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Natural Sciences in the Work of Theologians
Giuseppe Tanzella-Nitti
I. Introduction - II. From Dialogue to Intellectual
Integration: Some Epistemological Basis. 1. Ways for Developing
the Dialogue between Theology and Science . 2. When Theology
approaches Science: a Couple of Clarifications . - III. The
Usage of Natural Sciences in Theological Work: a Brief Status
Quaestionis. 1. How Theologians look at the Sciences .
2. The Intellectual Endeavor carried out by Thomas Aquinas .
3. The “Spirit” of the Second Vatican Council and its further
Application . - IV. The Scientific Image of the World and its
Main Implications for the Theological Understanding of Biblical
Revelation. 1. A Brief Overall Outlook on our More Recent
Scientific Achievements . 2. Room for a Theology of Science
and a Theology of Nature . - V. Towards a Genuine Development
of Christian Doctrine.
I. Introduction
Theology seeks to provide the understanding of the Word of God
in the light of faith. It seeks to explain the internal coherence
of this Word and to clarify the different implications it entails.
In so doing theology naturally encounters other sources of knowledge
and takes into account their contents. Although theologians “descent”
from Biblical Revelation towards created things, they cannot ignore
the need for an “ascent”, that is, from philosophical and scientific
knowledge towards the knowledge provided by God's Word, in order
to achieve a better understanding of it. This necessary dialogical
movement in the work of theology is already shown by the Anselmian
understanding of theology as fides quaerens intellectum ,
still one of the best definitions of its rational task (
THEOLOGY, II). It means that the true understanding of things is
to be “sought out”, but also “required” and “loved” by faith, according
to the multiple nuances encompassed by the Latin verb quaerere. Historically, such an understanding originated from different
sources, which concerned not only philosophy proper, but also that
knowledge of nature corresponding to “natural philosophy”, as it
was called for a long time. When the scientific method was established,
claiming its autonomy with respect to philosophical knowledge (
AUTONOMY, IV.1), theology had been confronted with two different
interlocutors, philosophy and science, as well as two different
realms, i.e. the humanities and the natural sciences. Thus the task
of theology became ever more complex because of the different methods
and different epistemological viewpoints adopted in each subject
area. In the Modern Age, the complexity of the task of theology
increased due to the breakthrough of two major issues (or, perhaps,
simply their modern re-proposition), namely the new perspective
brought about by the relevance of history
and the debate about the possibility of a quest for the
truth.
Questioning the use of the results of the natural sciences in the work of theologians goes beyond simply questioning about the dialogue between science and theology. Rather, it should be considered as the natural outcome of the dialogue itself. A genuine use of scientific results implies the responsibility of turning one's interest from merely providing a judgment of mutual compatibility, to facing the challenge that theology and science may provoke intellectually of each other. In fact, scientific results not only supply a deeper understanding of Revelation, but they might also require a new reading of the Word of God. This Word can be read now under new lights, and perhaps within unprecedented frameworks, which in turn would raise new problems and call for more in-depth analyses. It is clear, then, that the “use” of sciences in theological work is quite far from the idea of instrumental or ancillary view of science —a view which is certainly inadequate to philosophy or human sciences as well. To use scientific results in theological work means, rather, to see them as sources of inspiration and of dogmatic development. It is a role that obliges theologians to take upon their shoulders the work of understanding how to interpret these results and the intricacies that they entail.
If we compare the relationship existing between theology and philosophy to that between theology and the natural sciences, we detect some resemblances and marked differences. On the one hand, the interpretation of scientific data is often theory laden and hence requires some discernment by theologians, just as it happens when considering philosophy. On the other hand, many results of science, that we are able to verify in an objective and universal way, are marked by such a “proximity” to reality that the knowledge they bring about has a high degree of reliance, somewhat unique if compared with other sources of human knowledge. Experience plays a key-role for both philosophy and science and it is taken into due consideration by theology as well. The realist framework theology usually works with provides a precise vision of the link existing between history and truth, and reassures that an access to the truth starting from reality is possible. However, with respect to our topic, a relevant difference between philosophy and science must be underlined here. Whereas theologians are acquainted with the main notions of philosophy, whose role is well acknowledged by their official curriculum of studies, the kind of expert knowledge needed for a thorough understanding and evaluation of scientific results today escapes the great majority of theologians, also on account of the sophisticated theoretical and experimental tools used by contemporary science. If they have any scientific competence, it comes from training received in parallel with their own philosophical and theological studies.
In this essay, after introducing some epistemological assumptions which we believe should govern the dialogue and the interaction between theology and science (Section II), we present a brief status quaestionis of the presence of the natural sciences in theological works (Section III). The main scientific achievements with which theology has to reckon with today will be shortly summarized (Section IV), and, finally, a few guidelines for a proper use of science in the development of dogmatic theology will be schematically suggested (Section V).
II. From Dialogue to Intellectual Integration: Some Epistemological
Basis
Today, new philosophical premises and a new cultural climate allow
for theology and science to overcome conflictual relationships and
to foster a fruitful dialogue. There is a general agreement amongst
various authors on the factors that have produced this change of
perspective (cf. Polkinghorne, 1986, 1998; Gismondi, 1993; Haught,
1995; Barbour, 1997, 2000). They usually refer to the decline of
the deterministic and mechanistic views of science, and of the closed,
self-referential intent of logic and mathematics, within which scientific
knowledge had entangled itself for such a long time, preventing
it from engaging in dialogue with other sources of knowledge. It
must be pointed out also that the rediscovery of scientific enterprise
as an “activity of the person”, opened it to the canons of personal
knowledge (think, e.g., of the value of tradition, the integration
of analogical, symbolic and aesthetical language within the logical-mathematical
discourse, etc.). Finally, we witness today the rise of philosophical,
and sometimes even existential and religious questions, from within
the scientific work, though, clearly, these cannot be formalised
nor solved on the basis of scientific method alone. In the domain
of history and culture, one could also mention the rediscovery of
a meaningful link between Christian theology and the development
of Western scientific thought (
SCIENCE, CHRISTIAN ORIGINS OF). On the part of theology, an important
changing factor is now the gradual, though slow, reception of the
contemporary scientific view on the physical cosmos, on life and
the human species, a view that today constitutes the legitimate
horizon to correctly understand the Biblical doctrine of
creation and the history of salvation.
