In February 1615 the Cathalics Church charged Galileo with heresy for agreeing with the Copercian proposal that the Earth moved, expressly because this theory contradicted specific versus in the bible.
This is the bit that those who want to use the Galileo Affair as a stick to beat the modern Church usually only manage to get half right. The full story is that they did so because it was rejected by the scientists of the day AND it contradicted the established interpretation of those verses. That “AND” is the key to understanding what happened.
This is because they assumed that science (what they called “natural philosophy” or just “philosophy”) and revelation could not be in conflict with each other, since both ultimately came from God. So when there seemed to be a contradiction between the two they thought it was either because (a) someone had got their science wrong or (b) their interpretation of scripture was faulty. As Bellarmine wrote specifically about heliocentrism in 1615, if the science in this case could be demonstrated, the Church would have to reinterpret those verses. Given that Catholicism didn’t always interpret the Bible literally, it as entirely possible to interpret those verses according to one of the three other levels of Biblical exegesis. But, as Bellarmine also noted, they weren’t going to do this if the science wasn’t proven. And in 1615 (and 1616 and 1632 and for many decades afterwards) it was definitely
not proven. Far from it – it was considered a flawed idea that was held by no more than a tiny handful of people as a result. So they concluded they should go with option (a) above. We know they were wrong, but that’s with the cheap wisdom of hindsight.
So it’s too simplistic to say “they condemned him because of the Bible” and miss the fact that they did so because the
science said they should stick to their interpretation of those Biblical verses. But that doesn’t fit with the “Church was anti-science” cliché that people keep trying to jam this history into. Which is why, as someone who dislikes seeing history being distorted to fit an ideological agenda regardless of who is doing it, I try to explain the real story.
This was after Copernicus himself, but clearly demonstrates the displeasure the Church had and came to have with Copercian theory, whatever they actually publically charged Copercius with.
They didn’t charge Copernicus with anything, which should be telling you something. Far from it. Copernicus was sponsored and encouraged by the Bishop of Culm, Tiedemann Giese. He was vigorously urged to publish his book by Cardinal Scheonburg:
Therefore with the utmost earnestness I entreat you, most learned sir, unless I inconvenience you, to communicate this discovery of yours to scholars, and at the earliest possible moment to send me your writings on the sphere of the universe together with the tables and whatever else you have that is relevant to this subject. Moreover, I have instructed Theodoric of Reden to have everything copied in your quarters at my expense and dispatched to me.
And once his theories became known even before his book’s publication they sparked the interest of Pope Clement VII, who hosted a private lecture on them in the Vatican gardens by one of Copernicus’ students in 1533 and was delighted by them, rewarding the student with a precious Greek manuscript in gratitude. Do these sounds like the reactions of an institution that received these ideas with “displeasure”?
[In any case their charges of heresy against Bruno were not because Bruno was himself opposing some of Copernicus's theories.
More pertinently, their charges of heresy against Bruno had nothing to do with heliocentrism at all.
I find the apologetics that appear from time to time in an attempt to minimize the horror of the Church's historic actions against scientist and other, religious non-conformists amusing.
I find the way that people blithely lump “scientists” in with religious non-conformists and expect to get away with that distortion annoying. Galileo is pretty much the sole example of a scientist being suppressed by the Church and, as I’ve just explained, that was because at that stage the
science of the time was against him. Which makes him a very odd example of the Church being anti-science. Bruno is not an example either. So who are these scientists the Church oppressed?