studies
    is strongly stimulated by a question of another
    order, which goes beyond the proper domain of the
    natural sciences. It is not only a question of
    knowing when and how the universe arose
    physically, or when man appeared, but rather of
    discovering the meaning of such an origin is the
    universe governed by chance, blind fate,
    anonymous necessity, or by a transcendent,
    intelligent and good Being called God. And if
    the world does come from God's wisdom and
    goodness, why is there evil? Where does it come
    from? Who is responsible for it? Is there any
    liberation from it?

55
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Catholic Catechism
  • 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 1724-29 Rom 119-20 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. Is 431 Pss 11515 1248 1343
  • 288 Thus the revelation of creation is
    inseparable from the revelation and forging of
    the covenant of the one God with his People.
    Creation is revealed as the first step towards
    this covenant, the first and universal witness to
    God's all- powerful love. Cf. Gen 155 Jer
    3319-26 And so, the truth of creation is also
    expressed with growing vigour in the message of
    the prophets, the prayer of the psalms and the
    liturgy, and in the wisdom sayings of the Chosen
    People. Cf. Is 4424 Ps 104 Prov 822-31
    280, 2569

56
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Catholic Catechism
  • 289 Among all the Scriptural texts about
    creation, the first three chapters of Genesis
    occupy a unique place. From a literary standpoint
    these texts may have had diverse sources. The
    inspired authors have placed them at the
    beginning of Scripture to express in their solemn
    language the truths of creation - its origin and
    its end in God, its order and goodness, the
    vocation of man, and finally the drama of sin and
    the hope of salvation. Read in the light of
    Christ, within the unity of Sacred Scripture and
    in the living Tradition of the Church, these
    texts remain the principal source for catechesis
    on the mysteries of the "beginning" creation,
    fall, and promise of salvation.

57
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • Summary teaching on creation is of major
    importance.
  • Why? Not because of the scientific character of
    Christian teaching
  • i) Important because creation is connected with
    purpose
  • ii) Important because creation is connected with
    meaning
  • iii) Important because creation is connected with
    humanity knowing Gods existence
  • iv) Important because creation is a mystery
  • v) Important because creation is something
    active, it is ongoing
  • vi) Important because creation is only part of a
    larger story
  • Creation is revealed as the first step towards
    this covenant, and is revealed throughout
    scripture i.e., Gods activity is revealed
    through scripture.

58
Origins
  • How does Christianity approach origins?
  • What is humanitys role in origins or creation?
  • In scientific cosmology / cosmogeny
  • In Christianity
  • Creation -gt the first step towards covenant
  • -gt revealed throughout scripture
  • Creation is good but it was not complete when
    created.

59
Origins
  • What is humanitys role in origins or creation?
  • 302 Creation has its own goodness and proper
    perfection, but it did not spring forth complete
    from the hands of the Creator. The universe was
    created in a state of journeying (in statu
    viae) toward an ultimate perfection yet to be
    attained, to which God has destined it. We call
    divine providence the dispositions by which God
    guides his creation toward this perfection
  • 306 God is the sovereign master of his plan. But
    to carry it out he also makes use of his
    creatures' co-operation. This use is not a sign
    of weakness, but rather a token of almighty God's
    greatness and goodness. For God grants his
    creatures not only their existence, but also the
    dignity of acting on their own, of being causes
    and principles for each other, and thus of
    co-operating in the accomplishment of his plan.

