Jump to content
An Old School Catholic Message Board

The Pope Is Not Infallible Because He Has Not Decreed On Genesis


zunshynn

Recommended Posts

[quote name='Tony Atonement' date='25 November 2009 - 07:34 AM' timestamp='1259152497' post='2009167']
[color="#0000ff"]
THe Big Bang theory is Catholic: and God said Let there be Light...[/color]
[/quote]
[quote]

On the contrary, the Big Bang is athiestic in nature and origin, made popular by the Christ-hating Mr. Darwin.

If on the other hand, you are being facetious by saying, "God created, and BANG! it was done", then you would be correct according to Ps 33:6 & 9.
[/quote]

Father George Lemaitre was an atheist? Man the stuff you learn on Phatmass..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:yawn: Clearly I can't stand up to the baseball bat sharp logic of "NO U!"
[img]http://images.starcraftmazter.net/4chan/for_forums/no_u5.jpg[/img]
[img]http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j317/CuddlyDeadKitten/NO_U.jpg[/img]
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Tony Atonement

[quote name='Drew-Memphis' date='26 November 2009 - 12:03 AM' timestamp='1259211786' post='2009588']
Here's my question...take it from a mere peasant...

You wrote three very long paragraphs and still never answered his question...

I just put my popcorn in the microwave. Oh Nihil!! Where for art thou, Nihil?
[/quote]


I know very well I didn't answer his question as to being a Geo or a Helio.
It is absolutely pointless to this discussion. Obviously you have nothing to say to what I offered above, so you're only looking to find something to complain about. And to "Jamie", the other poster, I never said the priest was an atheist....I corrected myself shortly thereafter. Still yet another one who is just trying to find some fault somewhere. Anyway, Jamie, don't kid yourself into thinking God revealed the "truth" of the Big Bang to a some priest 1900 years after Christ. As I have been saying all along, the Bible will not allow it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I will vocally recant my position that evolution, the big bang, and Christianity are incompatible as soon as someone gives me a credible alternative explanation of the fossil record.
I do not expect to learn the ways of God from science.
I do not expect to learn science from the Bible.

Edited by USAirwaysIHS
Link to comment
Share on other sites

cmotherofpirl

[quote name='Tony Atonement' date='25 November 2009 - 08:34 AM' timestamp='1259152497' post='2009167']
[color="#0000ff"]
THe Big Bang theory is Catholic: and God said Let there be Light...[/color]
[/quote]


On the contrary, the Big Bang is athiestic in nature and origin, made popular by the Christ-hating Mr. Darwin.

If on the other hand, you are being facetious by saying, "God created, and BANG! it was done", then you would be correct according to Ps 33:6 & 9.
[/quote]
The Big Bang theory was postulated by a catholic priest, so it is definitely not atheistic. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

cmotherofpirl

[quote name='Tony Atonement' date='25 November 2009 - 06:16 PM' timestamp='1259187361' post='2009419']
I may be a dumb bunny, but I still fail to see what a geo/helio view has to do with the topic of this thread and don't understand how a Geo view is either for or against the book of Hebrews. The topic was somebody suggesting the pope was not infallible because he's remained silent on Genesis. While I didn't comment initially on the issue of infallibility, I [i]did[/i] mention Hebrews 11:3 which a layman can read without the assistance of the pope and conclude that what we see all around us was not made by things which do "appear"---eliminating once and for all the alleged big "Kablookie" that all Big Bangers say [i]had[/i] to exist somewhere up there for it to suddenly "explode" and make what we see today. I wonder why the simplicity of the verse does not attract you? I wonder what does God have to say to convince you of anything? You want people to understand YOU when you speak. Why will you not let Him who made you have the same liberty? When He says something once, you doubt it. When He says something numerous times--- like "all have sinned", you make Mary an exception to this and conclude He didn't mean what He said the first time. There's [i]always[/i] a caveat in Catholic theology, which is what makes Catholicism so frustrating. Whatever happened to the "simplicity that is in Christ"? (2 Cor 11:3).

