25 Famous Scientists on God
Who says science and religion don't mix? Not these Nobel laureates and pioneers in science.
Who says science and religion don't mix? Not these Nobel laureates and pioneers in science.
If the Church's "voice crying in the desert" is to be prophetic, it should not cry wolf.
Those who ask for evidence for the existence of God should take the time to examine the Shroud of Turin.
Some news hooks are irresistible, even when they're false or at least incomplete.
The Catholic Church and scientific discovery are utterly incompatible, right? History disagrees.
The man of faith knows that the questions he asks of the universe admit of a solution, because they have been posed to him by the Lord of that universe.
"I'll give one tug on this free rope," said the priest, "when I wish you to stop. Two tugs for lowering me, three tugs for raising me. Are we ready?"
The new cosmology makes possible a new dialogue between physics and theology, or, more broadly, between science and religion.
Fr. Stanley L. Jaki used the phrase stillbirths of science in reference to the ancient cultures of Egypt, China, India, Babylon, Greece, and Arabia. The lifeless imagery was the counter-analogy to his claim that science was born of Christianity.