The Magisterium Rules: The Debate is Over

It’s over.  It has been over for a very long time.  But, like a gathering of die hards who think Appomattox was just a temporary set-back for the South, this crop of geocentrists operate in a kind of time warp.

In 1820, the Catholic Church officially closed the debate: Catholics are perfectly free to accept and teach modern cosmological views concerning the motion of the earth while rejecting geocentrism. In 1822, the Church went even further and declared penalties for not allowing the publication of books that present the motion of the earth as a logical conclusion of science.

His Holiness has decreed that no obstacles exist for those who sustain Copernicus’ affirmation regarding the earth’s movement in the manner in which it is affirmed today, even by Catholic authors. (1820)

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There must be no denial, by the present or by future Masters of the Sacred Apostolic Palace, of permission to print and to publish works which treat of the mobility of the earth and of the immobility of the sun, according to the common opinion of modern astronomers…those who would show themselves to be reluctant or would disobey, should be forced under punishments at the choice of [this] Sacred Congregation, with derogation of [their] claimed privileges, where necessary. (1822)

As I argued in detail in Geocentrism and Strict Canonical Interpretation, the 1616 decree of the Congregation of the Index and the 1633 decree of the Holy Office against Galileo addressed a strict heliocentrism, which posited a motionless sun at the center of the universe and a mobile earth.  Such a strict heliocentrism was deemed to be “absurd and false in [natural] philosophy” (i.e. in science) and also “contrary to Scripture”.

What became apparent not so many decades after the time of Galileo, is that additional astronomical evidence answered questions and filled in gaps in evidence such that more modern astronomical views could no longer be said to be “absurd and false”.  Even the new geocentrists have to admit this—for example, even though they hold that the earth is not moving, they do not consider the motion of the earth to be “absurd and false in philosophy”.  It is also universally true now that modern cosmological views do not posit a motionless sun at the very center of the universe, but hold instead to the motion of both earth and sun.

Since the Catholic Church has held from time immemorial that canonical penalties (which the 1616 and 1633 decrees clearly are) must be interpreted strictly, that is, as narrowly and as affecting as few people as possible, the case was there to be made that more modern views do not fall under the 1633 decree at all.  Ultimately, given the authority structure in the Catholic Church, this is a question that could only be answered definitively by the Magisterium, the official teaching office of the Church.  And so it was.

In the early 1800s a Catholic astronomer, Canon Giuseppe Settele wrote a book presenting a non-geocentric view—and specifically the motion of the earth on its axis and around the sun—as a clear and logical conclusion from the scientific evidence.  Fr. Filippo Anfossi, the Master of the Sacred Palace and hence chief censor for Rome at the time, denied this book an imprimatur on the ground that such a view violates the 1633 decree against Galileo.  When Canon Settele appealed directly to Pope Pius VII, the question was examined by the Holy Office (the same church body that issued the decree against Galileo), and as result the question of whether it is permitted for Catholics to believe in the mobility of the earth was answered officially in two decrees.  Here is the first:

Decree

[Rome], 1820 VIII 16

Vol. I, fol. 174v (Bruni, scribe)

The Assessor of the Holy Office has referred the request of Giuseppe Settele, Professor of Optics and Astronomy at La Sapienza University, regarding permission to publish his work Elements of Astronomy in which he espouses the common opinion of the astronomers of our time regarding the earth’s daily and yearly motions, to His Holiness through Divine Providence, Pope Pius VII. Previously, His Holiness had referred this request to the Supreme Sacred Congregation and concurrently to the consideration of the Most Eminent and Most Reverend General Cardinal Inquisitor. His Holiness has decreed that no obstacles exist for those who sustain Copernicus’ affirmation regarding the earth’s movement in the manner in which it is affirmed today, even by Catholic authors. He has, moreover, suggested the insertion of several notations into this work, aimed at demonstrating that the above mentioned affirmation [of Copernicus], as it has come to be understood, does not present any difficulties; difficulties that existed in times past, prior to the subsequent astronomical observations that have now occurred. [Pope Pius VII] has also recommended that the implementation [of these decisions] be given to the Cardinal Secretary of the Supreme Sacred Congregation and Master of the Sacred Apostolic Palace. He is now appointed the task of bringing to an end any concerns and criticisms regarding the printing of this book, and, at the same time, ensuring that in the future, regarding the publication of such works, permission is sought from the Cardinal Vicar whose signature will not be given without the authorization of the Superior of his Order. [1]

It’s hard to overstate the importance of this decree.  Unlike the 1633 decree against Galileo, this decree explicitly invokes the pope’s authority and does not address a single individual but makes a broader decision on the matter.  And it rules that there are “no obstacles” and “no difficulties” for Catholics to hold to modern cosmological views, which include both the rotational and translational motion of the earth.  It is little wonder, then, that in a 1992 address to the Pontifical Academy of Science, Pope John Paul II stated, “the debate which had not ceased to evolve thereafter, was closed in 1820 with the imprimatur given to the work of Canon Settele” [2].

