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Is Science a Help or Threat to Faith?
by J. P. Moreland
from the Viewpoint column of the
Christian Research Journal, Fall 1993, page 46.
The Editor-in-Chief of the Christian Research Journal is Elliot Miller.
From space travel to organ transplants, one of the most
important influences shaping the modern world is science.
Amazingly, people who lived during the Civil War had more in common
with Abraham than with us. If Christians are going to speak to that
world and interact with it responsibly, they must interact with
science.
The question is, how are we to understand the relationship
between science and Christianity? At a dinner party I was
introduced to a professor of physics. On learning that I was a
philosopher and theologian, he informed me of the irrational
nature of my fields, contending that science had removed the need
to believe in God.
Others maintain science and theology mix like oil and water;
they are so different that no discovery in science has any bearing
on theology or vice versa. Science and religion are radically
different spheres of life, they maintain. This opinion was
enshrined in law in the creation science trial in Little Rock,
Arkansas in December 1981. In that trial, creation science was
judged as religion masquerading as science.
Still others seem to believe theology is not rational unless it
has scientific confirmation, and they fervently look about to find
that confirmation. Who's right? Is science a threat or a help to
faith, or are they unrelated at an intellectual level?
In addressing this issue one must keep in mind that the
relationship between science and theology is not a scientific
question but a question in theology, philosophy, and the history
of science. As we look to these fields for insight, we discover
several models of integration, each having something important to
offer. Following are four of these models:
First, theology provides a world view in which the assumptions
of science are best justified. Science cannot be practiced in thin
air. In fact, it requires substantive philosophical presuppositions
if it is even going to get off the runway. These assumptions
include the existence, orderly nature, and knowability of the
world; the reliability of our senses and intellect in discovering
truth; the existence of truth itself; and the uniformity of nature.
Many have argued that these assumptions, while consistent with a
naturalistic world view, are odd and without ultimate justification
in that world view. These assumptions are best explained and quite
at home in a Christian world view.
A second model is one in which theology fills out and adds
detail to the general principles in a scientific model and vice
versa, or theology helps to practically apply principles in a
scientific model or vice versa. For example, theology teaches that
fathers should not provoke their children to anger, and psychology
can add important details by offering information about the nature
and causes of anger. Psychology can devise various tests for
assessing whether one is or is not a mature person, and theology
can offer a normative definition or standard as to what a mature
person is.
A third model depicts the beliefs and methods of science and
theology as involving two distinct, nonoverlapping areas of reality
(e.g., the natural versus the supernatural), or as involving two
noninteracting, complementary descriptions -- each partially
correct but incomplete -- of the same reality. Each level of
description will have no gaps that need to be filled by information
from the other discipline. For example, debates about the extent of
the Atonement have nothing to do with physical chemistry.
Similarly, theologians have little interest in whether a methane
molecule has three or four hydrogen atoms. Moreover, a theological
description of certain aspects of human maturity (e.g., Sally is
becoming more like Christ) may be complementary to a psychological
description of human maturity (e.g., Sally is becoming a unified
self).
This third view that science and theology are two complementary
partial descriptions of the world is very popular today, and for
good reason. It does accurately capture part of the way science and
theology relate. To understand this, it is important to grasp the
distinction between primary and secondary causal actions by God.
Roughly, what God did in parting the Red Sea was a primary causal
act; what God did in guiding and sustaining that sea before and
after its parting involved secondary causal acts by God.
Secondary causes are God's usual way of operating by which He
sustains natural processes in existence and employs them as
intermediate agents to accomplish some purpose. Primary causes are
God's unusual way of operating and involve direct, discontinuous,
miraculous actions by God.
The complementary view is especially helpful when God acts via
secondary causes. For example, chemical descriptions of the
synthesis of water from hydrogen and oxygen are complementary to a
theological description of God's providential governance of the
chemicals during the reaction. Unfortunately, many advocates of the
complementary view press their position too far by leaving no room
for a fourth model of integration. This overuse of the
complementary model is rooted in an inadequate view of integration
and an improper understanding of the history and philosophy of
science.
According to this fourth model of integration, as directly
interacting approaches to the same phenomenon, science and theology
can be in conflict or concord in various ways. Sometimes a
scientific belief will be logically contradictory to a theological
belief. For example, some versions of the oscillating universe
model imply a beginningless universe -- and this contradicts
biblical teaching that there was a beginning.
Sometimes science and theology make statements that are not
logically contradictory -- they could both be true -- but are,
nevertheless, hard to square with, and tend to count against, each
other. For example, most evolutionists have argued that
evolutionary theory counts strongly against views of living
organisms (including humans) that treat them as having natures or
as having substantial souls. According to naturalistic evolution,
living organisms are wholly the result of material processes
operating on strictly physical objects (e.g., the "prebiotic
soup").
There is no contradiction in holding to naturalistic
evolutionary theory and still viewing organisms as creatures with
souls and natures as Christian theology would seem to imply. But
the reality of the soul and the existence of natures is hard to
square with naturalistic evolutionary theory.