60
Origins
  • What is humanitys role in origins or creation?
  • What is that cooperation?
  • 307 To human beings God even gives the power of
    freely sharing in his providence by entrusting
    them with the responsibility of "subduing" the
    earth and having dominion over it. Cf. Gen
    126-28 God thus enables men to be intelligent
    and free causes in order to complete the work of
    creation, to perfect its harmony for their own
    good and that of their neighbours. Though often
    unconscious collaborators with God's will, they
    can also enter deliberately into the divine plan
    by their actions, their prayers and their
    sufferings. Cf. Col 124 They then fully become
    "God's fellow workers" and co-workers for his
    kingdom. 1 Cor 39 I Th 32 Col 411

61
Origins
  • What is humanitys role in origins or creation?
  • Why isnt creation perfect? Why is there evil?
  • 310. But why did God not create a world so
    perfect that no evil could exist in it? With
    infinite power God could always create something
    better. But with infinite wisdom and goodness God
    freely willed to create a world in a state of
    journeying towards its ultimate perfection. In
    God's plan this process of becoming involves the
    appearance of certain beings and the
    disappearance of others, the existence of the
    more perfect alongside the less perfect, both
    constructive and destructive forces of nature.
    With physical good there exists also physical
    evil as long as creation has not reached
    perfection.

62
Origins
  • Another approach to cosmogeny, cosmology, and
    creation
  • Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881- April 10 1955)
  • Paleontologist and philosopher / theologian
  • The Phenomenon of Man (1955 Engl tr 1959)
  • Christianity and Evolution (1971)
  • Creation and evolution unfolding of the material
    cosmos towards union with God
  • this is directed, and has a final cause
    convergent evolution
  • primordial particles geosphere ? development of
    life biosphere ? the appearance of humanity and
    consciousness noosphere ? to what he called
    the Omega Point supreme consciousness in the
    future

63
Origins
  • Does the Big Bang theory have any implications
    for Christianity (or for theism) ?
  • Yes negative
  • Stephen Hawking's Grand Design (2012) gt Did God
    Create the Universe
  • The role played by time at the beginning of the
    universe, is, I believe, the final key to
    removing the need for a grand designer and
    revealing how the universe created itself. As
    we travel back in time towards the moment of the
    big bang time itself must come to a stop. You
    cant get to a time before the big bang because,
    there was no before, the big bang.We have
    finally found something that does not have a
    cause because there was no time, for a cause
    to exist in. 
  • So when people ask me if a god created the
    universe, I tell them the question itself makes
    no sense. Time didnt exist before the Big Bang,
    so there is no time for God to make the universe
    in.

64
Origins
  • Does the Big Bang theory have any implications
    for Christianity (or for theism) ?
  • Yes negative
  • Stephen Hawking's Grand Design (2012) gt Did God
    Create the Universe
  • Assumptions
  • Cause temporally precedes effect
  • Creation is in time
  • Causes are physical
  • Naturalism

65
Origins
  • Does the Big Bang theory have any implications
    for Christianity (or for theism) ?
  • No neutral
  • 1. Cf. Aquinas on the question Was the universe
    created in time?
  • "That the world began to exist is an object of
    faith, but not of demonstration or science. And
    it is useful to consider this, lest anyone,
    presuming to demonstrate what is of faith, should
    bring forward reasons that are not cogent, so as
    to give occasion to unbelievers to laugh,
    thinking that on such grounds we believe things
    that are of faith." (Summa theologiae I.46.2)
  • 2. The character of creation stories

66
Origins
  • Does the Big Bang theory have any implications
    for Christianity (or for theism) ?
  • Yes possibly positive
  • Is the universe self-explanatory?
  • Causality and Metaphysical dependence

67
Origins summary
  • Is there a contradiction? Is there support?
  • 1. Assumptions of this
  • 2. Catholics are at liberty to believe that
    creation took a few days or a much longer period,
    according to how they see the evidence, and
    subject to any future judgment of the Church
    (Pius XIIs 1950 encyclical Humani Generis
    3637). They need not be hostile to modern
    cosmology.
  • BUT there was creation ex nihilo what there is
    is under the impetus and guidance of God, and
    their ultimate creation must be ascribed to him.

