Vatican Rewrites History On Galileo

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First Posted: 12-23-08 07:38 PM   |   Updated: 01-23-09 05:12 AM

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Galileo Galilei is going from heretic to hero.

The Vatican is recasting the most famous victim of its Inquisition as a man of faith, just in time for the 400th anniversary of Galileo's telescope and the U.N.-designated International Year of Astronomy next year.

Pope Benedict XVI paid tribute to the Italian astronomer and physicist Sunday, saying he and other scientists had helped the faithful better understand and "contemplate with gratitude the Lord's works."

In May, several Vatican officials will participate in an international conference to re-examine the Galileo affair, and top Vatican officials are now saying Galileo should be named the "patron" of the dialogue between faith and reason.

It's quite a reversal of fortune for Galileo Galilei (1564-1642), who made the first complete astronomical telescope and used it to gather evidence that the Earth revolved around the sun. Church teaching at the time placed Earth at the center of the universe.

The church denounced Galileo's theory as dangerous to the faith, but Galileo defied its warnings. Tried as a heretic in 1633 and forced to recant, he was sentenced to life imprisonment, later changed to house arrest.

The Church has for years been striving to shed its reputation for being hostile to science, in part by producing top-notch research out of its own telescope.

In 1992, Pope John Paul II declared that the ruling against Galileo was an error resulting from "tragic mutual incomprehension."

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But that apparently wasn't enough. In January, Benedict canceled a speech at Rome's La Sapienza University after a group of professors, citing the Galileo episode and depicting Benedict as a religious figure opposed to science, argued that he shouldn't speak at a public university.

The Galileo anniversary appears to be giving the Vatican new impetus to put the matter to rest. In doing so, Vatican officials are stressing Galileo's faith as well as his science, to show the two are not mutually exclusive.

At a Vatican conference last month entitled "Science 400 Years after Galileo Galilei," the Vatican No. 2, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, said Galileo was an astronomer, but one who "lovingly cultivated his faith and his profound religious conviction."

"Galileo Galilei was a man of faith who saw nature as a book authored by God," Bertone said.

The head of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Culture, which co-sponsored the conference, went further. Archbishop Gianfranco Ravasi told Vatican Radio that Galileo "could become for some the ideal patron for a dialogue between science and faith."

He said Galileo's writings offered a "path" to explore how faith and reason were not incompatible.

The Rev. John Padberg, a church historian and the director of the Institute of Jesuit Sources at St. Louis University, said he suspected the Vatican's new emphasis on Galileo's faith came from the pope himself.

"Pope Benedict XVI is ardently convinced of the congruence of faith and reason, and he is concerned, especially in the present circumstances, of giving reason its due place in the whole scheme of things," he said.

While it is widely accepted that Galileo was a convinced Catholic, Padberg questioned whether he could ever be accepted as some kind of a poster child for the faith and reason debate. "That's going to be a long shot for an awful lot of people, on both sides, by the way," he said.

Benedict, a theologian, has made exploring the faith-reason relationship a key aspect of his papacy, and has directed his daily newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, in particular, to take up the charge.

On Monday, the newspaper published a piece on the possibility of alien life on other planets as well as one on the popes who were "friendly" to astronomy.

Benedict clearly is: In his Sunday blessing, he noted that the Vatican itself has its own meridian -- an obelisk in St. Peter's Square -- and that astronomy had long been used to signal prayer times for the faithful.

But the Vatican's embrace of Galileo only goes so far.

There were plans earlier this year to give Galileo a permanent place of honor in the Vatican to mark the anniversary of his telescope: a statue, to be located inside the Vatican gardens, donated by the Italian aerospace giant Finmeccanica SpA.

The plans were suspended after some Vatican officials voiced "problems" with the initiative, said Nicola Cabibbo, the president of the Pontifical Council for Science. He declined to elaborate.

Finmeccanica spokesman Roberto Alatri said the Galileo statue was just an idea that never got off the ground.

