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To: betty boop; joesbucks
BTW, if you ever track down the source for your paraphrase at the top, I’d like to know it.

I haven't tracked it down, but it's not a new sentiment:

As you are aware, the Council of Trent forbids the interpretation of the Scriptures in a way contrary to the common opinion of the holy Fathers. Now if your Reverence will read, not merely the Fathers, but modern commentators on Genesis, the Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and Joshua, you will discover that all agree in interpreting them literally as teaching that the Sun is in the heavens and revolves round the Earth with immense speed and that the Earth is very distant from the heavens, at the center of the universe, and motionless. Consider, then in your prudence, whether the Church can tolerate that the Scriptures should be interpreted in a manner contrary to that of the holy Fathers and of all modern commentators, both Latin and Greek.
-- Cardinal Bellarmine to Foscarini (April 12, 1615)
Source: The Trial of Galileo: Selected Letters.
976 posted on 01/06/2006 11:59:11 AM PST by PatrickHenry (Virtual Ignore for trolls, lunatics, dotards, scolds, & incurable ignoramuses.)
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To: PatrickHenry; joesbucks; Alamo-Girl; marron; hosepipe; Coyoteman; Fester Chugabrew; ...
Thank you so much, Patrick, for the cite from Cardinal Bellarmine to Foscarini. However, I think a little "context" is in order.

Bellarmine was a brilliant intellectual and a patron of Galileo, who was interested in his work and encouraged it. I seem to remember he had died by the time the Galileo affair achieved critical mass. But that's not to say that he would have been in a position to come to Galileo's defense, were he then living. The Roman Church is not a democracy: the Pope -- who stands in the place of Christ on earth -- is sole authority. The College of Cardinals may propose, but only the Pope may "dispose."

Plus you neglect to discuss the historical context of l'affaire Galileo: This was during a time when the Roman Church was asserting its authority against the encroachments of Reformed Christianity, the great achievement of Luther and Calvin. Interestingly enough, the Reformed Church has strong democratic elements. But I digress.

Bottom line, the Galileo trial was, at least in part, a political exercise, and not so much a resolution of an intellectual dispute. It seems that Galileo was (unfortunately) a pawn used in the Church's counter-reformation strategy.

You must remember that religion and church institutions are not the same thing, and ought not to be conflated. All church institutions are human institutions, and are thus prone to error. There have been some exacrable popes. There have been charlatans in many religious confessions. But then there have been magnificent, faithful popes, such as the late John-Paul II, who have suffered genuinely to take up Christ's Cross for the good of their fellow members in the Body of Christ.

As my dear friend hosepipe has said, Christ did not come to establish a religion; He came to establish a family under God.

It remains to be said that the American Founding was specifically Calvinist in philosophy, not Catholic. Indeed, Catholics in America were held in deep suspicion, right up to quite recent times. Indeed, JFK's Catholicism was a burning issue in the Presidential Campaign of 1960. Many Americans of Reformed persuasion felt that he could not be trusted as president, because of his supposed primary allegience to the Pope (who is the sovereign of a sovereign nation, the Vatican). But he squeaked out an election victory all the same (thanks to voter fraud in Chicago and Texas :^) ); and anti-Catholic sentiment began to die down from that time forward.

The last thing I'd like to point out is one doesn't have to be Catholic to be a faithful Christian. Or even "churched," necessarily.

FWIW. Thanks ever so much for writing, Patrick!

995 posted on 01/06/2006 3:30:20 PM PST by betty boop (Dominus illuminatio mea.)
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