1. Ways for “developing” the Dialogue between Theology and Science. The most obvious area of reflection in such a dialogue is provided by the interpretation of reality. It is precisely in this area that early conflicts arose between a scientific and a religious “reading” of the world. Once you come to recognise, thanks to more correct hermeneutics, the possibility of simultaneous and different readings of reality, no longer at odds with each other, past errors may be clarified and the foundations laid for future peaceful interaction.
Beyond a non-belligerent phase, characterized by the simple clarification
of the terms used by the two disciplines, a first chance to develop
the dialogue between theology and science is that of moving from
an “essentialist” category towards a “personalist” one. In this
way, the epistemological problem is redirected to a more anthropological
domain. In this respect, we observe that scientific thought itself
has gradually re-evaluated a number of factors of knowledge of a
personal, heuristic, aesthetic, and intuitive kind. For a long time,
science has underestimated these factors by reductively identifying
rationality with logical rationality (
EPISTEMOLOGY, II, VI). This would entail daring
to consider the question of the unity of the knowing subject's own
intellectual experience. The focus would then no longer be on how
theology and scientific knowledge might cooperate in their interpretation
of reality, but on how various forms of knowledge may contribute
to the subject's own self-awareness and to the determination of
his or her existential choices, not least the religious one (
UNITY OF KNOWLEDGE, V). This would realize a shift from a “notional”
assent —resulting from logical analysis— to a “real” assent —resulting
from the convergence of clues coming from all sources of knowledge,
including those which cannot be formalised in quantitative terms.
It is the path offered in a masterly way by J.H. Newman in
his work A Grammar of Assent (1870). To turn from epistemological
and essentialist categories towards anthropological and personalistic
ones also has ethical implications, providing the basis for overcoming
the idea of the “neutrality of science” (
ETHICS OF SCIENTIFIC WORK, IX).
There is, however, a further step in developing this dialogue within a strictly theological and not merely philosophical domain. For theology and science, it concerns the possibility of accepting a mutual “intellectual challenge”. This is no longer seen as a challenge from which conflicts proceed; rather, it is seen as the opportunity to submit one's results to the other party's reflection: «the dialogue should continue and grow in depth and scope. In the process we must overcome every regressive tendency to a unilateral reductionism, to fear, and to self-imposed isolation. What is critically important is that each discipline should continue to enrich, nourish and challenge the other to be more fully what it can be and to contribute to our vision of who we are and who we are becoming» (John Paul II, Letter to the Director of the Vatican Observatory , 1.6.1988). The possibility of cautiously including firm scientific results into theological reflection has its dogmatic grounding in the equivalence between the Word which creates the world and the Word which interprets and directs history, i.e. God as he shows himself in the works of Creation, and God as he definitely reveals himself in the Incarnation of his Logos. An invitation not to neglect this match is offered by Fides et ratio (1998): «The unity of truth is a fundamental premise of human reasoning, as the principle of non-contradiction makes clear. Revelation renders this unity certain, showing that the God of creation is also the God of salvation history. It is the one and the same God who establishes and guarantees the intelligibility and reasonableness of the natural order of things upon which scientists confidently depend, and who reveals himself as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ» (n. 34).
While avoiding any naïve concordism, one should rather take into serious account the consequences of that “unity of truth” mentioned above. The evaluation of theories and results coming from a scientific domain certainly has a cost for the theologian; it requires a new effort as well as the acquisition of new competencies. Nonetheless, employing this knowledge to contribute to a genuine “homogeneous development of dogma”, as fundamental theology would call it, should be seen as a real gain (see below, V). In other words, natural science, which caused a great deal of “trouble” for theology, may yet be seen as a positive spur for speculation. We have to notice, it is true, that “theology” and “dogmatic progress” are not one and the same thing. Exploring new paths is a task of theological reflection, not of official dogmatic formulations. The latter compound in an authoritative and stable form the outcome of an in-depth study which may, as history shows, take centuries. However, true progress in dogmatic formulations, though the fruit of a slow and pondered elaboration, would not be possible without a speculative development of theological reflection.
2. When Theology approaches Science: a Couple of Clarifications. If theology is meant to see natural science as a positive source of development, it ought to engage in clarifying a couple of important issues. The first is to take a stand on the meaning of the truth of science; the second is to be ready to define more precisely, and even revise, some theological terms and categories, in the light of well established scientific results on nature and on the human being. Actually, many of these results out to be quite independent of any specific philosophical framework.
In relation to the first clarification, theology should not insist
too much either on the fallibility of scientific enterprises —as
if it were a necessary premise to dialogue— or on the supposedly
utterly conventional nature of scientific knowledge, overemphasizing
the complete equivalence and the continuous change of its interpretative
models. Though these epistemological approaches may be partly justified,
if we use them incorrectly we may end up averting scientific knowledge
from its goals. This would confine science once again within the
closed horizon of studying merely phenomena ( phainómenon
, that is, what appears), with the only task of safeguarding
appearances, one which Copernican science had appropriately meant
to move away from. Although the history of scientific thought
has certainly not been producing a unified way of interpreting “phenomena”,
and their links with the world of events made different readings
possible, nonetheless, science as a whole could be reasonably understood
as nothing but the gradual progression of abstract formulations
towards the truth of things. Scientific knowledge, naturally feeding
into philosophical reflection, also shares in that metaphysical
effort that Fides et ratio identifies as the urgent need
«to move from phenomenon to foundation» (n. 83). The
world of experience is not a closed and self-referring courtyard,
but it is the gate through which one enters in order to search for
the essence of things. It may be significant to note, in
this respect, that the document just cited mentions the acquisition
of knowledge by empirical science in order to show —in analogy with
philosophical thinking— that the search for truth is not genetically
frustrated, but it is capable of resting on secure data: «This
is what normally happens in scientific research. When scientists,
following their own intuition, set out in search of the logical
and verifiable explanation of a phenomenon, they are confident from
the first that they will find an answer, and they do not give up
in the face of setbacks. They do not judge their original intuition
useless simply because they have not reached their goal; rightly
enough they will say that they have not yet found a satisfactory
answer» (n. 29).
