Letter to the Editor -- Ila Johnson
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Without getting into the pros and cons of the various theories of
evolution, so-called creationism, or the intelligent design theory, I
must take issue with letter writer William Bentley when he states that
”...the Roman Catholic Church and most mainstream Protestant
denominations accept evolution as the best present explanation for the
variety of fauna and flora that we see around us” (Community Commentary,
“Teach creationism, but not as science,” April 9).
Who made Bentley spokesperson for the Catholic Church? I cannot speak
to what “most mainstream Protestant denominations” accept, but as a
practicing Roman Catholic, I unequivocally refute that statement with
regard to the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church has never made any
definitive statement to that effect.
The church’s most recent statement regarding evolution was made by
Pope John Paul II in 1996 in an address to the Pontifical Academy of
Sciences, wherein he referred to the encyclical titled, “Humani Generis,”
issued in 1950 by his predecessor, Pope Pius XII. John Paul II said that
the encyclical “treated the doctrine of ‘evolutionism’ as a serious
hypothesis worthy of investigation and serious study along side the
opposite hypothesis.” John Paul II further stated that Pius XII added
that “one could not adopt the opinion [evolution] as if it were a certain
and demonstrable doctrine, and one could not totally set aside the
teaching Revelation on the relevant questions.”
John Paul II continued: “Today, more than a half-century after the
appearance of that encyclical, some new findings lead us toward the
recognition of evolution as more than one hypothesis within the theory of
evolution.” In other translations, the pope is quoted as saying “new
knowledge leads us to no longer consider the theory of evolution as just
a simple hypothesis.”
This is where the confusion arises. The mass media deduced and widely
reported that this “new knowledge” leads evolution to be considered a
scientific certainty by the church. But the pope’s statement merely
recognizes that science has progressed beyond the preliminary stage of
the scientific method commonly called a hypothesis. John Paul continues:
“Theory shows its validity insofar as it is open to verification; it is
constantly evaluated on the level of facts, and where it is no longer
demonstrated by facts, it manifests its limits and inadequacy. At this
point it must be thought out again.” Finally, John Paul II’s message
says, “in closing, I want to call to mind the Gospel truth which can shed
a greater light on your researches into the origins and the development
of living matter.”
The fact is, both popes have generally issued cautions with regard to
evolution as applied to biology. Neither “Humani Generis” nor John Paul
II’s message constitute Ex Cathedra (from the chair of Peter), church
doctrine to be definitely held in the deposit of faith. They do confirm
that the church is open to demonstrable scientific facts but that with
regard to the origin of life, the discovery of proof to support evolution
is perhaps light years away, if ever.
Furthermore, in the most recent edition of the Catechism of the
Catholic Church, published in 2000, there is no mention of evolution,
none at all, in the discussion of the origin of the universe. There has
been no acceptance by the Roman Catholic Church of evolution as the best
present explanation of the origin of man nor will there likely be any
time soon.
I also can’t allow to go unchallenged Bentley’s statement that
“science is only concerned with naturalistic events that take place in
the physical world. It is completely neutral with regard to the spiritual
world, religion and morality.” This may be true for science in general,
but it is certainly not true of evolutionism, which behaves much like a
religion with cherished, unquestionable beliefs, wraps itself in the
philosophy and dogma of materialistic naturalism, and takes on a decided
atheistic bent that denies any purpose to man’s existence. The Catholic
Church could never accept such a conclusion.
ILA JOHNSON
Costa Mesa
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