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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2024
There still appears to be a firm view in the minds of many people that science and religion are somehow inescapably opposed to one another. On the one hand (such a view might allege), to be a scientist means that one can’t take religion seriously: on the other, to be a religious believer one has to sit light to many of the findings of science, either quietly ignoring them or perhaps even flatly denying their validity. Anyone saying that modern science and Christianity are quite compatible is often looked at askance, as though either his or her science, or his or her theology, or both, must be suspect. However, a growing number of theologians are now writing about the theological implications of science; and, in addition, some scientists are also providing more or less explicit comments on the theological implications of their work.
This should not surprise us. In his recent book Art and the Beauty of God, Bishop Richard Harries makes the remark that ‘All works of art, whatever their content, have a spiritual dimension,’ in that they can provide us with comfort or solace. It is surely also true that all the sciences necessarily have a theological dimension, in that they all investigate one aspect or another of the material universe, and, Christians believe, that universe is itself, in some sense, the creation of God. We ought therefore to expect to discover something about the Creator in our analysis of the creation, whether we conclude, at one extreme, with the deists, that God somehow initiated the Big Bang and then abandoned the cosmos to get on with it; or whether we conclude, at the other extreme, that the universe may be regarded as being so intimately connected with its originator that it is reasonable to call it in some sense the Body of God.
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2 The idea of the cosmos as the body of God has been developed in lantzen, G., God's World, God's Body (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1984)Google Scholar and McFague, S., The Body of God (London: SCM, 1993)Google Scholar.
3 For recent work by these authors, see Peacocke, A., Theology for a Scientific Age (London: SCM, 1993)Google Scholar and Polkinghorne, J., Science and Christian Belief (London: SPCK, 1994)Google Scholar.
4 See, for example, Dawlcins, R., The Blind Watchmaker (London: Penguin, 1988)Google Scholar, and Atkins, P., The Creation (London: W. H. Freeman and Company, 1981)Google Scholar.
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