In highlighting the search for truth within scientific research,
and the real progress of its knowledge within a realist epistemological
reference framework, superficial commonplaces such as the opposition
between “how” and “why”, or the insistence on the “limitations”
of science, can be reduced in emphasis or even abandoned. Scientific
research attempts to come up with answers to some definite “whys”
and, within its specific formal object, it deals with an “unlimited”
material object. It would not be difficult to show that even those
limitations of which science becomes aware while reflecting on its
own methodology (incompleteness, unpredictability, inadequacy of
reductionism, need for holism, etc.) often result in “openings”,
i.e. transitional or transcending points towards higher levels of
understanding, corresponding to more general formal objects. The
path followed by Wittgenstein
in logic, regarding the need for transcending the language, is but
one example of a conceptual itinerary reproducible also in other
scientific domains. As a result, one should put more emphasis on
reflecting on the “foundations” of scientific knowledge, rather
than on its “limitations” ( AUTONOMY,
IV.1). Amongst the commonplaces to be discarded there is also the
claim to solve complex issues in the debates between science and
theology by affirming that a statement of science would not contradict
Revelation because, in the end, we simply deal with “scientific
hypotheses”. This stems from an ambiguous as well as an incorrect
epistemological view: in fact, if that particular statement of science
is truly scientific, based on arguments developed in compliance
with correct methodological procedures, we should expect that it
by no means would contradict Revelation, even as hypothesis.
A second question concerns the use in theological discourse of
terms with a strong cosmological connotation, such as earth, heaven,
life, death,
time, space, light, etc.
In the Middle Ages, theology and science used the same terminology:
nowadays this is no longer the case, and when this happens it is
almost invariably cause for confusion: take the word “nothing”,
or the very notion of “creation” (
CREATION, I.1, III.3). The very fact that theological, analogical,
symbolic, poetic, and doxological languages, should necessarily
be much richer than that of science, does not prevent theologians
from seeking to be as linguistically accurate as possible, a requirement
to which scientists are very sensitive. The use of two notions would
call for special attention: those of transcendence and of experience.
In treating the former, critical as it is to the entire theological
discourse, theologians should be able to show at which level it
operates with respect to the analysis of the sciences, and how it
relates to the epistemological and anthropological openings of science
itself; in the use of the latter, critical as it is to the entire
scientific discourse, they should be able to explain in which way
the experience of divine things and the experience of material things
both intersect the sphere of the historical, sensible world (
EXPERIENCE, VI).
To be convinced of how relevant this issue is, it would suffice to think how deep is the need to propose a language on God that may sound more meaningful to today's people, whose culture is shaped by scientific rationality (cf. Gaudium et spes , 5; / God , III). The implications in the pastoral domain are obvious to all: «without valid reflections which may be capable of clarifying (and of articulating) the possible link existing between the historical path of humankind, the evolution of the universe and God's action in the world, any talk on God's reality and on his presence runs the risk of being culturally irrelevant and meaningless for life» (Italian Conference of Bishops, Tre Proposte per la ricerca , 1999, n. 35; cf. nn. 27-37). Similar caveats are contained in other pastoral documents of the Roman Catholic Church, just as the one issued in 1999 by the Pontifical Council for Culture (cf. Toward a Pastoral Approach to Culture , 23.5.1999, n. 35). A few years have passed since the declaration of the former Secretariat for the Dialogue with Non-Believers, now Pontifical Council for Culture, pointed out that: «Christians do not consider science as a threat, but rather as a manifestation, at a deeper level, of God as Creator. On the other hand, scientific culture calls on Christians to mature in their faith, to be prepared to open up to the language and researches of scientists, and especially to use their discerning faculties vis-à-vis the technical applications of science» (in “Atheism and Dialogue”, 16 (1981), p. 231).
In more general terms, an approach capable of accepting the “challenge” posed by science to theology appears to be more demanding. To merely assert the compatibility between the scientific reading of the world and the reading of the world offered by Revelation, theologians might yield to the easy solution of considering science and theology as two completely separated realms, and so they need not to take scientific results quite seriously. If, on the contrary, they wish to use those same results as a positive source of speculative reflection and dogmatic development, they must do exactly the opposite by taking science seriously.
III. The Usage of Natural Sciences in Theological Work: a Brief
Status Quaestionis
Generally speaking, both theological thought and the Church's Magisterium have paid less attention to natural sciences than to the humanities. The greater weight attributed to the latter is due both to their role as auxiliary sciences in the study and the interpretation of Holy Scripture (history, philology, etc.), and as sciences appropriate to the study of the historical and existential dimensions of the addressee of the Gospel message, that is of the human being (psychology, sociology, anthropology, etc.). Recent examples of the minor attention paid to the natural sciences are the absence of any references to them both in the Vatican II Constitution Dei Verbum (1965), devoted to divine Revelation, and in the Document of the PBC The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church (1993). If we look further back, Pope Leo XIII's encyclical letter, Providentissimus Deus (1893), suitably recognises that «knowledge of the natural sciences will be of great help to the teacher of Sacred Scripture», although the main goal of this knowledge seems to be to define the areas of their competence, rather than foster the use of scientific results; a few lines further, in fact, that document adds: «Knowledge of the natural sciences will be of great help to the teacher of Sacred Scripture. Indeed there should be no real disagreement between the theologian and the physicist, provided that each confines himself within his own territory, watching out for this, according to St. Augustine's warning, “not to make rash assertions, and to declare the unknown a known” ( incognitum pro cognito )» (DH 3287). However, an important assumption that would have later justified the idea of a positive contribution of the natural sciences to theology was contained, in a nutshell, in the document Dei Filius (1870) of the Vatican I Council, when it speaks of the «mutual help» to be granted by reason and faith in the understanding of dogmas (cf. DH 3019).
