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Reprinted from Catholic Online
Intelligent Design belittles God, Vatican director says
By Mark Lombard
1/30/2006
WEST
PALM BEACH, Fla. (Catholic Online) -- Intelligent Design reduces and
belittles God’s power and might, according to the director of the
Vatican Observatory.
Science is and should be seen as
“completely neutral” on the issue of the theistic or atheistic
implications of scientific results, says Father George V. Coyne,
director of the Vatican Observatory, while noting that “science and
religion are totally separate pursuits.”
Father Coyne is scheduled to deliver the annual Aquinas Lecture
on “Science Does Not Need God, or Does It? A Catholic Scientist Looks
at Evolution” at Palm Beach Atlantic University, an interdenominational
Christian university of about 3,100 students, here Jan. 31. The talk is
sponsored by the Newman Club, and scheduled in conjunction with the
Jan. 28 feast of St. Thomas Aquinas.
Catholic Online received an advance copy of the remarks from the Jesuit
priest-astronomer, who heads the Vatican Observatory, which has sites
at Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome, and on Mount Graham in Arizona.
Christianity is “radically creationist,” Father George V. Coyne said,
but it is not best described by the “crude creationism” of the
fundamental, literal, scientific interpretation of Genesis or by the
Newtonian dictatorial God who makes the universe tick along like a
watch. Rather, he stresses, God acts as a parent toward the universe,
nurturing, encouraging and working with it.
In his remarks, he also criticizes the cardinal archbishop of Vienna’s
support for Intelligent Design and notes that Pope John Paul’s
declaration that “evolution is no longer a mere hypothesis” is “a
fundamental church teaching” which advances the evolutionary debate.
He calls “mistaken” the belief that the Bible should be used
“as a source of scientific knowledge,” which then serves to “unduly
complicate the debate over evolution.”
And while Charles Darwin receives most of the attention in the
debate over evolution, Father Coyne said it was the 18th-century French
naturalist Georges Buffon, condemned a hundred years before Darwin for
suggesting that “it took billions of years to form the crust of the
earth,” who “caused problems for the theologians with the implications
that might be drawn from the theory of evolution.”
He points to the “marvelous intuition” of Roman Catholic Cardinal
John Henry Newman who said in 1868, “the theory of Darwin, true or not,
is not necessarily atheistic; on the contrary, it may simply be
suggesting a larger idea of divine providence and skill.”
Pope John Paul Paul II, he adds, told the Pontifical Academy of
Sciences in 1996 that “new scientific knowledge has led us to the
conclusion that the theory of evolution is no longer a mere
hypothesis.”
He criticizes Austrian Cardinal Christoph Schonborn of Vienna for
instigating a “tragic” episode “in the relationship of the Catholic
Church to science” through the prelate’s July 7, 2005, article he wrote
for the New York Times that “neo-Darwinian evolution is not compatible with Catholic doctrine,” while the Intelligent Design theory is.
Cardinal Schonborn “is in error,” the Vatican observatory director says, on “at least five fundamental issues.”
“One, the scientific theory of evolution, as all scientific theories,
is completely neutral with respect to religious thinking; two, the
message of John Paul II, which I have just referred to and which is
dismissed by the cardinal as ‘rather vague and unimportant,’ is a
fundamental church teaching which significantly advances the evolution
debate; three, neo-Darwinian evolution is not in the words of the
cardinal, ‘an unguided, unplanned process of random variation and
natural selection;’ four, the apparent directionality seen by science
in the evolutionary process does not require a designer; five,
Intelligent Design is not science despite the cardinal’s statement that
‘neo-Darwinism and the multi-verse hypothesis in cosmology [were]
invented to avoid the overwhelming evidence for purpose and design
found in modern science,’” Father Coyne says.
Christianity is “radically creationist” and God is the “creator of the
universe,” he says, but in “a totally different sense” than creationism
has come to mean.
“It is unfortunate that, especially here in America, creationism has
come to mean some fundamentalistic, literal, scientific interpretation
of Genesis,” he stresses. “It is rooted in a belief that everything
depends upon God, or better, all is a gift from God. The universe is
not God and it cannot exist independently of God. Neither pantheism nor
naturalism is true.”
He says that God is not needed to explain the “scientific picture of life’s origins in terms of religious belief.”
“To need God would be a very denial of God. God is not a response to a
need,” the Jesuit says, adding that some religious believers act as if
they “fondly hope for the durability of certain gaps in our scientific
knowledge of evolution, so that they can fill them with God.”
Yet, he adds, this is the opposite of what human intelligence should be
working toward. “We should be seeking for the fullness of God in
creation.”
Modern science reveals to the religious believer “God who made a
universe that has within it a certain dynamism and thus participates in
the very creativity of God,” Father Coyne says, adding that this view
of creation is not new but can be found in early Christian writings,
including from those of St. Augustine.
“Religious believers must move away from the notion of a dictator God,
a Newtonian God who made the universe as a watch that ticks along
regularly.”
He proposes to describe God’s relationship with the universe as that of
a parent with a child, with God nurturing, preserving and enriching its
individual character. “God should be seen more as a parent or as one
who speaks encouraging and sustaining words.”
He stresses that the theory of Intelligent Design diminishes God into “an engineer who designs systems rather than a lover.”
“God in his infinite freedom continuously creates a world which
reflects that freedom at all levels of the evolutionary process to
greater and greater complexity,” he said. “God lets the world be what
it will be in its continuous evolution. He does not intervene, but
rather allows, participates, loves.”
The concludes his prepared remarks noting that science challenges
believers’ traditional understanding of God and the universe to look
beyond “crude creationism” to a view that preserves the special
character of both.
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