Italian news reports suggested the Vatican simply didn't want to draw so much permanent attention to the Galileo episode, which 400 years on, still rankles some.

"The dramatic clash between Galileo and some men of the Church left wounds that are still open today," the Vatican's chief astronomer, the Rev. Jose Funes, wrote recently in Osservatore. "The Church in some ways has recognized its errors.

"Maybe it could do better. One can always do better," he wrote.

Galileo Galilei is going from heretic to hero. The Vatican is recasting the most famous victim of its Inquisition as a man of faith, just in time for the 400th anniversary of Galileo's telescope and ...
Galileo Galilei is going from heretic to hero. The Vatican is recasting the most famous victim of its Inquisition as a man of faith, just in time for the 400th anniversary of Galileo's telescope and ...
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- Heru1 I'm a Fan of Heru1 24 fans permalink
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Wow it only took almost 400 years for the Catholic Church to recognize that the Earth revolves around the Sun! Next up? Paying reparations for their role in the destruction of Black race?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 AM on 12/24/2008
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What's next?

The Flintstones was not a documentary?

Oh the humanity!.­.. a certain governor's world is about to crash down... LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 12/24/2008
- Earl I'm a Fan of Earl 90 fans permalink
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Of course, Darwin is still a heretic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 AM on 12/24/2008
- spartanmom I'm a Fan of spartanmom 13 fans permalink

And you say that based on what?

I went to Catholic schools for 11 years (1962-1974) and guess what? We learned about evolution. Darwin was never considered a heretic by the Catholic Church (except, of course that all Protestants are inherently heretics).

Here are the facts:
According to Archbishop Gianfranco Ravasi, the Vatican's culture minister Darwin's theories were "never condemned by the Catholic Church nor was his book ever banned".

http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSLG62672220080916

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 12/24/2008
- mathme I'm a Fan of mathme 29 fans permalink
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The catholic church, from what I understand, has said that evolution and Christianity are not mutually exclusive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 AM on 12/24/2008
- Zofomofo I'm a Fan of Zofomofo 44 fans permalink
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Yeah, weird. The last Pope said it. Not that you would notice by their behavior.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 PM on 12/24/2008
- wak84 I'm a Fan of wak84 2 fans permalink

Perhaps they are finally understanding that the Vatican is losing its relevance in a modern world. They are desperately trying to hold on to it. A last gasp of of death.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 AM on 12/24/2008

Either death or transformation, the religions organized around misleading pretenses have stifled many people like Galileo. It's time for them to re-adjust or loose their hold on the masses (double en tender proposed).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 12/24/2008
- jodieez I'm a Fan of jodieez 2 fans permalink

"Galileo Galilei was a man of faith who saw nature as a book authored by God"

This says it all about religion vs science. I am sure that Galileo said to himself, Wow, I just discovered that the earth revolves around the sun. O my god am I in trouble!! I might get life in prison for this heretic behavior.

When are we going to grow up and realize that religion and there imaginary friend they call god, is the real illusion that needs to be called rejected. They not only were wrong about the way the universe works, they have been wrong about so many things, and yet we let them dictate the way we live and discover the mysteries of life.

They constantly try blocking stem cell research and other forms of science they deem unacceptable for humans to examine.

Now they are trying to back peddle some 400 hundred years to say that there is a marriage between religion and science. DON'T BELIVE IT!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 AM on 12/24/2008
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This is a religion we are talking about. It seeks to control how God is worshiped. It wrongly also attempted to dictate physical facts due to its ignorance of science. The admission of the fact that the Catholic Church can be wrong when it comes to science is long overdue being that this church has had so much control over western civilization for so long - though diminished in recent times.

I never agreed with Catholicism, however, I do believe in God. It never made sense to me to be able to sin at your leisure then say a few "hail Mary's" and then keep right on sinning.

I also would not be involved with a Church that would attempt to dictate the facts of science to me - such as these hard core creationists do. Evolution is a fact of the physical world, however, it also does not rule out that at some point God has intervened and is intervening daily in people's lives.