1. How Theologians look at the Sciences . One may well wonder
why theological textbooks over the last 30 or 40 years have been
so prudent and rather quiet on this issue. Eloquently silent was
the book series Mysterium salutis , which meant to identify
the main lines of theological renewal from Vatican II onwards (
Mysterium Salutis. Grundriß heilsgeschichtlicher Dogmatik
, edited by J. Feiner e M. Löhrer, 5 vols., Einsiedeln
1965-1976). Up to the 1980s, textbooks on Creation or on Theological
Anthropology containing links with natural sciences were very rare.
Usually, they addressed these issues in a cursory and imprecise
fashion, almost as if treading on a minefield. The gradual rise
of interest witnessed at the close of the 20th century was mainly
spurred by reflections on the ecological crisis and by the renewed
focus on classical borderline issues known as the “problems of the
origins” (of cosmos, of man, of life) with an annex concerning the
final scenarios (future of humankind and of the cosmos). However,
most of the reflections offered by theologians were only a response
to scientists' works which had had such a remarkable philosophical
impact on culture and on public opinion, that theology was bound
to take them into account ( POPULARIZATION
OF SCIENCE, III).
Among contemporary theologians, however, the work of Karl Rahner
(1904-1984) and Wolfhart Pannenberg (born 1928) should be remembered
as an example of theology which seems to have taken natural sciences
seriously. Rahner left several remarks on this issue in the form
of short essays. However, in these works he did not construct any
structured proposal (some seminal remarks can be found in K. Rahner,
Naturwissenschaft und vernünftiger Glaube , 1981). In
his extensive monographs devoted to the present issue (cf. Pannenberg,
1973, 1975, 1993), as well as in a number of scattered articles,
the latter has developed a significant philosophical reflection
in dialogue with science, especially in his Systematic Theology
(3 vols., T. & T. Clark, Edinburgh 1991-1998, cf. ch. VII:
“The Creation of the World”). In Pannenberg's works a strong idealist
philosophical viewpoint is present, which, by orientering the issue
of truth on the far escathon , ultimately affects, at least
in some ways, the consistency of his reading of the work of science.
Alongside these two authors it is worth mentioning Thomas F. Torrance
(born 1913), whose philosophical-theological production has copiously
touched on the links between theology and science (cf. Torrance,
1989, 1992, 1997), and theologians such as Juan Luis Ruiz de la
Peña , Karl Heim and Jürgen Moltmann. The latter has
written a treatise on Creation containing interesting points for
a dialogue with science ( God in Creation. An Ecological Doctrine
of Creation , SCM Press, London 1985). Finally, we should not forget the contribution made
by Bernard Lonergan ( 1904-1984
), whose further philosophical insights originally grew out of questions
about theological method (cf. Insight. A Study of Human Understanding
, 1957; Method in Theology , 1972). Here we have only
mentioned scholars whose main working area is theology. In our view,
they differ from the far greater number of authors who now devote
themselves primarily to the relationship between theology and science
( DIALOGUE, SCIENCE AND THEOLOGY),
but whose standpoint is basically epistemology and not dogmatic
theology.
The case of the French Jesuit scientist Pierre
Teilhard de Chardin (1881-1955) is certainly uncommon, but worthy
of particular attention. Teilhard was not a theologian, nor did
he use the natural sciences within a systematic theological project.
However, his thought has greatly influenced and still influences
theology (for a concise review of his impact, cf. Latourelle, 1994).
Admittedly with some uncertainties and ambiguities, he is indeed
the first author who tried to “reconsider” the results of science
—particularly the evolutionary path of the cosmos and of life— in
the light of Biblical Revelation, while offering original interpretations
with implications on a much wider scale than expected. His reading
of the relationship between Christ, the human being and the cosmos,
inspired by his observations as a palaeontologist, and by his vibrant,
and at times mystical reflections as a believer, has become a sort
of model framework within which some theologians ended up interpreting
central issues, such as the relationship between nature and grace
or that between creation and redemption (
JESUS CHRIST, INCARNATION AND DOCTRINE OF LOGOS, III.2). However,
if judged as a theological project, Teilhard's thought does not
offer fully convincing solutions regarding issues of paramount importance
for Christian doctrine, such as the understanding of original sin
or the ways in which God is present in the cosmos. Thus, it may
thus lead to conclusions that, in some specific respects, might
differ from the teachings of Revelation.
A bird's eye view of 20th-century theology as a whole, except for
some rare exceptions, would lead us to conclude that no particularly
productive dialogue with scientific thought ever took place. We
are thinking of a kind of dialogue that was not to be confined to
marking boundaries or to clarifying errors, but one that would manage
to use, in a careful but fruitful manner, some of the results and
the new perspectives that 20th-century scientific research was able
to hand over to the world of learning as a whole. The philosophical
charge attached to these results was reflected in the wide-ranging
debates spurred by science amongst philosophers, rather than amongst
theologians. These debates, however, mainly focused on epistemological
aspects, only seldom affecting anthropological or existential considerations,
which, paradoxically, are likely to be present more in scientific
than in philosophical works. The causes of the delay of theology
are historically complex, but among them there is certainly the
gradual loss of its “academic room”. This stemmed from the fact
that theology itself abandoned (sometimes unwillingly) university
campuses in a number of countries of Christian Catholic traditions
and remained confined to seminaries and to Pontifical universities.
Moreover, important scientific subjects were excluded from syllabuses
in the training of the clergy and more generally from philosophical-theological
studies. ( UNIVERSITY, III, V).
