Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘NEVER FEAR THE TRUTH’

Pope tells astronomer­s that church welcomes scientific discoverie­s

- By Josephine McKenna

Pope Francis tells astronomer­s that church welcomes scientific discoverie­s.

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis told a group of astronomer­s that scientific questions about the universe and its origins sometimes clash with theology and spiritual beliefs, but he encouraged them to continue their quest for knowledge and “never to fear truth.”

The pope sent a personal greeting earlier this month to astronomer­s, cosmologis­ts and other researcher­s discussing black holes, gravitatio­nal waves and assorted scientific questions at the Vatican Observator­y at Castel Gandolfo outside Rome.

Francis said issues such as the beginning of the universe and its developmen­t, as well as the “profound structure” of space and time “concern us deeply.”

“It is clear that these questions have a particular relevance for science, philosophy, theology and for spiritual life,” the pope said.

“They represent an arena in which these different discipline­s meet and sometimes clash.”

The 35 conference participan­ts included Gerald ‘t Hooft, the 1999 Nobel laureate in physics from the Netherland­s; British mathematic­ian Sir Roger Penrose, who won the 1988 Wolf Prize in Physics; and Renata Kallosh, a theoretica­l physicist at Stanford University.

“I encourage you to persevere in your search for truth,” the pope said. “For we ought never to fear truth, nor become trapped in our own preconceiv­ed ideas, but welcome new scientific discoverie­s with an attitude of humility.”

Brother Guy Consolmagn­o, the MITeducate­d, Jesuit director of the Vatican Observator­y, said that faith and science are not opposed to each other.

“God is not a scientific explanatio­n,” Consolmagn­o told RNS. “If you are using God instead of science to explain what happens in the world, you are talking about the gods of the Romans and Greeks.

“We believe in a God that creates outside space and time and shows us everything he did. We experience God as a person, as a god of love.”

The Vatican Observator­y was establishe­d by Pope Leo XIII in 1891 to show that the church supported science. The weeklong conference was held in honor of the Belgian Catholic priest and cosmologis­t, Monsignor Georges Lemaitre, who is credited with the big-bang theory about the creation of the universe.

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 ?? Associated Press ?? Pope Francis meets Brother Guy Consolmagn­o, a Jesuit astronomer, at the Vatican’s Observator­y earlier this month.
Associated Press Pope Francis meets Brother Guy Consolmagn­o, a Jesuit astronomer, at the Vatican’s Observator­y earlier this month.

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