I do agree with the statement that nature is a book authored by God. It makes the wonderment of discoveries and theories and the physical world even more fascinating.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 AM on 12/24/2008
- Marlyn I'm a Fan of Marlyn 79 fans permalink
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"The admission of the fact that the Catholic Church can be wrong when it comes to science is long overdue."

Yes, but they will NEVER give up on the idea of miracles , like Jesus walked on water, ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 12/25/2008

I hope the Vatican goes bankrupt and collapses. They are the biggest schemers in the world. Come on, they already "got rid" of purgatory, now they change their minds and accept Gallileo after how many years? Religion is the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 12/24/2008
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I'm afraid they never will.

Remember a certain PT Barnum? One born every minute, and they go to church.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 12/24/2008
- lobo1939 I'm a Fan of lobo1939 7 fans permalink
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Adding to the number of scientests brutalized by the CC, in this last century the Jesuit, Fr Teilhard De Chardin was hounded by his superiors in his order and the Vatican because of his views on evolution and his efforts to reconcile his determined belief in the CC with science. After they had "banished" him to an outpost in China, he got even sort of, my being on the team that discovered the Peking Man. But the church has yet to release hardly any information on its correspondence with this brilliant scientist. That church is a front for a corrupt political machine.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 AM on 12/24/2008
- helonias I'm a Fan of helonias 231 fans permalink
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I would be more impressed with the pope and his minions if they didn't dress like the high pagan priests of ancient Rome

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 AM on 12/24/2008
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rofl

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 12/24/2008

"I would be more impressed with the pope and his minions if they didn't dress like the high pagan priests of ancient Rome"

In Prada shoes, no less!!! Just like the Christ himself, who wore Prada sandals... oh, wait, Prada didn't exist then! He was stuck with patronizing local sandal makers, helping the local economy of the times...

What I don't have to strive to remember is that every pope since Peter has striven to out-God God himself, giving himself the airs that Jesus refused to do. We are to follow His teachings in all things, except in that pesky thing, simple living.

Happy holidays to all, from Hippy Nana

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 12/24/2008
- helonias I'm a Fan of helonias 231 fans permalink
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But not a peep about Bruno

This idea about the universe did not sit well with the Catholic Church. They lured Giordano Bruno to Rome with the promise of a job, where he was immediately turned over to the Inquisition and charged with heresy.
Giordano Bruno spent the next eight years in chains in the Castel Sant’Angelo, where he was routinely tortured and interrogated until his trial. Despite this, he remained unrepentant, stating to his Catholic Church judge, Jesuit Cardinal Robert Bellarmine, "I neither ought to recant, nor will I." Even a death sentence handed down by the Catholic Church did not change his attitude as he defiantly told his accusers, "In pronouncing my sentence, your fear is greater than mine in hearing it."
Immediately after the death sentence was handed down, Giordano Bruno’s jaw was clamped shut with an iron gag, his tongue was pierced with an iron spike and another iron spike was driven into his palate. On February 19, 1600, he was driven through the streets of Rome, stripped of his clothes and burned at the stake.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 AM on 12/24/2008
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Thank you for bringing this up.

Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) was a predecessor of Galileo and an earlier proponent of helio-centricism. He broke ground for Galileo but was not as fortunate to have the political connections of Galileo Galilei. He paid for it by being publicly repudiated, (falsely) jailed, tortured, and then burned alive, by the Catholic church, all for the desire by the church officials maintain a bulwark against a truth, now seen to be so obvious as to be understood by every school child.

Which parts of the status-quo are today being threatened by truth-glea­ned-of-obs­ervation, for which current truth seers (scientists, amongst others) are being marginalized, threatened and repudiated, if not worse, and which will also someday be seen as commonly accepted fact?

Condemn with care, Church! And religion mongers!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 12/24/2008

"Galileo Galilei (1564-1642), who made the first complete astronomical telescope and used it to gather evidence that the Earth revolved around the sun. Church teaching at the time placed Earth at the center of the universe."