Although the development of the natural sciences in our times has
resulted in an expansion of knowledge that is no longer comparable
with 19th-century learning, the presence of subject matters such
as physics, astronomy, logic or biology, in the ratio studiorum
of 19th-century seminaries, showed at least a kind of sensitivity
that later would fade away. Such a state of affairs has contributed
to increase the cultural gap between theological reflection
and scientific reasoning that had slowly (and yet inexorably) been
felt in early modern times. Quantitative evidence, for those who
love data, is provided by a simple analysis of the scientific biographies
contained in the monumental Dictionary of Scientific Biographies
(edited by C. Gillispie, 16 vols., New York 1970-1980); it
turns out that the percentage of scientists that were also secular
or regular clerics of Christian Churches still covered in the 18th
century 30% of all recorded biographies, but these dramatically
plummeted to 10% in the early 19th century, before being reduced
to very few personages in the 20th century. Although this data is
no proof of the “efficiency” of the dialogue between theology and
science —as the personages in question were merely scientists who
were clergy but not theologians at the same time— it still provide
an important indication of how scholars who were trained first in
philosophy and theology, later on, decided to dedicate themselves
to the study of various fields science as professionals familiar
with research and experimental science.
Of these authors it is worth mentioning Antonio Stoppani (1824-1891), a priest and a geologist, whose case is particularly interesting from a historical point of view. He was the first to produce a complete geological survey of the Italian territory ( Il Bel Paese , 1875 – “Our Beautiful Country”) and combined his scientific production with very attentive apologetic work, as well with a lively and more mature concern for the formation of the clergy in the area of the natural sciences. Despite its misleading title, in his work Il dogma e le scienze positive, ossia la missione apologetica del clero nel moderno conflitto tra la ragione e la fede [“Dogma and positive science, or the clergy's apologetic mission in the modern conflict between reason and faith”] (Milano 1886), he does not present an instrumental view of science as ancillary to a naïve concordist or a kind of polemical apologetics. Though allowing the constraints of the rhetorical discourse of the time, he offers, rather, a precise methodological vision: «to clarify the errors of science by science itself». By that he meant to stress the need for the clergy to attain a more profound competence in science, in order not to avoid or to underestimate the issues in question, but to tackle them with competence and provide a better service to theology. Some titles of the chapters in this work, such as “Condizioni speciali del moderno conflitto tra la scienza e il dogma e conseguente necessità degli studi naturali” [Special conditions of the modern conflict between science and dogma and subsequent need for natural studies] (cf. pp. 48-75) or “Come lo studio delle scienze fisiche e naturali sia per l'universalità del clero cattolico specialmente indicato” [How the study of physical and natural sciences should be particularly suitable for the whole of the Catholic clergy] (cf. pp. 227-236), show by themselves what kind of project this scholar was pursuing.
2. The Intellectual Endeavor carried out by Thomas Aquinas. It is no idle exercise, in the present study, to look back at an even more distant past to find an instructive model in the work of Thomas Aquinas (1224-1274). It is commonly held among historians that, although he did not directly have a hand in the development of experimental sciences, he contributed to raise renewed interest in the study of nature by circulating Aristotle in Western Christian universities, and facilitated the introduction of much scientific knowledge of the time into theological thinking. The Papal encyclicals Aeterni Patris (1879) and Fides et ratio (1998), do not fail to single out Aquinas as a model for scholars and an expert of the scientific learning of his time, who, by his wise discernment, was able to start a constructive and fruitful dialogue where others had only seen obstacles or complications.
A fresh appreciation of Thomas Aquinas's method and spirit may therefore turn out to be useful for the current renewal of a theological approach to scientific learning, in spite of the gap separating us from the historical context in which he lived and worked. A recommendation by Pope John Paul II is no doubt explicit in this respect: «Contemporary developments in science challenge theology far more deeply than did the introduction of Aristotle into Western Europe in the thirteenth century. Yet these developments also offer to theology a potentially important resource. Just as Aristotelian philosophy, through the ministry of such great scholars as St Thomas Aquinas, ultimately came to shape some of the most profound expressions of theological doctrine, so can we not hope that the sciences of today, along with all forms of human knowing, may invigorate and inform those parts of the theological enterprise that bear on the relation of nature, humanity and God?» (John Paul II , Letter to the Director of the Vatican Observatory , 1.6.1988).
These are no isolated remarks. The same idea was authoritatively taken up, as hinted above, in the encyclical letter Fides et ratio , which presents St. Thomas as a “searcher for truth”, wherever it might be found and by whomsoever it was studied and taught. Recalling a passage by Paul VI in his letter Lumen ecclesiae (1974), John Paul II writes: «Thomas possessed supremely the courage of the truth, a freedom of spirit in confronting new problems, the intellectual honesty of those who allow Christianity to be contaminated neither by secular philosophy nor by a prejudiced rejection of it. He passed therefore into the history of Christian thought as a pioneer of the new path of philosophy and universal culture. The key point and almost the kernel of the solution which, with all the brilliance of his prophetic intuition, he gave to the new encounter of faith and reason was a reconciliation between the secularity of the world and the radicality of the Gospel, thus avoiding the unnatural tendency to negate the world and its values while at the same time keeping faith with the supreme and inexorable demands of the supernatural order» ( Fides et ratio , 43). And, also: «Profoundly convinced that “whatever its source, truth is of the Holy Spirit” ( omne verum a quocumque dicatur a Spiritu Sancto est – Summa Theologiae , I-II, q. 109, a . 1, ad 1 um ) Saint Thomas was impartial in his love of truth. He sought truth wherever it might be found and gave consummate demonstration of its universality» ( ibidem , 44). The aim of such exhortations does not (or does not simply) seem to be a laudative celebration of Aquinas's thought, but they are also meant as an invitation to accomplish in our time what St. Thomas did in his life. It is easy to see that nowadays such an endeavor would involve not only philosophical knowledge, but also that derived from the natural sciences.
