- Feb 17, 2005
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I have two very simple questions.
1. Why is it that, if geocentrism is not a doctrinal matter, it is treated as one by ancient and modern geocentrists alike?
The Catholic decision on geocentrism in 1616 was this: that the proposition that the sun is immobile in the firmament was "formally heretical", and that the proposition that the earth moved in the firmament was at least "erroneous in faith". (Or possibly the other way around.) Both terms in quotes are technical terms used by those convened to deliver theological judgments about theological matters.
Nothing has changed almost 400 years later. The Association of Biblical Astronomy's statement of faith states that:
"The Biblical Astronomer was originally founded in 1971 as the Tychonian Society, on the premise that the only absolutely trustworthy information about the origin and purpose of all that exists and happens is given by God, our Creator and Redeemer, in his infallible, preserved word, the Holy Bible. All scientific endeavor which does not accept this revelation from on high without any reservations, literary, philosophical or whatever, we reject as already condemned in its unfounded first assumptions.
... the reason why we deem a return to a geocentric astronomy a first apologetic necessity is that its rejection at the beginning of our Modern Age constitutes one very important, if not the most important, cause of the historical development of Bible criticism, now resulting in an increasingly anti-Christian world in which atheistic existentialism is preaching a life that is really meaningless."
The logical next question is:
2. Is it not possible that similarly, the creationists treat creationism (not creation) as a doctrinal matter, even though it is not one?
1. Why is it that, if geocentrism is not a doctrinal matter, it is treated as one by ancient and modern geocentrists alike?
The Catholic decision on geocentrism in 1616 was this: that the proposition that the sun is immobile in the firmament was "formally heretical", and that the proposition that the earth moved in the firmament was at least "erroneous in faith". (Or possibly the other way around.) Both terms in quotes are technical terms used by those convened to deliver theological judgments about theological matters.
Nothing has changed almost 400 years later. The Association of Biblical Astronomy's statement of faith states that:
"The Biblical Astronomer was originally founded in 1971 as the Tychonian Society, on the premise that the only absolutely trustworthy information about the origin and purpose of all that exists and happens is given by God, our Creator and Redeemer, in his infallible, preserved word, the Holy Bible. All scientific endeavor which does not accept this revelation from on high without any reservations, literary, philosophical or whatever, we reject as already condemned in its unfounded first assumptions.
... the reason why we deem a return to a geocentric astronomy a first apologetic necessity is that its rejection at the beginning of our Modern Age constitutes one very important, if not the most important, cause of the historical development of Bible criticism, now resulting in an increasingly anti-Christian world in which atheistic existentialism is preaching a life that is really meaningless."
The logical next question is:
2. Is it not possible that similarly, the creationists treat creationism (not creation) as a doctrinal matter, even though it is not one?