It is also possible for scientific and theological beliefs to
be mutually reinforcing. For example, some have argued that the Big
Bang has given support to the theological belief that the universe
had a beginning. The same thing has been claimed for the second law
of thermodynamics when applied to the universe as a whole. Other
examples of scientific findings giving support to theological
presuppositions include the delicate balance of various constants
of nature (e.g., gravity) needed for any life to appear in the
universe, systematic gaps in the fossil record, the information
content in DNA, and the nature of human language. In each case, the
theological beliefs were already reasonable without science, but
scientific discoveries have given further support to them.
The important thing about this fourth model is that it allows
for theological beliefs to enter into the very practice of science.
Indeed, one cannot read the history of science without seeing that
theology has regularly entered into scientific practice, sometimes
inappropriately but other times quite appropriately. Any view of
science that rules out this fourth model is a revisionist account
of science's history.
In the spirit of this fourth model philosopher Alvin Plantinga
has challenged Christians to develop what he calls theistic
science. Theistic science is rooted in the idea that Christians
ought to consult all they know -- including theological beliefs --
in forming and testing hypotheses, in explaining things in science,
and in evaluating the plausibility of scientific theories.
More specifically, theistic science expresses a commitment to
the belief that God, conceived of as a personal agent with great
power and intelligence, has through direct, primary causation
and indirect, secondary causation created and designed the world
for a purpose. He has directly intervened in the course of its
development at various points (e.g., in directly creating the
universe, first life, the basic kinds of life, and humans). And
these kinds of ideas can enter into the very fabric of scientific
practice.
To clarify this further, let me highlight three ways
theological beliefs can enter into science. First, theological
propositions can provide background beliefs used to evaluate a
scientific hypothesis. The theological beliefs that the universe
had a beginning and that adultery is sinful and immature can be
used to evaluate hypotheses that claim the universe has an infinite
past or adultery can be a sign of psychological maturity.
Second, theological beliefs can guide research and yield
predictions that can be tested. For example, theological assertions
that the basic kinds of life were directly created, that humans
arose in the Mideast, and that Noah's flood had certain properties
can yield testable predictions: that is, gaps will exist in the
fossil record; the earliest human remains will be found in the
Mideast; and there will be limits to breeding.
Furthermore, the idea of a direct, creative act of God can be
used to explain things that are scientifically discoverable.
Science can discover information in DNA, that the universe had a
beginning, that human language is unique -- and theology can
provide explanations for these discoveries.
Not everyone is happy with the notion of theistic science. For
various reasons, many want to keep science and theology separate,
though perhaps complementary. Some employ a "god-of-the-gaps"
strategy in which God is believed to act only when there are gaps
in nature. Appeal is made to God to cover human ignorance. However,
the gaps in our knowledge are getting smaller, and so this is a
poor strategy.
Theistic science, however, does not limit God's activity to
gaps. Nature is not autonomous. God is constantly active in
sustaining and governing the universe. Nor does theistic science
appeal to direct acts of God to cover scientific ignorance. Such
appeals are made only when there are good theological or
philosophical reasons to expect a discontinuity in nature.
Finally, Witworth College philosopher Stephen C. Meyer has made
a distinction between empirical and historical science. Empirical
science is a nonhistorical approach to the world that focuses on
repeatable, regularly recurring events or patterns in nature
(e.g., chemical reactions). By contrast, historical science is
historical in nature and focuses on past, nonrepeatable events
(e.g., the death of the dinosaurs). In the history of science,
inappropriate appeals to God's primary causal action to explain a
phenomenon have occurred in empirical science. Such appeals were
wrong because in these cases God acts through secondary and not
primary causation. The proper conclusion from this is to limit
appeals to God's primary causal activity to historical science,
not to eliminate such appeals from science altogether.
Here's a second objection to theistic science: science explains
things by using natural laws -- and an act of God is not a law of
nature. This objection is mistaken as well. We do explain things
in empirical science by an appeal to natural law. The formation of
water from hydrogen and oxygen, for example, is explained by the
laws of chemistry. In historical science, however, we explain the
existence of something by postulating a causal entity for it.
Cosmologists explain some aspect of the universe not only by using
natural laws of motion but also by citing the Big Bang as a single
causal event. In archaeology, psychology, and forensic science,
appeals are made to acts or states of agents as causes for
phenomena (e.g., a desire for love caused this obsessive behavior).
This is not unscientific, and if Christians have reason to suspect
that God directly created, say, human beings, then appealing to His
actions fits a respectable pattern of scientific explanation.
In sum, there are several aspects to the integration of science
and theology, and theistic science is a legitimate part of such
integration. Theology doesn't need science to be rational. There is
nothing wrong in principle, however, with bringing one's theology
into the practice of science. Intellectual bullying aside, it is
time for Christians to rethink these matters and allow theistic
science to be a part of how they love God with their minds.
About the Author
J. P. Moreland is the director of the M.A. program in philosophy
and ethics at Talbot School of Theology, Biola University in La
Mirada, California. He is the author of Christianity and the
Nature of Science (Baker Book House).
End of document, CRJ0180A.TXT (original CRI file name),
"Is Science a Help or Threat to Faith?"
release A, February 28, 1995
R. Poll, CRI
A special note of thanks to Bob and Pat Hunter for their help in
the preparation of this ASCII file for BBS circulation.
Copyright 1995 by the Christian Research Institute.
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