In 1822 the Holy Office issued a follow-up decree, which actually applies penalties for not allowing the publication of books that present the motion of the earth as a logical conclusion of science:

The most excellent [cardinals] have decreed that there must be no denial, by the present or by future Masters of the Sacred Apostolic Palace, of permission to print and to publish works which treat of the mobility of the earth and of the immobility of the sun, according to the common opinion of modern astronomers, as long as there are no other contrary indications, on the basis of the decrees of the Sacred Congregation of the Index of 1757 and of this Supreme [Holy Office] of 1820; and that those who would show themselves to be reluctant or would disobey, should be forced under punishments at the choice of [this] Sacred Congregation, with derogation of [their] claimed privileges, where necessary.[3]

This decree, too, was approved by Pope Pius VII.

The grounds on which these decrees may be harmonized with the decree against Galileo have been laid out in detail in Geocentrism and Strict Canonical Interpretation.  Suffice it to say for now that the official teaching of the Catholic Church is that Catholics are perfectly free to hold to modern cosmological views that include the motion of the earth on its axis and around the sun.

But the new geocentrists take a very different view of things.  Regarding the question of whether modern astronomical views still stand condemned and prohibited, the leader of the new geocentrists, Robert Sungenis, states:

1378319_418033891653194_929420116_nAs far as the Church was concerned, there were two choices – either the Earth moved or it did not. It made no difference to Paul V, Urban VIII, or even Benedict XIV who kept Copernicus, et al., on the Index in 1758, whether it was Galileo’s model, Kepler’s model, Newton’s model or anyone else’s. All of them were rejected and/or condemned because they made the Earth move, contrary to the literal reading of Scripture and the interpretation of it according to the unanimous consensus of the Church Fathers (GWW2, 5th ed., p 249; emphasis mine).

In the final analysis, it does not matter whether the version of heliocentrism is Copernican, Neo-Copernican, Keplerian, Newtonian, etc. The 1633 Holy Office’s decision stated that any cosmology that claims the sun is fixed or the Earth moves is formally heretical and erroneous in faith (GWW3, 9th ed., p. 170; emphasis his.)

Sungenis’s personal view here is directly contrary to the decree of Pope Pius VII who stated, on the contrary, that,“no obstacle exists” for Catholics to hold to the motion of the earth.  His view also does not harmonize with the decree of the Holy Office, which states that books espousing modern views regarding the earth’s motion must be allowed to be published, under penalty of punishment.

The bottom line is that determinations as to what is and is not covered by a strict interpretation of a canonical penalty (as the 1616 and 1633 decrees clearly were) belong to the Magisterium of the Catholic Church alone, not to the new geocentrists.  Their private opinions hold no weight in this discussion and as such they should cease troubling Catholics with the notion that geocentrism is, or ever has been, the official teaching of the Catholic Church.

The Magisterium has ruled: there are no obstacles to Catholics holding modern astronomical views, which include the motion of the earth. Truly, as Pope John Paul II stated in 1992, “the debate which had not ceased to evolve thereafter, was closed in 1820”. So, if the geocentrists intend to prove their case, they’re going to have to do so based on the scientific merits alone. Good luck with that.

 

[For more details on why Sungenis’s interpretation of the 1633 decree is incorrect, see Geocentrism and Strict Canonical Interpretation]

End Notes:

[1]  From W. Brandmüller and E.J. Greipl, eds., Copernico, Galileo e la Chiesa. Fine della controversia (1820). Gli atti del Sant’uffizio (Florence: Leo Olschki, 1992), pp. 300-301; translation from Interdisciplinary Encyclopedia of Religion and ScienceDecree of Approval for the work “Elements of Astronomy” by Giuseppe Settele, in support of the heliocentric system; my emphasis.

[2]  Address to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, cited in Philosophy of Religion: An Anthology, L. Pojman and M. Rea eds., p. 579.)

[3]  Cited by A. Fantoli, Galileo: For Copernicanism and For the Church, 475.

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It’s All In the Translation

What a difference a correct translation can make.

Robert Sungenis has gone on and on (and on!) about the supposed deceit and duplicity of Fr. Benedetto Maurizio Olivieri—the commissary general of the Holy Office during the reign of Pope Pius VII—in successfully convincing the Holy Office and the Holy Father to issue a decree stating that Catholics are free to hold to the scientific view of the mobility of the earth.