68
Origins summary
  • Is there a contradiction? Is there support?
  • "no real disagreement can exist between the
    theologian and the scientist provided each keeps
    within his own limits. . . . If nevertheless
    there is a disagreement . . . it should be
    remembered that the sacred writers, or more truly
    the Spirit of God who spoke through them, did
    not wish to teach men such truths (as the inner
    structure of visible objects) which do not help
    anyone to salvation and that, for this reason,
    rather than trying to provide a scientific
    exposition of nature, they sometimes describe and
    treat these matters either in a somewhat
    figurative language or as the common manner of
    speech those times required, and indeed still
    requires nowadays in everyday life, even amongst
    most learned people" (Leo XIII, Providentissimus
    Deus 18).

69
Origins summary
  • Is there a contradiction? Is there support?
  • the view(s) of non-Catholic Christians
  • no major denomination (Orthodox, Lutherans,
    Anglicans, Reformed Churches /Calvinist/,
    Presbyterian) insists on 6 day
  • the views of non Christians 
  • Judaism The Rabbinical Council of America
    evolutionary theory, properly understood, is not
    incompatible with belief in a Divine Creator, nor
    with the first 2 chapters of Genesis.
  • Islam " Surely your Lord is Allah, Who created
    the heavens and the earth in six periods of time,
    and He is firm in power He throws the veil of
    night over the day, which it pursues incessantly
    and (He created) the sun and the moon and the
    stars, made subservient by His command surely
    His is the creation and the command blessed is
    Allah, the Lord of the worlds. Quran 7.54

70
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Questions
  • Is life reducible to chemistry?
  • Why is there complexity in nature?
  • Is life on earth unique?
  • Does evolution rule out God's existence?
  • Original sin?

71
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Ideas of evolution (chemical, biological) are not
    new
  • Lucretius (99-55 BC) De rerum natura On the
    nature of things
  • Explaining Epicurean philosophy (Gk - 307 BCE)
  • Pleasure is the greatest good
  • A general acct of astronomy natural history and
    development
  • Universe operates according to physical
    principles (atomism) and chance, not gods, and
    not final causes
  • Since all is natural/due to natural causes, no
    need to fear the gods
  • Still room for freedom atoms swerve clinamen

72
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Ideas of evolution (chemical, biological) are not
    new
  • George Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (1707-88)
  • Histoire Naturelle, générale et particulière,
    avec la description du Cabinet du Roi (17491804)
    - 36 volumes
  • Species improve and degenerate over time 
  • Jean-Baptiste Lamarck 1744-1829
  • the idea of inheritance of acquired
    characteristics 
  • characteristics change in response to the
    environment, and then these characteristics are
    passed on (e.g., giraffes and long necks) not a
    matter of genetics unknown
  • i.e., use inheritance

73
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Ideas of evolution (chemical, biological) are not
    new
  • Charles Lyell 1797-1875 
  • Principles of Geology, 3 vols (1830-33)
  • by looking at geological deposits -- slow
    progressive change not cataclysmic events
    (e.g., a universal flood)
  • a uniformitarian theory (but not necessarily
    evolution, until later in his life)
  • Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
  • See http//www.iep.utm.edu/spencer/
  • Principles of Biology, 1864
  • Move from homogeneity to heterogeneity, yet also
    a greater integratyion of the parts (organicism)
  • Lamarckian evolution
  • Coined survival of the fittest

74
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Ideas of evolution (chemical, biological) are not
    new
  • Charles Darwin 1809-1882
  • and Alfred Russell (1823-1913)
  • o Early medical studies (Edinburgh), attends
    Cambridge to study for the Anglican ministry
  • o Reads enjoys Paley (1828-31) adaptation as
    example of God acting through nature
  • o Five year voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (1831-1836)
    D joins as a self-funded naturalist cum
    companion
  • o On the Origin of Species 1859
  • o natural selection / nature just selects the
    most suitable from the less suitable ones.
    (borrows the "survival of the fittest."

