Catholicism and Evolution
			By David W. Tschanz
			David W. Tschanz, PhD, MSPH, MCSE is a 
			demographer, historian, and computer consultant. A former Jesuit 
			seminarian, he has made a special study of the role of the Catholic 
			Church in relation to science, particularly cosmology, and 
			evolution. 
			One of the most unfortunate results of the popularity of American 
			author Dan Brown's The DaVinci Code is that it is not only at 
			times wildly factually inaccurate. Its portrayal of the Roman 
			Catholic Church as being anti-science is deplorably false. Sadly, 
			perception is often mistaken for reality, and nowhere is that more 
			obvious than in the current discussion on the topic of evolution.
			Cosmology and Catholicism 
			Before looking at the position of the Catholic Church on human 
			evolution, we should start with the related question, what does the 
			Church believe about how and when the universe came into being?
			The Church has declared, as an article of faith (meaning 
			Catholics must accept it as a matter of dogma), that the universe 
			was specially created out of nothing by God, that "the world 
			and all things which are contained in it, both spiritual and 
			material, as regards their whole substance, have been produced by 
			God from nothing" (First Vatican Council, 1870).
			Beyond that declaration, the Church left to each individual 
			Catholic the choice of how this happened. If they wish to believe 
			that God did it all at once, or that the stars, nebulae, and planets 
			developed over time (for example, in the aftermath of the Big Bang 
			that modern cosmologists discuss), or some place in between, that is 
			perfectly acceptable. In fact, as we shall see shortly, according to 
			Catholic belief, the "how" in cosmology is an irrelevant and 
			pointless question. What is relevant is the role of God. If a 
			Catholic, acting in good faith and intellectual honesty, truly 
			believed that the stars and planets did develop over time, this 
			still ultimately must be attributed to God and his plan.
			Let us restate that the means are not as important as the 
			essential truth of God creating the universe. As a result, and 
			obscured by writers such as Brown, is the fact that many of today's 
			leading scientists and astronomers are Catholic priests (the Vatican 
			Observatory is a leading research facility). They are simply 
			following the long tradition of Catholic clergy (and layman) in the 
			sciences that included astronomer Nicholas Copernicus and geneticist 
			Gregor Mendel, among others. The Vatican Observatory even has its 
			own
			
			website. 
			Evolution and the Bible
			On the subject of biological evolution, the Church does not have 
			any official position on whether various life forms developed at 
			once or over the course of time. However, it says that if they did 
			develop over time or all at once, then they did so under the impetus 
			and guidance of God, and their ultimate creation must be ascribed to 
			Him. 
			When it comes to human evolution, it comes as a surprise to many 
			Catholics, as well as non-Catholics, to learn how little the Church 
			teaches in this area. This is because the Church has chosen to 
			define only a few tenets as true beyond doubt, leaving a great deal 
			of latitude to Catholics for their personal judgment. This is 
			principally because the Church has not been concerned with 
			evolutionary questions as such, but rather with their possible 
			implications for Catholic belief. 
			The Church allows for the possibility that man's body developed 
			from previous biological forms, under God's guidance, but it insists 
			on the special creation of his soul. The Church insists that man is 
			not an accident; that no matter how God went about creating Homo 
			Sapiens, God from all eternity intended that man and all creation 
			exist in their present form. 
			The historical meaning of the first three chapters of Genesis, 
			wrote Pope Pius X in 1909, could not be doubted in regard to "the 
			creation of all things by God at the beginning of time; the special 
			creation of man; the formation of the first woman from the first 
			man; the unity of the human race; the original happiness of our 
			first parents in the state of justice, integrity, and immortality; 
			the command given by God to man to test his obedience; the 
			transgression of the divine command at the instigation of the devil 
			under the form of a serpent; the degradation of our first parents 
			from that primeval state of innocence; and the promise of a future 
			redeemer." 
			Notice that the Church again says nothing definite about how, in 
			specific detail, God created the world and its various forms of 
			life, or how long any of this took. The only "special creation" 
			mentioned is that of man's spiritual and immortal soul. In the 
			Church's eyes, Genesis deals with historical fact, not scientific 
			process — with the what of creation, not the how. 
			
			As long ago as the fifth century, Augustine of Hippo, the 
			church's most revered ancient theologian, had cautioned Christians 
			not to take the Genesis creation accounts too literally. So it 
			should not be a surprise that Catholics are not obliged to reconcile 
			scientific data with the early verses of Genesis, but can instead 
			view it as containing truths that are expressed in an archaic, 
			pre-scientific Hebrew idiom. They can also accept with "enjoyment 
			and confidence" modern scientific discoveries which, more often than 
			not, raise fundamental questions which science itself cannot answer. 
			Every new discovery is a source of wonder and a reason for giving 
			praise to God.
			Ironically, many scientists engaged in evolutionary studies are 
			devout Catholics. These men and women see no contradiction between 
			what the Church teaches and what science has learned. In 
			fact, their efforts are lauded in the Catechism of the Catholic 
			Church (a summary of beliefs and tenets) as follows:
			Methodical research in all branches of knowledge, provided it is 
			carried out in a truly scientific manner and does not override moral 
			laws, can never conflict with the faith, because the things of the 
			world and the things the of the faith derive from the same God. The 
			humble and persevering investigator of the secrets of nature is 
			being led, as it were, by the hand of God in spite of himself, for 
			it is God, the conserver of all things, who made them what they are.
			Evolution Does Not Mean Atheism 
			While the Church does not oppose evolution per se, it does not 
			allow belief in atheistic evolution, nor does it accept the broader 
			implications of evolutionism. The Church's quarrel with many 
			scientists who call themselves evolutionists is not about evolution 
			itself, which may (or may not) have occurred in a non-Darwinian, 
			teleological manner, but rather about the philosophical materialism 
			that is at the root of so much evolutionary thinking. Evolutionists 
			argue the word came about without divine action, as a pure accident.
			To Catholics, the universe is not the result of purely random 
			events that have no direction and operate without the hand of God. A 
			universe without God is purely materialistic and secular, this is a 
			position that the church rejects. It does not oppose evolution, but 
			it opposes the argument that evolution disproves the existence of 
			God, or makes Him irrelevant.
			Catholicism and Fundamental Protestantism 
			The Catholic Church's position clearly contrasts with that of 
			many fundamentalist Protestant sects. Fundamentalists have usually 
			insisted on treating Genesis as a scientifically accurate, as well 
			as historically true, account. Unfortunately, this stance has often 
			appeared in the media as definitive Christian doctrine. Its details 
			have contrasted so sharply with established scientific knowledge 
			that "Christian belief" has been held in ridicule. 
			To give one example, in the 17th century, Anglican clergyman 
			Bishop James Ussher, made a calculation based on Biblical 
			genealogies that God created the world on an October morning in 4004 
			BCE. Many fundamentalists today hold this as an article of faith. 
			For virtually all scientists, the figure is absurd. From the 
			Catholic point of view, Bishop Ussher spoke only for himself, not 
			for the Church; his feat was one of arithmetic, not theology. 
			Of course, Catholics may share many of these 
			fundamentalist beliefs as their personal opinions. The point is they 
			are not required to. With the exception of the few matters 
			mentioned above, Catholics may hold whatever scientific positions 
			seem reasonable and intellectually convincing, as long as they 
			accept that everything comes about as the will of God. 
			Disclaimer: The article reflects the opinions of 
			the author 
			Source:
			
			http://www.islam-online.net/English/Science/2006/04/article12.shtml