Bearing in mind the present context and the need of “translating” Aquinas' observations into a language capable of including the contemporary sciences as we now know them, it is interesting to re-read what he stated in the opening of Book II of the Summa Contra Gentiles. In that section he comes to the lucid conclusion that «it is therefore evident that the consideration of creatures has its part to play in building the Christian faith». Here we refer to some of the most illuminating excerpts: «The meditation on divine works is indeed necessary for instruction of faith in God. First, because meditation on His works enables us to admire and reflect upon His wisdom. For things made by art are representative of the art itself, being made in the likeness of the art. […] Secondly this consideration [of God's works] leads to admiration of God's sublime power, and consequently inspires in men's hearts reverence for God. For the power of the worker is necessarily understood to transcend the things made. And so it is said: “If they”, namely the philosophers, “admired their power and effects”, namely of the heavens, stars and elements of the world, “let them understand that He that made them is mightier than they” ( Wis 13,4). […] Thirdly, this consideration incites the souls of men to the love of God's goodness. […] Fourthly, this consideration endows men with a certain likeness to God's perfection. For it was shown in Book I that, by knowing Himself, God beholds all other things in Himself. Since, then, the Christian faith teaches man principally about God and makes him know creatures by the light of divine revelation, there arises in man a certain likeness to God's wisdom. […] It is therefore evident that the consideration of creatures has its part to play in building the Christian faith » (Book II, ch. 2).
A little further, Aquinas' argument seems to involve even more directly the realm of “natural philosophy”, when he claims that a careful knowledge of creatures helps avoid making mistakes concerning the knowledge of God: «The consideration of creatures is further necessary, not only for the building up of truth, but also for the destruction of errors. For errors about creatures sometimes lead one astray from the truth of faith, so far as the errors are inconsistent with true knowledge of God. Now, this happens in many ways. First, because through ignorance of the nature of creatures men are sometimes so far perverted as to set up as the first cause, as if it were God, that which can only receive its being from something else; for they think that nothing exists beyond the realm of visible creatures. […] Secondly, because they attribute to certain creatures that which belongs only to God. This also results from error concerning creatures. For what is incompatible with a thing's nature is not ascribed to it except through ignorance of its nature […]. Thirdly, because through ignorance of the creature's nature something is subtracted from God's power in its working upon creatures. […] Fourthly, because man, who by faith is led to God as his last end, through ignorance of the nature of things, and consequently of his own position in the universe, believes that he is subject to other creatures to which he is in fact superior. Such is evidently the case with those who subject human wills to the stars» (Book II, ch. 3). These remarks require no further comments. The conclusion St. Thomas comes to, linking up with Augustine and through him with the great tradition that preceded him, is still relevant nowadays: «It is, therefore, evident that the opinion is false of those who asserted that it made no difference to the truth of the faith what any one holds about creatures, so long as one thinks rightly about God, as Augustine tells us in his book On the Origin of the Soul [IV, 4]. For error concerning creatures, by subjecting them to causes other than God, spills over into false opinion about God, and takes men's minds away from Him, to whom faith seeks to lead them» ( ibidem ).
3. The “Spirit” of the Second Vatican Council and its further Application. The poverty of explicit references to the natural sciences in the Church's 20th-century Magisterium, in sharp contrast with its developments concerning philosophy and the humanities, should not lead theologians to pay less attention to science in their work. In line with what we cited above regarding Thomas Aquinas' model, we may trace promising hints in some documents of the Second Vatican Council which, in their “spirit”, perhaps more than in the “letter”, would seem to encourage scholars to move in this direction. It was a specific intention of the Council, as is well known, to urge to present the Gospel message in a way that would better suit men and women of our times, in the awareness that «the experience of past ages, the progress of the sciences, and the treasures hidden in the various forms of human culture, by all of which the nature of man himself is more clearly revealed and new roads to truth are opened, these profit the Church, too» ( Gaudium et spes , 44). This and other passages that mention sciences add no explanation concerning the ways in which they may contribute to theology. Yet some passages by the Council's Fathers deserve a special attention.
Gaudium et spes contains significant references to the sciences in various places. Having recognised that the study of various disciplines, such as philosophy, history, mathematics and the natural sciences, contributes to raise the cultural and social conditions of humanity, and having called to mind that the progress of the sciences and of technology can promote a kind of phenomenism and agnosticism when their method is exalted as the supreme norm to search for global truth, the text points out that «those unfortunate results, however, do not necessarily follow from the culture of today, nor should they lead us into the temptation of not acknowledging its positive values. Among these values are included: scientific study and fidelity toward truth in scientific inquiries, the necessity of working together with others in technical groups, a sense of international solidarity...» ( Gaudium et spes , 57). Taking into due consideration potential temptations and sometimes real misconceptions, the positive appreciation of scientific learning that also engages theologians in a fruitful dialogue with the world, may be deduced from the contents of another passage: «The recent studies and findings of science, history and philosophy raise new questions which effect life and which demand new theological investigations. Furthermore, theologians, within the requirements and methods proper to theology, are invited to seek continually for more suitable ways of communicating doctrine to the men of their times; for the deposit of Faith or the truths are one thing and the manner in which they are enunciated, in the same meaning and understanding, is another» ( ibidem , 62).
Echoing what Pius XI had already written in his Constitution on the formation of the clergy, Scientiarum Dominus (1931), namely that the Catholic religion has to dread ignorance of truth more than any other enemies ( id unum timet: veritatis ignorantia ), the Second Vatican Council's decree on the formation of priests, Optatam totius , underlines the need for candidates to the priesthood to possess an adequate formation in the humanities and the sciences as a condition to enter higher education (cf. n. 13). In fact, for an in-depth study of theology «account should also be taken of the more recent progress of the sciences. The net result should be that the students, correctly understanding the characteristics of the contemporary mind, will be duly prepared for dialogue with men of their time» (n. 15). Finally, in the declaration Gravissimum educationis , it is stated that Catholic universities and theological schools of Church universities, shall promote closer co-operation with other centers of teaching devoted to scientific research (cf. nn. 10-12).
