THE seeds of the clash between Galileo and
the Catholic Church were sown centuries before Copernicus and Galileo were
born. The earth-centered, or geocentric, view of the universe was adopted by
the ancient Greeks and made famous by the philosopher Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.)
and the astronomer-astrologer Ptolemy (second century C.E.).
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Aristotle’s concept of the universe was
influenced by the thinking of Greek mathematician and philosopher Pythagoras
(sixth century B.C.E.). Adopting Pythagoras’ view that the circle and
sphere were perfect shapes, Aristotle believed that the heavens were a series
of spheres within spheres, like layers of an onion. Each layer was made of
crystal, with the earth at the center. Stars moved in circles, deriving their
motion from the outermost sphere, the seat of divine power. Aristotle also held
that the sun and other celestial objects were perfect, free of any marks or
blemishes and not subject to change.
Aristotle’s great scheme was a child of
philosophy, not science. A moving earth, he felt, would violate common sense.
He also rejected the idea of a void, or space, believing that a moving earth
would be subject to friction and would grind to a halt without the application
of constant force. Because Aristotle’s concept seemed logical within the
framework of existing knowledge, it endured in its basic form for almost 2,000
years. Even as late as the 16th century, French philosopher Jean Bodin
expressed that popular view, stating: “No one in his senses, or imbued with the
slightest knowledge of physics, will ever think that the earth, heavy and
unwieldy . . . , staggers . . . around its own
center and that of the sun; for at the slightest jar of the earth, we would see
cities and fortresses, towns and mountains thrown down.”
Aristotle Adopted by
the Church
A further step leading to the confrontation
between Galileo and the church occurred in the 13th century and involved
Catholic authority Thomas Aquinas (1225-74). Aquinas had a profound respect for
Aristotle, whom he referred to as The Philosopher. Aquinas struggled for five
years to fuse Aristotle’s philosophy with church teaching. By the time of
Galileo, says Wade Rowland in his book Galileo’s Mistake, “the
hybridized Aristotle in the theology of Aquinas had become bedrock dogma of the
Church of Rome.” Keep in mind, too, that in those days there was no scientific
community as such. Education was largely in the hands of the church. The
authority on religion and science was often one and the same.
The stage was now set for the confrontation
between the church and Galileo. Even before his involvement with astronomy,
Galileo had written a treatise on motion. It challenged many assumptions made
by the revered Aristotle. However, it was Galileo’s steadfast promotion of the
heliocentric concept and his assertion that it harmonizes with Scripture that
led to his trial by the Inquisition in 1633.
In his defense, Galileo affirmed his strong
faith in the Bible as the inspired Word of God. He also argued that the
Scriptures were written for ordinary people and that Biblical references to the
apparent movement of the sun were not to be interpreted literally. His
arguments were futile. Because Galileo rejected an interpretation of Scripture
based on Greek philosophy, he stood condemned! Not until 1992 did the Catholic
Church officially admit to error in its judgment of Galileo.
Lessons to Be Learned
What can we learn from these events? For one
thing, Galileo had no quarrel with the Bible. Instead, he questioned the
teachings of the church. One religion writer observed: “The lesson to be
learned from Galileo, it appears, is not that the Church held too tightly to
biblical truths; but rather that it did not hold tightly enough.” By allowing
Greek philosophy to influence its theology, the church bowed to tradition
rather than follow the teachings of the Bible.
All of this calls to mind the Biblical
warning: “Look out: perhaps there may be someone who will carry you off as his
prey through the philosophy and empty deception according to the tradition of
men, according to the elementary things of the world and not according to
Christ.”—Colossians 2:8.
Even today, many in Christendom continue to
embrace theories and philosophies that contradict the Bible. One example is
Darwin’s theory of evolution, which they have accepted in place of the Genesis
account of creation. In making this substitution, the churches have, in effect,
made Darwin a modern-day Aristotle and evolution an article of faith.
