dell'alleanza di Dio con il suo popolo. Nel Vangelo, Gesù riprende il cantico di
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- Cathedrali Ecclesiae Baionensi, vacanti post renuntiationem a Summo
Acta Benedicti Pp. XVI 797
of thinking and speaking about the evolution of the world. Thomas observed
that creation is neither a movement nor a mutation. It is instead the foun-
dational and continuing relationship that links the creature to the Creator,
for he is the cause of every being and all becoming.1
To ''evolve'' literally means ''to unroll a scroll'', that is, to read a book.
The imagery of nature as a book has its roots in Christianity and has been
held dear by many scientists. Galileo saw nature as a book whose author is
God in the same way that Scripture has God as its author. It is a book whose
history, whose evolution, whose ''writing'' and meaning, we ''read'' according
to the different approaches of the sciences, while all the time presupposing
the foundational presence of the author who has wished to reveal himself
therein. This image also helps us to understand that the world, far from
originating out of chaos, resembles an ordered book; it is a cosmos. Not-
withstanding elements of the irrational, chaotic and the destructive in the
long processes of change in the cosmos, matter as such is ''legible''. It has an
inbuilt ''mathematics''. The human mind therefore can engage not only in a
''cosmography'' studying measurable phenomena but also in a ''cosmology''
discerning the visible inner logic of the cosmos. We may not at first be able to
see the harmony both of the whole and of the relations of the individual
parts, or their relationship to the whole. Yet, there always remains a broad
range of intelligible events, and the process is rational in that it reveals an
order of evident correspondences and undeniable finalities: in the inorganic
world, between microstructure and macrostructure; in the organic and ani-
mal world, between structure and function; and in the spiritual world, be-
tween knowledge of the truth and the aspiration to freedom. Experimental
and philosophical inquiry gradually discovers these orders; it perceives them
working to maintain themselves in being, defending themselves against im-
balances, and overcoming obstacles. And thanks to the natural sciences we
have greatly increased our understanding of the uniqueness of humanity's
place in the cosmos.
The distinction between a simple living being and a spiritual being that is
capax Dei, points to the existence of the intellective soul of a free tran-
scendent subject. Thus the Magisterium of the Church has constantly affir-
med that ''every spiritual soul is created immediately by God - it is not
1 Cfr Summa Theologiae, I, q. 45, a. 3.