And yet it is in the teachings of John Paul II, often given in
the form of addresses to the world of academia and of learning,
that we find a kind of synthesis of the “spirit” of the Second Vatican
Council, and a genuine development of its exhortations (
MAGISTERIUM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, IV; UNIVERSITY, VI). Although
he has not left any specific legislative indications —the Constitution
on the reform of ecclesiastical studies, Sapientia christiana
(1979) contained no indications as to the role of the natural
sciences— there is no doubt that the whole of his long pontificate,
and the sincere concern he has been showing towards the world of
science as witnessed by his courageous and unprecedented statements,
have been radically and positively reshaping the Church's attitude
in this area. A further quotation from the already mentioned Letter
to the Director of the Vatican Observatory (1988) will suffice:
«If the cosmologies of the ancient Near Eastern world could
be purified and assimilated into the first chapters of Genesis,
might contemporary cosmology have something to offer to our reflections
upon creation? Does an evolutionary perspective bring any light
to bear upon theological anthropology, the meaning of the human
person as the imago Dei , the problem of Christology — and
even upon the development of doctrine itself? What, if any, are
the eschatological implications of contemporary cosmology, especially
in light of the vast future of our universe? [...] Questions of
this kind can be suggested in abundance. Pursuing them further would
require the sort of intense dialogue with contemporary science that
has, on the whole, been lacking among those engaged in theological
research and teaching». In contrast with what may have happened
in other periods of Church's history, this seems to suggest that
we are living in a time when the Church's Magisterium indicates
guidelines which anticipate theological research, and indicate a
road that theology still seems unprepared to proceed along.
IV. The Scientific Image of the World and its Main Implications
for the Theological Understanding of Biblical Revelation
A number of results achieved by contemporary science should by no means be ignored by theologians. Indeed, these results represent a new source of knowledge that theologians have to take into account in their research. Based on these results, they can suggest, or at times even require, some new interpretations of Holy Scripture. Though the dogmatic content and the genuine meaning of what is revealed by God do not depend, as such, on the results of science, nevertheless the understanding of the Word of God may be advanced through them. This might even result in a better clarification of the internal coherence of Revelation and in an illumination on some implications for the faith. The general and abridged synthesis we offer here of some of the most important scientific results, whose widespread popularization let them become part of the “shared scientific knowledge of our times”, saves us from providing point-by-point bibliographical references: for further discussion, the reader is referred to the other entries of this Encyclopedia. Confining our analysis to the natural sciences, the theological areas mainly concerned by our topic are: fundamental theology, the treatise on creation, theological anthropology, eschatology, and to a certain extent Christology too.
1. A Brief Overall Outlook on our More Recent Scientific
Achievements . As is well known, one of the most inspiring “expanding
horizons” comes from physical cosmology.
We now have sufficient data to conclude that the physical universe
possesses a huge evolutionary and historical dimension. It has undergone
a slow and continuous development over time, starting from an initial
phase capable of “containing”, in physical conditions of extremely
high density and temperature and of incredibly limited size, all
the matter and energy currently in existence. We cannot rule out
that the universe may coexist with other space-time independent
domains, totally separate from one another and having different
evolutionary histories ( MANY-WORLDS
MODELS, III), urging us to better qualify and distinguish between
a “physical” and a “philosophical” definition of the universe.
The space-time horizon that lies behind our understanding of the
universe in which we live has been extraordinarily widened, necessarily
leading to a “space-time re-setting” of humankind and its cosmic
habitat . Such “re-setting” implies a new physical and temporal
context we can no longer ignore, just as, in the past, we could
not ignore the new worlds reached by great geographic discoveries
or the new cosmological assessment originated by the Copernican
revolution. The time spanning from the formation of the first chemical
elements to the appearance of life on earth, and from the rise of
its most elementary forms to the appearance of humans, was incredibly
long, much longer than could be expected even one century ago. Within
their specific object and methodology, the natural sciences have
been capable of tracing back without any interruption the key steps
of that history, and they are able to predict some of its principal
future scenarios. The latter also are characterized by very long,
but not infinite time spans, enough to tell us that the conditions
suited to host life are placed within suitable “time windows”, that
could not arise before a specific cosmic age, and that from a certain
time onward will no longer arise.
But the wide spaces and great time spans involved, far from being
redundant, have been strictly necessary to produce the conditions,
places and times allowing for the slow synthesis of chemical elements
and the subsequent formation of the physical scenarios and biological
niches suitable to host life. Besides, we know that there is a delicate
“primeval fine tuning” of the physical structure of the universe,
and of the physical, chemical, and biological conditions on which
life —due to appear very much later— would then be based (
ANTHROPIC PRINCIPLE). Today we know that for the appearance of human
life here and now , the initial conditions of the cosmos
have been as important as (and in some ways much more important
than) the innumerable, contingent cosmic and biological events,
which have taken place throughout the evolutionary history of the
universe.
As regards to the laws governing the universe, we know that the
physical universe is not always governed by laws that may be mathematically
formalized and wholly predictable. The universe is not deterministic
nor “undetermined”: its basic components possess specific and stable
properties, showing qualities of identity and universality on a
large cosmic scale ( LAWS OF NATURE,
IV-V). However, besides “entities”, the universe is made up, above
all, of “relations”, that often determine many elementary cosmic
properties. In the physical universe nothing is totally isolated,
because the nature of any part depends on the history of the whole.
In the universe there is a positive quantity of information, which
is non-reducible to the support of matter or energy through which
information itself is conveyed (
INFORMATION, III). Above the whole scenario of the laws of nature,
the question of the origin of their intelligibility and rationality
emerges, as well as that of their accordance with our processes
of knowledge. Again, as far as cosmic structure is concerned, we
know that distinctions between matter and energy, space and time,
matter and void, have to be reinterpreted through totally new categories:
matter and energy can mutually transform each other; the flow of
time depends on the curving of space, hence on the matter contained
in it; physical void, once the universe exists, houses very high
energies which may in turn be transformed into huge quantities of
matter ( COSMOLOGY, III). Nature
is truly capable of emergence and novelty. Her history is not merely
that of slow and gradual decay towards uniformity: conceding that
this holds true on a very large scale, on a small and intermediate
scale new and more complex structures may arise, in which information
is accumulated and grows. Physical reality remains something truly
“open” to the novelty of history (
LAWS OF NATURE, IV.3).