75
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Ideas of evolution (chemical, biological) are not
    new
  • Gregor Johann Mendel (1822-84)
  • German/Czech priest and scientist
  • founder of genetics (though term not coined
    until after his death (by William Bateson
    1861-1926
  • demonstrated that the inheritance of certain
    traits in pea plants follows particular patterns
    the laws of Mendelian inheritance this is
    building on something that breeders know
  • Vs blending inheritance
  • work not widely accepted until after he died
    (circa 1900, when there were several independent
    attempts

76
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Three key questions
  • What is life?
  • How do we get life?
  • Does life develop?
  • What is life?
  • Oxford the condition that distinguishes animals
    and plants from inorganic matter, including the
    capacity for growth, reproduction, functional
    activity metabolism, reaction to stimuli, and
    continual change preceding death.

77
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How do we get life?
  • Earth 4.5 billion years ago
  •  
  • Earliest known life on Earth between 3.9 and 3.5
    billion years ago

78
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How do we get life?
  • Aristotle, History of Animals, Book V, Part 1
  • ? Based on observation (empirical)
  • Now there is one property that animals are found
    to have in common with plants. For some plants
    are generated from the seed of plants, whilst
    other plants are self-generated through the
    formation of some elemental principle similar to
    a seed and of these latter plants some derive
    their nutriment from the ground, whilst others
    grow inside other plants, as is mentioned, by the
    way, in my treatise on Botany. So with animals,
    some spring from parent animals according to
    their kind, whilst others grow spontaneously and
    not from kindred stock and of these instances of
    spontaneous generation some come from putrefying
    earth or vegetable matter, as is the case with a
    number of insects, while others are spontaneously
    generated in the inside of animals out of the
    secretions of their several organs.

79
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How do we get life?
  • Metabolism first
  • the origin of life triggered by the accumulation
    of very simple organic molecules in
    thermodynamically favorable circumstances.
  • -- mechanisms such as lightning and radiation.
  • These act as catalysts for the formation of more
    organic molecules.
  • This is the beginning of life.

80
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How do we get life?
  • Alexander Oparin (1894-1980)
  • The Origin of Life (1924) The Origin and
    Development of Life, 1968
  • -- no fundamental difference between a living
    organism and lifeless matter.
  • -- the properties of life arose in the process of
    the evolution of matter.
  • -- there was a "spontaneous generation of life"
    attacked by Louis Pasteur BUT now impossible
    because the conditions found on the early Earth
    had changed
  • -- so, a "primeval soup" of organic molecules
    could be created in an oxygenless atmosphere
    through the action of sunlight.

81
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How do we get life?
  • J. B. S. Haldane (The Origin of Life, 1929)
    Earth's early oceans were a "hot dilute soup"
  • Oparin and Haldane confirmed in 1952
  • MillerUrey experiment
  • mixture of water, hydrogen, methane, and ammonia
    electric sparks
  • organic compounds, including amino acids and
    monomers formed which are the building blocks
    of protein amino acids "the building blocks
    of life"

82
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
3.5 billion years ago Beginning of life  
1 billion years ago, 1st multicellular organisms, worms, jellyfish, etc.
500,000,000 years ago 1st fish
450,000,000 1st land plants
250,000,000 years ago 1st of 5 mass extinction events
220.000,000 dinosaurs
75,000,000 primates
2.500,000 Homo habilis (most remote ancestors of the homo genus)
1.800,000 Homo erectus
   
338,000 ? (200,000 300,000) Y-chromosomal Adam
99,000 200,000 Mitocondrial Eve
250,000 neanderthals
160,000 Homo sapiens in Ethiopia
60,000 migration out of Africa
25,000 neanderthals die out
  • How do we get human life?

