(photo: Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters)
Pope Francis: Evolution and Big Bang Happened, God Is Not "A Magician With a Magic Wand"
28 October 14
he theories of evolution and the Big Bang are real and God is not “a magician with a magic wand”, Pope Francis has declared.
Speaking at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, the
Pope made comments which experts said put an end to the “pseudo
theories” of creationism and intelligent design that some argue were
encouraged by his predecessor, Benedict XVI.
Francis explained that both scientific theories were
not incompatible with the existence of a creator – arguing instead that
they “require it”.
“When we read about Creation in Genesis, we run the
risk of imagining God was a magician, with a magic wand able to do
everything. But that is not so,” Francis said.
He added: “He created human beings and let them
develop according to the internal laws that he gave to each one so they
would reach their fulfilment.
“The Big Bang, which today we hold to be the origin of
the world, does not contradict the intervention of the divine creator
but, rather, requires it.
“Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the
notion of creation, because evolution requires the creation of beings
that evolve.”
The Catholic Church has long had a reputation for
being anti-science – most famously when Galileo faced the inquisition
and was forced to retract his “heretic” theory that the Earth revolved
around the Sun.
But Pope Francis’s comments were more in keeping with
the progressive work of Pope Pius XII, who opened the door to the idea
of evolution and actively welcomed the Big Bang theory. In 1996, John
Paul II went further and suggested evolution was “more than a
hypothesis” and “effectively proven fact”.
Yet more recently, Benedict XVI and his close advisors
have apparently endorsed the idea that intelligent design underpins
evolution – the idea that natural selection on its own is insufficient
to explain the complexity of the world. In 2005, his close associate
Cardinal Schoenborn wrote an article saying “evolution in the sense of
common ancestry might be true, but evolution in the neo-Darwinian sense –
an unguided, unplanned process – is not”.
Giovanni Bignami, a professor and president of Italy’s
National Institute for Astrophysics, told the Italian news agency
Adnkronos: “The pope’s statement is significant. We are the direct
descendents from the Big Bang that created the universe. Evolution came
from creation.”
Giulio Giorello, professor of the philosophy of
science at Milan’s University degli Studi, told reporters that he
believed Francis was “trying to reduce the emotion of dispute or
presumed disputes” with science.
Despite the huge gulf in theological stance between
his tenure and that of his predecessor, Francis praised Benedict XVI as
he unveiled a bronze bust of him at the academy's headquarters in the
Vatican Gardens.
“No one could ever say of him that study and science
made him and his love for God and his neighbour wither,” Francis said,
according to a translation by the Catholic News Service.
“On the contrary, knowledge, wisdom and prayer
enlarged his heart and his spirit. Let us thank God for the gift that he
gave the church and the world with the existence and the pontificate of
Pope Benedict.”
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