In previous editions of Galileo Was Wrong (GWW) Sungenis tarred Fr. Olivieri with numerous disrespectful and slanderous charges and epithets—“devious”, “deceptive”, “duplicity”, “malicious distortion of the historical record”, “outright falsehood”, etc. (all the while deploying numerous errors of his own: see here and here.)  In the latest (9th) edition, Sungenis piles on even more accusations.  And now he has tried to enlist the support of Galileo scholar Fr. Pierre-Noel Mayaud, S. J.  Specifically he claims that Fr. Mayaud joins him in accusing Fr. Olivieri of “deception”.  Here’s the passage from GWW:

As Mayaud notes concerning Olivieri’s duplicity:

One may easily imaging what the deception of Olivieri [la déception d’Olivieri] was in this year 1822. It is important to notice here the “for some other reason,” which arises from the “unless something else opposes it” of the last paragraph of September 11, 1822 (‘supra’ p. 245). This however would be a scruple of the last hour. It should have partly motivated certain cardinals of the Inquisitors for the suspension; or was there something else which had caused the prohibition? It should have been sufficient to respond to them that the decree of 1616, as we have at length shown, presented a completely exceptional character in the formulation, for it explained the motive of the prohibition, the knowing of an ‘instruction of the Pythagorean teaching, contrary to the Scriptures’ (what none of the decrees of that time did in regard to the prohibited books), and that it did not show anything else!  [GWW3, 9th ed., p. 368; citing Mayaud, La condamnation des livres Coperniciens et sa revocation, pp. 265f.; emphasis mine.]

The stilted nature of this translation from Mayaud’s work suggests that Sungenis may have been using some sort of machine translator, not a human, to render these passages. There are numerous translations like this in the latest edition of GWW, so awkward that one can hardly make heads or tails of what is being said.

Regardless of who or what made the translations, Sungenis has missed the fact that déception in French is a so-called faux ami; in English it does not mean deception, but rather disappointment.  So the passage should run, “One may easily imagine the disappointment of Olivieri in the year 1822.”  Fr. Olivieri found it personally disappointing that the Holy Office delayed taking all Copernican works off of the Index of Forbidden Books until it could be determined that there was nothing else besides Copernicanism that would warrant their being on the Index.  But there was nothing deceptive or duplicitous in his actions.  He argued the case that modern cosmological views—with both a mobile sun and mobile earth—do not fall under the 1633 decree against Galileo (on this see The New Geocentrism and Strict Canonical Interpretation).  All was done in the open and in proper form.

The new geocentrists do not find Fr. Olivieri’s case convincing.  But so what?  All that matters is that the cardinal-prefects of the Holy Office and the Holy Father himself did find it convincing.  And from this came a magisterial decree stating that Catholics are free to hold to the mobility of the earth (see The Magisterium Rules: The Debate is Over).  If the geocentrists want to continue to push matters, they at least need to acknowledge that they advance their private view against the official teaching of the Magisterium.

The bottom line is that in his zeal to tar Fr. Olivieri, Sungenis has completely misconstrued this passage from Fr. Mayaud’s work, in large part because of his sloppy translation.  As I have said in previous articles, if you are going to accuse a Catholic priest of duplicity and deception, you at least need to get your facts straight.

As the French would say, c’est incroyable!

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Geocentrism in the Fathers: A Matter of Natural Philosophy, Not Theology

In “The Fathers Don’t Support an Immobile Earth” I cited Fr. Melchior Inchofer, S. J., a staunch opponent of Galileo and Copernicanism and an adviser to the Holy Office, admitting that the Fathers do not ever deal with the mobility of the Earth “clearly and positively”.  This poses a serious problem for the new geocentrists, since they have argued that the immobility of the Earth is the central issue in this controversy and that there exists a binding unanimous consensus of the Fathers on the matter.

I argued on the contrary in “Geocentrism and the Unanimous Consent of the Fathers” that no such unanimous consensus exists and that the Fathers treat of geocentrism as a matter of natural philosophy and not as a matter of revealed truth.

Interestingly, Fr. Inchofer further supports this very conclusion in the same theological tract he wrote just prior to Galileo’s trial.  He states just what I did in my article, namely, that the Fathers of the Church presume their views on the immobility of the earth, drawing from the natural philosophers (scientists) of their day:

Regarding the Holy Fathers it must be noted that they presupposed, rather than argued, that the earth is at rest, in agreement with the common opinion of the philosophers (from R. J. Blackwell, Behind the Scenes at Galileo’s Trial, p. 119; emphasis mine.)

As I pointed out in “Geocentrism and the Unanimous Consent of the Fathers“, the Magisterium of the Catholic Church does not support the geocentrists’ private assertion that the Fathers are unanimous in teaching the immobility of the earth as a matter of faith.  Quite the contrary, twice any mention of the Fathers was actively removed from the text of a consultants’ report before official disciplinary decrees concerning Copernicanism were promulgated.  This is not just an argument from silence, then, this is an active suppression by the Magisterium of any mention of the Fathers of the Church with regard to the Copernican controversy.  And this for good reason — the Fathers held this as a matter of natural philosophy, not divine revelation, and the Church very wisely did not commit herself to an untenable position with regard to the Fathers.

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