Not quite: It was Galileo's observations and report of Jupiter's four great moons, Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto revolving around Jupiter, itself, and not the Earth that lead to his contretemps with the Church. Faced with an invitation to view the evidence for themselves, some Cardinals adamantly refused to look through Galileo's then new, improved implimentation of Johann Lippershey's "optical tube" to verify that, indeed, not everything in the Heavens revolved around the Earth. While Galileo did favor the Copernican theory that the Earth revolved around the Sun, this isn't why he was charged with apostasy. Instead, his crime was to caste doubt on Aristotelian astronomy with its then ever-increasing cycles and epicycles as a rationale for movement in the Heavens.

Parenthetically, I must say that, indeed, plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose. Witness the ever-increasing complexity of modern theories of Physics, where each failure of theory is answered by announcements of new particles/processes discovered -- not in reality, but because, if they don't exist, the theory fails, and too much has been invested in tenure, research, money and reputations for that to happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 12/24/2008
- isis I'm a Fan of isis 17 fans permalink
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One of the biggest differences between science and religion is that science strives for accuracy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:26 AM on 12/24/2008
- Ouroboros I'm a Fan of Ouroboros 5 fans permalink

This is an outrage. Everyone knows the Earth is flat and 6000 years old, four-sided, resting upon four great stone pillars which stretch down to infinity, covered by a great metal firmament with windows which open to let rain in, created in seven days, as the center of everything. And man was created directly from dust by God, who was born in a barn 4000 years later.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 AM on 12/24/2008

Hmm. What's wrong with you? You seem to have left out the fact that the whole edifice rests on the back of an elephant -- and, "it's elephants all the way down."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 AM on 12/24/2008
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Mutual incomprehension.

What a laugh. It was ONLY the church refusing to enter the next century. As they continue to do to this very day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 AM on 12/24/2008
- huffnpuffn I'm a Fan of huffnpuffn 8 fans permalink

Where is the history being rewritten? Reexamined maybe.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 AM on 12/24/2008
- scottowego I'm a Fan of scottowego 33 fans permalink
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It only took, what, 400 years for them to wake up? Yikes. No wonder I hate organized religions. In there heart of hearts they haven't changed at all. It's all PR. They'd still love to rule the world including the world of Science, the Scientific Method and Reason.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 AM on 12/24/2008

At that rate evolution should be accepted in another 250 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 AM on 12/24/2008
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This new pope is a nasty little man with a fetish for rare and expensive pope shoes. From his beady eyes and finger-pointing intellect, he seems divisive, cold and entirely dangerous to both reason and faith. I like nothing about him and cannot agree with a single word that has come from his tight, breathless lips. He is a working symbol of the corporation and landlord known as the Holy Roman Church. I am gratified when I hear that universities resist having him speak in their presence. He is calculating, narrow, and so far has done nothing to help this tense and dangerous world understand or reach out to the peace and hope which a faith in God should imply. Step by step he is a dangerous and threatening presence, hoisted by his own ego, and not by devotion to any duty to be a leader representing anyone but his little private club. A nasty, ugly little man, in my view.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 AM on 12/24/2008
- prostock69 I'm a Fan of prostock69 24 fans permalink

Agreed! Well said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:29 AM on 12/24/2008

What bothers me about the Pope, or any Pope, for that matter is the fact that a lot of people actually think this piece of sh*t,that's right, I said sh*t,is not only HOLY, but he really has on going talks with God !These folks are as f*cked up as his Holiness!JESUS CHRIST, what a bunch of BULLSH*T!!! P.S. Sorry God, but I call'em like I see'em!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 AM on 12/24/2008
- Marlyn I'm a Fan of Marlyn 79 fans permalink
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"has on going talks with God"

This is a major misconception held by most Christians. Reality is that they are talking to themselves.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 PM on 12/25/2008
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