Philip Pullella, "Pope says science no threat to faith" (2006)
"Yahoo! News" Fri Feb 10, 1:36 PM ET; http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060210/sc_nm/religion_pope_science_dc
Pope says science no threat to faith
By Philip PullellaFri Feb 10, 1:36 PM ET
First lady Laura Bush talks to Pope Benedict XVI at the conclusion of a meeting in the Papal Library at the Vatican, February 9, 2006. (Jim Bourg/Reuters)
Science made such rapid progress in the 20th century that people may sometimes be confused about how the Christian faith can still be compatible with it, Pope Benedict said on Friday.
But science and religion are not opposed to each other and Christians should not be afraid to try to understand how they compliment each other in explaining the mystery of life on Earth, he told the Vatican's doctrinal department.
The Pope made his comments at a time of heated debate, mostly in the United States, about intelligent design arguments challenging evolution. A Pennsylvania court ruled in December that intelligent design could not be taught as science in school.
"The Church joyfully accepts the real conquests of human knowledge and recognizes that spreading the Gospel also means really taking charge of the prospects and the challenges that modern knowledge unlocks," he said.
The dialogue between religion and science would actually help the faithful see "the logic of faith in God," said the Pope, speaking to members of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
He headed this Vatican department for nearly 25 years until his election last April.
Scientific discoveries sometimes came so rapidly "that it becomes very complicated to recognize how they are compatible with the truth revealed by God about man and the world," said the German-born Pontiff, 78.
The Church, however, should not fear the challenge of reconciling faith and reason because God was "in fact, the Lord of all creation and all history."
The intelligent design debate in the United States has pitted scientists -- who are sometimes also agnostics -- against believers who claim that science can prove some life forms are so complex that they must have had a supernatural "designer."
ID supporters have been trying to get it taught as science in biology classes alongside Darwin's theory of evolution, which some Christian conservatives oppose. Its opponents rejected this as having no scientific basis at all.
(Additional reporting by Tom Heneghan in Paris)