True Science
Harmonizes With the Bible
The foregoing should in no way discourage an
interest in science. To be sure, the Bible itself invites us to learn from God’s
handiwork and to discern God’s amazing qualities in what we see. (Isaiah 40:26;
Romans 1:20) Of course, the Bible does not claim to teach science. Rather, it reveals
God’s standards, aspects of his personality that creation alone cannot teach,
and his purpose for humans. (Psalm 19:7-11; 2 Timothy 3:16) Yet, when the
Bible does refer to natural phenomena, it is consistently accurate. Galileo
himself said: “Both the Holy Scriptures and nature proceed from the Divine Word
. . . Two truths can never contradict one another.” Consider the
following examples.
Even more fundamental than the movement of
stars and planets is that all matter in the universe is governed by laws, such
as the law of gravity. The earliest known non-Biblical reference to physical
laws was made by Pythagoras, who believed that the universe could be explained
by numbers. Two thousand years later, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton finally
proved that matter is governed by rational laws.
The earliest Biblical reference to natural
law is contained in the book of Job. About 1600 B.C.E., God asked Job: “Have
you come to know the statutes [or, laws] of the heavens?” (Job 38:33)
Recorded in the seventh century B.C.E., the book of Jeremiah refers to
Jehovah as the Creator of “the statutes of the moon and the stars” and “the
statutes of heaven and earth.” (Jeremiah 31:35; 33:25) In view of these
statements, Bible commentator G. Rawlinson observed: “The general prevalence of
law in the material world is quite as strongly asserted by the sacred writers
as by modern science.”
If we use Pythagoras as a point of reference,
the statement in Job was about a thousand years ahead of its time. Keep in mind
that the Bible’s objective is not simply to reveal physical facts but primarily
to impress upon us that Jehovah is the Creator of all things—the one who can create
physical laws.—Job 38:4, 12; 42:1, 2.
Another example we can consider is that the
earth’s waters undergo a cyclic motion called the water cycle, or the
hydrologic cycle. Put simply, water evaporates from the sea, forms clouds,
precipitates onto the land, and eventually returns to the sea. The oldest
surviving non-Biblical references to this cycle are from the fourth century B.C.E.
However, Biblical statements predate that by hundreds of years. For example, in
the 11th century B.C.E., King Solomon of Israel wrote: “All the
rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full. To the place from which the
rivers come, to there and from there they return again.”—Ecclesiastes 1:7, The
Amplified Bible.
Likewise, about 800 B.C.E. the prophet
Amos, a humble shepherd and farmworker, wrote that Jehovah is “the One calling
for the waters of the sea, that he may pour them out upon the surface of the
earth.” (Amos 5:8) Without using complex, technical language, both Solomon and
Amos accurately described the water cycle, each from a slightly different
perspective.
The Bible also speaks of God as “hanging the
earth upon nothing,” or he “suspends earth in the void,” according to The
New English Bible. (Job 26:7) In view of the knowledge available in 1600 B.C.E.,
roughly when those words were spoken, it would have taken a remarkable man to
assert that a solid object can remain suspended in space without any physical
support. As previously mentioned, Aristotle himself rejected the concept of a
void, and he lived over 1,200 years later!
Does it not strike you as amazing that the
Bible makes such accurate statements—even in the face of the erroneous yet
seemingly commonsense perceptions of the day? To thinking people, this is one
more evidence of the Bible’s divine inspiration. We are wise, therefore, not to
be easily swayed by any teaching or theory that contradicts God’s Word. As
history has repeatedly shown, human philosophies, even those of towering
intellects, come and go, whereas “the saying of Jehovah endures forever.”—1 Peter
1:25.
[Footnotes]
In the third century B.C.E., a Greek
named Aristarchus of Samos put forth the hypothesis that the sun is at the
center of the cosmos, but his ideas were dismissed in favor of Aristotle’s.
For an in-depth discussion on this topic, see
chapter 15, “Why Do Many Accept Evolution?” in the book Life—How Did It
Get Here? By Evolution or by Creation? published by Jehovah’s Witnesses.
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