| Vatican Considers ET Possibility | | Print | |
| Written by Bruce Walker | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 11 November 2009 15:00 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
But what's paradoxical about religion and science? The connection between Christianity and Science has always been robust. As Rodney Grant points out in his book, The Victory of Reason, Christian faith is the virtual cornerstone of modern science. In fact, Galileo was not punished for religious heresy in his notorious trial but for academic malfeasance. The academicians in the Catholic Church who prosecuted him objected to Galileo stating as scientific fact that the sun was at the center of the universe; no Catholic professors or clerics objected to his assertion as a theory that the sun was at the center of the universe and that the planets revolved around the sun as Copernicus suggested.
Set as favorite
Email This
Trackback(0)
Comments (5)
![]()
Bonnie
said:
|
|
... Mankind is the special creation of God. What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him? "Vatican Considers ET Possibility" - or is he not so special after all? On the sixth day, "God created man in his own image". Or did He? The Vatican is treading on the thin ice of appeasement. |
|
Cato
said:
|
... #1 I am a christian ... #2 I have read the CS Lewis space trilogy. #3 I believe that there are "aliens". #4 But I don't think the "aliens" are from another planet ... I think they are from another dimension, and are most likely demonic. |
|
David S
said:
|
... Regardless of whatever the Vatican may say, the Big Picture of history precented in scripture makes ET life extremely unlikely. http://creation.com/did-god-create-life-on-other-planets |
|
Paul Zerzan
said:
|
Science and History Teacher Amazing how you forgot to mention Giordan Bruno. He was a Catholic Priest brutally murdered for heresy by the Catholic Church. Because he refused to recant his findings that the earth revolved around the sun, the he was tied naked to a wooden pole, an iron stake was driven through his tongue and he was burned alive. This was for the crime of heresy. Galileo was interested in Bruno's case. He checked out Bruno's findings and found them to be true. When the Catholic Church threatened him with death he recanted. To talk of Galileo without mentioning Bruno is to tell half a truth in order to perpetuate a lie. The Catholic Church was as opposed to Scientific Inquiry as much as it was opposed to translating the Bible into English and other languages. In both cases the punishment was death. If it were not for the Protestant Reformation Europe would still be locked in the ignorance and superstitions of the Dark Ages. |
|
Florida Warren
said:
|
Paul Zeran: Where did you learn history? In Saudi Arabia? It was common in that era for dissidents to be executed for heresy. Calvin had many heretics executed, as did the English Puritans. According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "in 1600 there was no official Catholic position on the Copernican system, and it was certainly not a heresy. When [...] Bruno [...] was burned at the stake as a heretic, it had nothing to do with his writings in support of Copernican cosmology." |
|




CBS News reported on November 11 that Pope Benedict is considering the possibility of extraterrestrial life, which is an attempt to bridge the gap between science and religion. This news story came five days after a report by the Pew Research Center on November 6 called the “Paradoxical Relationship of Religion and Science.”
