For Catholics, the question of evolution touches on all the most important topics: the nature of God and his work in the world, the nature of life, and the status of man in the universe.
It is also a subject of perennial controversy and confusion.
Some see the Darwinian theory of evolution as a major agent in discrediting the Church's doctrine on creation, undermining biblically-based morality and the concept of human exceptionalism.
Others regard Darwinian theory as compatible with biblical faith and Catholic tradition.
Has the Church itself evolved? Or are there certain truths that are permanent and irreplaceable? Fr.
Michael Chaberek is a Polish Dominican who has studied creation doctrine from Old and New Testament accounts to the Church Fathers, to the Medieval Scholastics (especially St.
Thomas Aquinas), to the Vatican's internal and public papers of the 19th and 20th centuries--and on into our own times and the pronouncements of recent popes.
His new book gathers all doctrinal statements on evolution and presents the history of the engagement of Catholicism with natural science since Darwin presented his theory in 1859.
What he finds is a clear path that gradually became twisted and over-grown.
His exploration of that path is both scholarly and engrossing.
Finally, a book that tells the full story of Catholic reflections and Magisterial statements down through the centuries on issues of creation and evolution.
From the meditations of the ancient Church Fathers to the statements of Popes Pelagius I and Leo XIII, there are many hidden treasures to be found here.
Chaberek combines historical, philosophical, and theological scholarship in a book that is both comprehensive and engaging.
This book will be an eye-opener for many, and will quickly become the standard and essential work on the subject.
--ROBERT STACKPOLE, director, John Paul II Institute of Divine Mercy In Catholicism and Evolution, Fr.
Michael Chaberek surveys perennial Catholic teaching, plum.
Topics | The nature of |
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