Anyway, I entirely disagree with you that the Galileo episode is irrelevant. Mr. G believed the Scriptures, and what it is that I think you don't want to face is that a mere "Bible believer" could have been right, over and above all the hot air being blown out of the hierarchy. Hot air being defined as the Bull of Sixtus V who told his cardinals

"to examine and expose the books which are repugnant to the Catholic [u]doctrines[/u] and Christian discipline, and after reporting them to us, they are to condemn them by our authority" (i.e., making it clear that they thought the motion of the earth and the fixity of the sun was a [i]doctrine[/i] contrary to Holy Writ). They were wrong! Later, Pope Urban ordered the sentence of Galileo be distributed to all "apostolic nuncios" and "Florentine Inquisitors of heretical pravity" ---to the end that, "so pernicious a [u]doctrine[/u] as that [of Copernicas & Galileo] might be altogether taken away and spread no further to the heavy detriment of the Catholic faith." Again, they were wrong. And still later, Pope Alexander VII republished the previous decrees against the "doctrine" of the mobility of the earth, and lo and behold, he was wrong too. Protestants thank God for this episode in history because it shows that for all the yada-yada about "Holy Mother Church being able to judge the true sense of Scripture"---here we see it was a LAYMEN who triumphed over the hierarchy, and we too will not be intimidated by them either.


Apparently JP II would not agree with your opinion that the Galilean episode was irrelevant---as he went out of his way to issue a world-wide apology about 10 years ago.
[/quote]
THe Holy Father apologized on how it was handled, not that Galileo was right. Galileo wanted to correct the Bible, which obviously NOT acceptable.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here is a summary of the first moments of the universe:

1 In the beginning God created heaven, and earth.
2 And the earth was void and empty, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the spirit of God moved over the waters.
3 And God said: Be light made. And light was made. [color="#FF0000"]Cue ENORMOUS explosion, a.k.a. [size="5"]Horrendous Space Kablooie[/size] (Narrator's voice should echo here). There's a lot of light in a Kablooie of that size[/color]
4 And God saw the light that it was good; and he divided the light from the darkness. [color="#FF0000"]It's been a couple billionths of a second now, and the Horrendous Space Kablooie is calming down a bit; now the fundamental forces are starting to separate, reality is starting to make sense, etc., etc..[/color]
5 And he called the light Day, and the darkness Night; and there was evening and morning one day.

I see no problem here.

Edited by Nihil Obstat
Link to comment
Share on other sites

cmotherofpirl

[quote name='Tony Atonement' date='26 November 2009 - 03:13 PM' timestamp='1259262797' post='2009799']
I know very well I didn't answer his question as to being a Geo or a Helio.
It is absolutely pointless to this discussion. Obviously you have nothing to say to what I offered above, so you're only looking to find something to complain about. And to "Jamie", the other poster, I never said the priest was an atheist....I corrected myself shortly thereafter. Still yet another one who is just trying to find some fault somewhere. Anyway, Jamie, don't kid yourself into thinking God revealed the "truth" of the Big Bang to a some priest 1900 years after Christ. As I have been saying all along, the Bible will not allow it.
[/quote]
And you are qualified how to decide what the Scriptures will or will not allow? You obviously have never read the Holy Father on this topic have you...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Tony Atonement

[quote name='cmotherofpirl' date='26 November 2009 - 05:42 PM' timestamp='1259275356' post='2009894']
THe Holy Father apologized on how it was handled, not that Galileo was right. Galileo wanted to correct the Bible, which obviously NOT acceptable.
[/quote]


Under no circumstances whatsoever can it be said that Galileo wanted to "correct the Bible". That is what is called "revisionist history". If you want to be taken seriously, you ought to include proof with your assertions, not just make claims hoping people will believe you simply by the breath of your mouth. I suggest you recant this position if you want to maintain your credibility.

