If you mean "creation of the world" The Catholic teaching is that there is nothing in science that can contradict the faith... The world may have been created over a period of millions of years... allowing for the existence of dinosaurs... believing that prior to creation there was nothing [ II Macc], and that the human race as we know it is a special creation of God... (Dawin is a theory -- there are other scientific studies (Leaky's discoveries in Africa and some DNA testing that was published about 20 years ago.)
We choose to do the Catholic teaching because it was entrusted from the teaching of the apostles.
Magisterium is the teaching authority of the Church.
It is the teaching authority of the Catholic Church.
Catholic viewed them as not belong to the group.They sin a sacrilege and they deny the teaching of the church as an infallible teaching.
The Holy Bible
The Magesterium has the ultimate teaching authority in the Catholic Church.
Nope. There is no official Catholic statements in regards to time, warping or otherwise. The closest you get is by very loosely interpreting the work of some Catholic theologians (ie Origen or Aquinas) debating about the nature of time from God's perspective, but this is far from official.
The origin of man for the Catholic is way back at the time of creation.It is found in the book of Genesis.The very first ancestor of man is Adam and Eve.
This was done because the Catholic church leaders believed this implied there was imperfection in the Creation. This was a teaching of man, and not Biblically supported.
He was teaching as fact what was considered at the time to be an hypothesis or theory. He was not asked to renounce his view, just to quit teaching the unproven as fact.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe only time "purpose" is used in official Catholic teaching is in "purpose of amendment" which means that a penitent (a person who is confessing their sins) proposed to amend their life and not sin again.
A sermon or a homily