There's more, about the diversity of beings and the relationships between them producing order and harmony. All of which we can observe, discovering them as the laws of nature. The paragraph ends with:
"...The beauty of creation reflects the infinite beauty of the Creator and ought to inspire the respect and submission of man's intellect and will."That phrase, "ought to inspire," jumped out at me.
(Catechism, 341)
In some circles, acknowledging God's place as creator is unfashionable. And has been for generations. Other folks don't have a problem with the idea that God created the universe: but they don't seem to approve of the Almighty's decision to make creation so big and old.
Respect, Submission, and Beauty
When it comes to respect and submission? I suspect that's not so easy to accept. But that's guesswork on my part. Romans 2:1-11, and I've been over that before.Then there was the fad for bug-ugly 'art.' I suspect that was tied in with an odd notion that G. K. Chesterton mentioned:
"By a curious confusion, many modern critics have passed from the proposition that a masterpiece may be unpopular to the other proposition that unless it is unpopular it cannot be a masterpiece."I'm getting off-topic. Anyway, I've been over this before:
("On Detective Novels," Generally Speaking: a Book of Essays, London: Methuen (1928) via "Quotations of G. K. Chesterton," The American Chesterton Society)
(and see National Library of Australia Catalog)
- "Art, Catholic Teachings, and This Catholic"
(August 9, 2010)
Particularly
"... From the Same God ..."
Before getting into the next paragraph, here's a realty check from earlier in the Catechism:"...the things of the worldSome folks don't want to believe that God exists. I don't think that's a good idea: and that's another topic. For dedicated secularists, the scale of creation doesn't seem to be a problem.
and the things of faith
derive from the same God...."
(Catechism of the Catholic Church, 159)
Then there are folks who acknowledge the existence of God: but don't seem to approve of the size of God's creation. Over the last century, it's gotten increasingly difficult to ignore data about this incredible universe.
One of the more ingenious work-arounds I've run into for staying true to the world of Ussher is the notion that God created the world a few thousand years back - and planted false clues, to make wicked scientists go to Hell.
As the premise for a fantasy story, that sort of malicious trickster might make an intriguing character. As something to take seriously? I pass. I really don't think it's likely that God planted intellectual booby traps.
Hierarchy, Creatures, and God
"The hierarchy of creatures is expressed by the order of the 'six days,' from the less perfect to the more perfect...."There's a lesson here, but it's not about paleontology. And that's another topic:
(Catechism, 342)
- "When to Call Tech Support, When to Read the Bible"
(January 14, 2011)
The Bible and Me
Do I 'believe in the Bible?' Yes. I'm a practicing Catholic. I have to accept Sacred Scripture. Reading the Bible is high priority, too:"The Church 'forcefully and specifically exhorts all the Christian faithful . . . to learn "the surpassing knowledge of Jesus Christ," by frequent reading of the divine Scriptures. "Ignorance of the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ." ' "Gung-ho secularists and others notwithstanding, the Catholic Church doesn't encourage ignorance.
(Catechism of the Catholic Church, 133)
(from January 27, 2009)
"Six Days," Metaphor, and Culture
The Bible wasn't written by an American. I think we're one of the more metaphor-free cultures that's been around. Show an American "six," and we're likely to assume that it's the integer between five and seven. And nothing more.Here's a footnote to the first chapter of Genesis:
"In ancient Israel a day was considered to begin at sunset. According to the highly artificial literary structure of ⇒ Genesis 1:1-⇒ 2:4a, God's creative activity is divided into six days to teach the sacredness of the sabbath rest on the seventh day in the Israelite religion (⇒ Genesis 2:2-3)."Moving on.
(footnote 3, Genesis 1) [emphasis mine]
How We Fit In
"...God loves all his creatures209 and takes care of each one, even the sparrow. Nevertheless, Jesus said: 'You are of more value than many sparrows,' or again: 'Of how much more value is a man than a sheep!'210"From there, the Catechism gets into humanity's position in creation. Basically, we're a special case: at the top, which doesn't mean that God told us to go forth and strip-mine the world.
(Catechism, 342)
And that's yet another topic, for another post.
Related posts:
- The universe
- "Beauty, Science, and a Crazy Idea"
(March 14, 2012) - "The Visible World"
(March 7, 2012) - "Gnosticism: Dissing God's Creation"
(March 5, 2012) - " 'Visible and Invisible' "
(February 8, 2012) - " 'In a State of Journeying' "
(January 18, 2012)
- "Beauty, Science, and a Crazy Idea"
- Humanity
- "Humans are Animals: But Not Just Animals"
(August 31, 2011) - "God, Genesis, the Catholic Church, and Getting a Grip"
(June 22, 2011) - "Climate Changes: So What Else is New?"
(May 16, 2011) - "Environmental Awareness, Enlightened Self-Interest, and My Catholic Faith"
(April 15, 2011) - "Animals: Yeah, the Catholic Church has Rules About Them, Too"
(August 17, 2009)
- "Humans are Animals: But Not Just Animals"
2 comments:
Missing period: "God planted intellectual booby traps"
The Friendly Neighborhood Proofreader
Brigid,
Oops, fixed, and thanks!
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