83
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • The standard scientific view of evolution

84
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • The standard scientific view of evolution

85
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How evolution works
  • a. Lamarck
  • epigenesis
  • changes in gene expression due to mechanisms
    other than changes in DNA sequence
  • use-function model of inheritance

86
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How evolution works
  • b. Darwin Natural selection
  • i.e., natural selection acting upon random
    mutation as distinct from artificial selection,
    what we now call selective breeding.
  • A process in nature in which organisms
  • possessing certain genotypic characteristics
  • that make them better adjusted to an
    environment
  • and so tend to survive, reproduce, and
    increase in number or frequency,
  • and therefore, are able to transmit and
    perpetuate their essential genotypic qualities
    to succeeding generations.

87
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How evolution works
  • b. Darwin Natural selection
  • The key is differential reproduction
  • This has been called survival of the fittest
  • Note the risk of circularity

88
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How evolution works
  • c. Theories of evolution
  • i) Gradualism (Darwin) - evolution proceeds in
    small 'grades.'
  • Not necessarily a matter of rate or tempo
  • Not all change is evolution
  • Some changes are within the range of normal
    variation observed within a population, so not
    really evolution
  • ii) Punctuated Equilibrium (Niles Eldredge and
    Stephen Jay Gould 1972)
  • Effort to explain abrupt appearance of new
    species while also the relative stability of
    morphology in widespread species

89
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Some interesting implications
  • other evolutionary development
  • possible evolutionary path for Troodon
  • (Dale Russell, National Museum of Man,
    Ottawa, 1982)
  • If Troodon had not perished in the great
    extinction event (65 million years ago), could
    have evolved into intelligent beings
  • encephalization quotient (relative brain weight
    compared to other dinosaurs) of Troodon, six
    times higher than other dinosaurs, and pattern of
    increase
  • Could have reached a stage comparable to the
    human

90
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • Artists model of hypothetical Dinosauroid,
    based on
  • Russell Séguin (1982)

91
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • The standard scientific view(s) of evolution
  • What can we conclude from this?
  • Evolution on other planets
  • 2. What is assumed by this account?
  • Naturalism
  • Reductionism
  • Geological history, mutation, migration
  • Assumptions about chance, randomness, determinism
  • 3. What is left out of this account?
  • ?

92
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How does biological evolution fit with
    Christianity?
  • 1. Darwin
  • Authors of the highest eminence seem to be fully
    satisfied with the view that each species has
    been independently created. To my mind it accords
    better with what we know of the laws impressed on
    matter by the Creator, that the production and
    extinction of the past and present inhabitants of
    the world should have been due to secondary
    causes, like those determining the birth and
    death of the individual. When I view all beings
    not as special creations, but as the lineal
    descendants of some few beings which lived long
    before the first bed of the Silurian system was
    deposited, they seem to me to become ennobled.
  • -- Darwin, The Origin of Species, Conclusion Ch
    14 (1859)
  • There is grandeur in this view of life, with its
    several powers, having been originally breathed
    by the Creator into a few forms or into one and
    that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on
    according to the fixed law of gravity, from so
    simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful
    and most wonderful have been, and are being,
    evolved. (1859)ref to Creator removed in 1861)

93
DEVELOPMENT EVOLUTION, MATTER, AND THE IMMATERIAL
  • How does biological evolution fit with
    Christianity?
  • John Henry Newman
  • It does not seem to me to follow that creation is
    denied because the Creator, millions of years
    ago, gave laws to matter. He first created matter
    and then he created laws for it laws which
    should construct  it into its present wonderful
    beauty, and accurate adjustment and harmony of
    parts gradually. We do not deny or circumscribe
    the Creator, because we hold he has created the
    self acting originating human mind, which has
    almost a creative gift much less then do we deny
    or circumscribe His power, if we hold that He
    gave matter such laws as by their blind
    instrumentality moulded and constructed through
    innumerable ages the world as we see it. If Mr
    Darwin in this or that point of his theory comes
    into collision with revealed truth, that is
    another matter but I do not see that
    the principle of development, or what I have
    called construction, does. As to the
    Divine Design, is it not an instance of
    incomprehensibly and infinitely marvellous Wisdom
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