In point of fact, it was the [i]magisterium [/i]who wished to unwarrantly "correct the Bible", and not the other way around. On March 5, 1616, the Congregation of the Indexed (a committee of Cardinals appointed by the Pope) published a decree with the following sentence: "Since it has come to the knowledge of this Holy Congregation that the false Pythagorean doctrine, altogether opposed to the Divine Scripture, of the mobility of the earth...."

The fact of the matter is, that the mobility of the earth is indeed verified in Scripture, and certainly not opposed to it as the Papacy supposed in 1616. And unlike you, who only furnishes bold and brash statements, I will provide the evidence: Job 38:12:14.

[i]"Hast thou commanded the morning since thy days and caused the dayspring to know his place; that it might take hold of the ends of the earth, that the wicked might be shaken out of it?" It is [u]turned[/u] as a clay to the seal, and they stand [exposed] as a garment."

[/i]My Bible commentary reports on the word "turned": "This figurative expression of the clay seal refers to God's initiation of the earth's rotation and the day-night cycle. Each night, like a rotating clay cylinder exposing the impressions of the seal, the earth turns to the sun (or "dayspring"), exposing the wicked and their works of the night."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[img]http://static.zooomr.com/images/4143788_2d6f848112.jpg[/img]
[size="1"]The views or opinions disseminated in the above picture do not necessarily accurately reflect the views or opinions of the poster.[/size]

Edited by Nihil Obstat
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Tony Atonement

[quote name='cmotherofpirl' date='26 November 2009 - 05:47 PM' timestamp='1259275646' post='2009896']
And you are qualified how to decide what the Scriptures will or will not allow? You obviously have never read the Holy Father on this topic have you...
[/quote]


I am indeed qualified to know what the Scriptures will or will not allow because God's word is crystal clear. If Catholics wish to sit on the fence regarding this issue because the Pope has not infallibly defined Genesis, then so be it. Catholics keep forgetting that Jesus held people responsible for knowing the Scriptures--period; (e.g., "Have you not read that which was spoken to you by God...?) without making any indication that they needed to be "qualified" in whatever sense you mean. As for the myth of evolution, we know that everything was created "after his kind" (Gen 1:24), and since God "rested from all His work" (2:3) after 6 days of creating all things, it follows He is no longer using those processes which he used to create, but is instead now, "upholding all things by the word of His power (Heb 1:3). No one in history has ever recorded the natural evolution of any kind of creature into a more complex kind and the fossil record tells us why: It just never happened.

As for me reading what the pope has thus far had to say on this topic, I have indeed. Your point? [i]My[/i] point is that the fiasco with Galileo demonstrates I need not hang my hat on what the Pope has to say.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Tony Atonement

[quote name='Nihil Obstat' date='26 November 2009 - 05:45 PM' timestamp='1259275534' post='2009895']
Here is a summary of the first moments of the universe:

1 In the beginning God created heaven, and earth.
2 And the earth was void and empty, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the spirit of God moved over the waters.
3 And God said: Be light made. And light was made. [color="#ff0000"]Cue ENORMOUS explosion, a.k.a. [size="5"]Horrendous Space Kablooie[/size] (Narrator's voice should echo here). There's a lot of light in a Kablooie of that size[/color]
4 And God saw the light that it was good; and he divided the light from the darkness. [color="#ff0000"]It's been a couple billionths of a second now, and the Horrendous Space Kablooie is calming down a bit; now the fundamental forces are starting to separate, reality is starting to make sense, etc., etc..[/color]
5 And he called the light Day, and the darkness Night; and there was evening and morning one day.

I see no problem here.
[/quote]


Mr. Obstat,

Your theory that the Big Bang resulted in the instant when God "made light", is erroneous because contrary to your statement that He [u]made[/u] light, you are forgetting that the Creator Himself [u]is[/u] light (1 Jn 1:5)--"dwelling in the light which no man can approach" (1 Tim 6:16). Thus, the obvious pre-existence of visible light prior to the establishment of the sun, moon and stars---is not an argument for the Big Bang being the "light" spoken of in Genesis 1:3.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...