(cheerful music)
LIBBY: What are you doing?
KAI: I'm trying to figure
out how we got here.
LIBBY: We took the 405 to the 10, and --
KAI: No, no, no, I mean, how did
we get here as humans?
What do Catholics say?
Were our ancestors monkeys,
or two people who couldn't
follow directions?
LIBBY: That's easy. Option number three.
KAI: Oh, you mean monkeys that
couldn't follow directions.
(cheerful music)
LIBBY: Hi, I'm Libby.
KAI: And I'm Kai, welcome
to Catholic Central.
LIBBY: Today, we will explore
what the Catholic Church
has to say about the debate
between the Bible and evolution.
Spoiler alert: for Catholics,
there's another way.
KAI: But first, what is this fight all about?
LIBBY: Well, in one camp,
we have the evolutionists
and the theory of natural selection.
KAI: Charles Darwin came
up with this theory in 1859,
which states that life started
as a primordial soup and evolved.
LIBBY: The strongest of
the species, meaning the ones
that could best adapt to
their environment, survived.
KAI: From this perspective,
everything could be chalked up
to random chance, and God could
be considered unnecessary.
LIBBY: Nothing became something, and out of it,
substances came to life.
KAI: And at some point, we became self-aware
and weeded out the
weaklings until arriving
at the nearly perfect specimen
you see before you today.
Specimens, sorry.
LIBBY: In the other camp,
we have the creationists.
KAI: They believe that the
creation story in the Bible
was written like an eyewitness report.
LIBBY: One day of
light, one day of oceans,
one day of plants, animals, and bam!
Here we are, a mere 6,000 years later.
- You may be wondering, OK
then, option number three?
Catholics say...what?
LIBBY: Well, to answer that, we really need
to dive into how the Church views science.
KAI: Now, you might be
tempted to roll your eyes
and think that the words
Catholic and science
should only go together
in a sentence along
with the words superstition,
anathema, and excommunication.
LIBBY: But actually, Catholics
aren't at all scared,
distrustful, or willfully
ignorant of science.
KAI: They love it so much that many of them
have dedicated their lives to studying it.
A Holy Cross priest, Julius Nieuwland,
developed a synthetic rubber
that revolutionized the industry.
Pasteurization and genetics
both came from Catholics:
Louis Pasteur and Father Gregor Mendel.
LIBBY: Not to mention another
priest, Georges Lemaitre,
who came up with the Big Bang theory.
KAI: The actual theory, not the show.
- Which is still the leading explanation
of how the universe began.
KAI: Catholics don't see
science and faith as conflicting.
You don't have to choose
which camp to live in.
LIBBY: You can believe in evolution, and also
in the creator of an ordered universe,
where beings evolved
according to a higher purpose.
KAI: Which, let's be honest,
is actually helpful,
since science is a little lacking
in the where everything
came from in the first place
and why is it here now, and
where is it going department.
LIBBY: And because Catholics believe God
created the universe with order,
for them, all truth comes from God.
So, we understand more
about God when we discover
more about the truths of the
universe through science.
KAI: And science can bring us closer to God.
It gives us a greater admiration
for his greatness when we see his works.
LIBBY: And you know what else
doesn't conflict with science?
The Bible.
NEWSCASTER KAI: Breaking news, scientific
evidence has been found
that suggests that our
cells are actually made up
of tiny dust particles,
proving that man's creation
from dust in the book of
Genesis is true, (laughs)!
LIBBY: No, I mean they're
compatible when you see
the creation story as
figurative, not literal;
as words and images that point to truth.
KAI: Especially when you consider
that the Bible is full of poetic language
which means something different in Hebrew.
(Libby chanting)
Uh, Libby, this is not the time for yoga.
LIBBY: No, that's the word in Hebrew for day.
Like Yom Kippur?
It could mean anything, from a
24-hour day to an entire era.
KAI: Oh, right, so, when the Bible says
God created the Earth in six days,
it could mean a series of epochs.
LIBBY: What's most important is
how Genesis shows us God's
relationship with creation
and ultimately, with humanity.
KAI: Science is the
observation of the physical world.
LIBBY: So it can't definitively say
that God had no hand in creation.
KAI: And it can't tell us why
anything happens, either.
LIBBY: Or whether it should.
KAI: Catholics say that observation
reveals to us who God is and how he works.
Speaking of dinosaurs --
LIBBY: Who's speaking of dinosaurs?
KAI: Well, now that you mention it,
yesterday I discovered a team
that's actually researching
how to bring back woolly mammoths.
LIBBY: Wait, really?
KAI: Yeah, I'm going to do a Kickstarter
to open a theme park and
call it Mammoth Land.
Think of "Jurassic Park," only
friendlier and with more fur,
and with smoothies and musical numbers.
It's the magic of science!
LIBBY: Science is not magic, and you know
what happened in "Jurassic Park."
KAI: Come on, they're way less likely
to eat people than dinosaurs are.
LIBBY: My point is that you need to consider
where breakthroughs fall in
the natural order of things.
So Genesis --
KAI: Which, how accurate can it be
if it doesn't even mention dinosaurs once?
I mean, including a picture
would be pretty cool.
LIBBY: You're proving my point.
Genesis is not meant to
be a science textbook.
There's a lot of stuff
in the physical world
that's not mentioned in
it, but there are truths
about our relationship with God.
KAI: Pope quote!
As Pope Benedict said when he
was still Cardinal Ratzinger,
"The Biblical story of the
dust of the earth and the
breath of God does not, in
fact, explain how human persons
come to be, but rather,
it tells us what they are."
And when in Genesis, God
declares everything to be good,
we know that the universe
wasn't an accident or a mistake,
but something beautiful and intentional.
LIBBY: And made out of love,
including the human species,
which stars in the story of Adam and Eve
and their bad life choices.
KAI: Even though they
messed up, they were created
in the image of God, with
freedom, intelligence,
creativity, the ability to
consciously choose love,
and to choose truth, beauty, and goodness.
LIBBY: Or choose to be
defiant, selfish, and defensive,
a proud tradition humans
continue to uphold today.
KAI: Which is kind of awesome.
LIBBY: Wait, you like when people
are defiant, selfish, and defensive?
KAI: No, no, no, what I mean
is, because even though
Adam and Eve abuse what God gives them,
they do it with their free will,
which sets the stage for what
Jesus needed to save us from.
LIBBY: The creation story in the
Bible makes the most sense
as a framework to the
supernatural love and peace
that Christ comes to offer the world.
KAI: Science and religion go together
because the God who
created evolution as part
of the natural order is the same God
who inspired the writing of Genesis.
God is the god of scientific truth
and the god of sacred truth.
These truths complement each
other and don't contradict.
God is God of all.
LIBBY: And God keeps both scientists
and theologians busy.
He's always active in showing us
His creative love from
the galaxies and stars,
down to the daily lives
of every one of us.
KAI: The process of creation has never ended.
Ever since the Big Bang,
God hasn't stopped shaping the universe.
LIBBY: We can see God at work
every day, if we look for him.
He gives us a world of wonder and the gift
of nature to admire. And like
Adam and Eve with the garden,
it's up to us to protect the Earth.
KAI: Or destroy it.
LIBBY: On that note, let's use our
free will to end this episode.
I'm Libby.
KAI: And I'm Kai. This is Catholic
Central. Until next time --
NEWCASTER KAI: You stay classy, Catholic Central.
(cheerful music)
