Posted on 02/23/2019 4:49:34 PM PST by pcottraux
-Manschreck, Clyde. A History of Christianity in the World. Second Edition. Prentice-Hall, Englewood, NJ, 1985, pages 133, 205.
-Strobel, Lee. The Case for a Creator. Zondervan, Grand Rapids, MI, 2006, pages 162-163.
-Collins, Francis. The Language of God. Free Press, New York, NY, 2006, pages 153-156.
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Whenever I post a blog on scientific history, some smart-aleck always corrects me on one little detail I got wrong. Oh well...this week I'm prepared for it!
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I understood that he was a poor boy from a poor family.
This should probably be in Religion. But thank God you’re here to explain to all of us how wrong history is.
“In 1633, Galileo was tried before the Roman Inquisition. He was ordered to abjure, curse, and detest his lifes work. His publications were banned and he was placed under house arrest. While this is certainly unfortunate”
Unfortunate? Baloney.. The idea of a church, conducting a trail and placing him under house arrest is what people are generally disgusted by.
There are all kinds of games to evade responsibility, but yes, the Church was despotic at that time. Bur it was hundreds of years ago, so it is the worst kind of apologetics to “unpack” it and pretend that it really wasn’t that bad.
If Galileo would have had a Glock, he would have been fully justified in producing it and shooting his way out of the room.
Don’t start doing the Fandango, for pity’s sake.
Mama mia, Mama mia...
Huzzah!
Oh mama mia, mama mia, mama mia let me go
Beelzebub has a devil put aside for me for me for me
Galileo was a brilliant man. He would never have cheapened a discussion by using "unpack" in a rhetorical context.
Galileo was a back-stabbing asshole who got what he deserved.
If he'd been ordered to "unpack" his life's work, he'd have been justified in nuking the place.
Some Smart Aleck,
Spelling Cop or
Punctuation Police.
.
Ya done good,FRiend!
OK. I put your quote in DuckDuckGo. It brought me to FreeRepublic.
There is no biblical or Christ based defense of what they did to him ***400 years ago!*** Better that they should just own it and emphatically say today’s Roman church wouldn’t do that. I see no need to apologize, though JPII already basically did. Galileo is long gone, and so are the thugs who tried him.
Then I would point out Georges Lemaitre, a Belgian Priest who was responsible for the big bang theory. I would direct further inquiries to the Vatican observatory in Arizona.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vatican_Advanced_Technology_Telescope
The modern Roman church’s actual activity regarding science today is the best apology Galileo would have ever asked for. That mean’s far more than some farcical apology. I’d bet a paycheck on it.
No one tried to claim that Gallileo was an atheist when I was in school. As a matter of fact, I’ve never heard anyone try to characterize him as such, much less that he is some icon for atheism. Sounds like a straw man.
Aw geez! I totally missed the reference until I saw the replies, LOL!!
Ashes can't recant.
He died of natural causes. He wasn’t burned at the stake.
The biblical roots of Galileo's name and surname were to become the subject of a famous pun.[27] In 1614, during the Galileo affair, one of Galileo's opponents, the Dominican priest Tommaso Caccini, delivered against Galileo a controversial and influential sermon. In it he made a point of quoting Acts 1:11, "Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven?". Wiki
Galilee is "galil", the Hebrew word for a cylinder. The root is all about revelation (unrolling) and rolling, circular motion and so forth.
Galileo was famous for his cylinder:
Galileo noted that the revolution of the satellites of Jupiter, the phases of Venus, rotation of the Sun and the tilted path its spots followed for part of the year pointed to the validity of the sun-centered Copernican system over other Earth-centered systems such as the one proposed by Ptolemy. Galileo's instrument was the first to be given the name "telescope". Wiki
Galileo was born in Pisa, the town whose symbol is the leaning cylinder.
Divine order of the universe:
"How if I just leave this here."
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