Biology, for its part, has shown that the human body is like a
summary of the long history of the cosmos and of our planet (
GEOLOGY, VII ). Almost all the information essential for the bodily
development of each individual is contained within a tiny genetic
set, shared to a very large extent with inferior animal species.
Each living being is endowed with a specific genetic code which
may be likened to a “program”, capable of reconstructing, in a non-reductive
but informational fashion, its physical and biological structure,
and the various biological processes which control its life and
development ( BIOLOGY, IV; GENETICS,
II-III). Today we know that the different forms of life on our planet
have undergone slow changes leading to the appearance of new species
and to the disappearance of others. Such a long, temporal path not
only displays a development or a growth, but also a real evolution.
Various factors have contributed, and partly still contribute, in
uneven ways, to make that evolution possible: the adaptation of
living beings to the different environments in which they had to
survive, some sort of natural selection, the development of precise
organismic functions, the existence of internal processes, which,
through their gradual emergence seem to have progressively channelled
living beings towards more complex and perfected forms. It belongs
to common and also to scientific experience that, among all these
species, homo sapiens sapiens stands as a climax, a unique
and singular case of a living being whose phenomenology cannot be
entirely reduced to the biological panorama surrounding it, though
being itself a part of it ( MIND-BODY
RELATIONSHIP; CULTURE). The times and the ages that have marked
the appearance of the human being on earth and, the gradual ascent
of the first humans towards the achievements of civilization and
learning, have been much longer than expected; it is much more distant
in the past than we could have reasonably imagined only a few decades
ago ( MAN, ORIGIN AND NATURE,
II-III). Contemporary astronomical observations outside the earth's
atmosphere have revealed to us that the presence of stars with planets
around them is a relatively widespread phenomenon: no other forms
of life, even basic ones, have been observed, but the hypothesis
that these may have developed in environments similar to ours is
quite plausible ( COSMOS, OBSERVATION
OF THE, II). Finally, it is scientific research again that teaches
us that owing to the size of the universe, and on the basis of the
time scales involved when communicating through space, it is not
possible (nor will it ever be) to acquire complete information from
all regions of the universe in order to check the potential presence
of other intelligent beings: it is thus a possibility which cannot
be invalidated on the basis of a priori arguments (
EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE).
2. Room for a Theology of Science and a Theology of Nature. The sketchy list of results and perspectives drawn up above could have been even longer. We insisted on the results pertaining to the cosmological domain, and, to a lesser extent, on the challenges coming from biology or physical anthropology; we could have added other results, having a similar philosophical relevance, from the field of high energy physics, of quantum mechanics, of chemistry or biochemistry, of zoology or of human physiology. Contemporary results of mathematical sciences and logic, which also have a considerable philosophical bearing, may be considered as coming from the domain of philosophy, rather than from the natural sciences. Our concern, however, is not to supply here a thorough and in-depth list of results: what is at stake is to evaluate whether such results are solely a source of “trouble” for that interpretation of the world and human history, along with their relationships with God, that theologians make on the basis of Revelation; or, rather, whether the lessons we are taught today by the natural sciences may be a positive source of theological progress. True progress, yet, is only feasible when, in the event of problems, these are tackled and possibly solved by proposing new ways of understanding. And a better understanding of divine Revelation, while increasing its intelligibility, enhances the credibility of the faith in a scientific context as well.
On the positive balance, it suffices to note, for example, that
today science provides theology with a much wider framework to understand
actually what it means “to be a creature in a created world”. It
is the very meaning of terms as creature and world that gains today
a weight and a context they did not possess before. If, of course,
this does not directly enhance the dogmatic content of the theological
notion of Creation understood as an act ex parte Dei , it
certainly enhances it with respect to the implications of creation
when understood as a relation and as a created effect (
CREATION, I.1). Again in the realm of the theology of Creation,
it is not without interest to note that the essential conditions
of the fine tuning of those physical and biological conditions on
which the universe would be in due time built up, arose in the very
beginning of the development of the cosmos, well before its subsequent
long-term biological evolution. Greater emphasis ought to be placed
also on the potential Christological resonances of the teleological,
and no longer geometrical, centrality of life and of the human being
within the cosmos. Perhaps, even the Christian doctrine of the resurrection
of the flesh might profit from the acquired knowledge of what genetic
information actually is, having in mind the inevitable dissolution
of the human body. Would those Christian thinkers that pay so much
attention to the “theology of the body”, a body sharing in the image
of God, capable of revealing the personal dimension of the subject
and of being the temple of the Holy Spirit, simply be confused or
would they rather be enlightened by the fact that such a body, even
before being “human”, encloses a very long evolutionary, cosmic
and biological history? And how would one grasp the order and harmony
of a nature crowned by the creation of human beings, if one considers
that in the history that preceded them innumerable species appeared
and disappeared, through mutual competition and sometimes painful
conflicts? At the level of salvation history, might the very long
ages which passed from the first appearance of the human species
on earth facilitate the understanding of the relationship between
objective and subjective redemption, considering above all that
the great majority of human beings that have lived so far have never
come into contact with the salvific message of Christ's Paschal
event? These are just hints —also in this case the list may grow
longer— that may suffice to give a sense of what we mean; not just
for being potentially fruitful in themselves but for showing the
need for serious and thorough interdisciplinary work, calling on
capable scholars to use their competence to carry it out.
On the other side of the balance, of course, we could find problematic
issues to solve. It becomes important to explain, for instance,
the relationship between the “first” and the “new creation”, finding
suitable ways not to contradict our current knowledge of the material
universe as well as of its past and future scenarios. An evaluation
of the elements of continuity and discontinuity operating within
that relationship, about which Biblical Revelation also informs
us, should further be carried out on the basis of scientific insights,
while consequent possible implications for eschatology, including
intermediate eschatology, should be carefully examined. We should
explicitly make clear that we are dealing with “implications”, not
necessarily with “problems”; it is nothing but a “common quest for
understanding”, from which the intelligibility of Revelation might
take full advantage. With reference to the “physical” dimension
undoubtedly contained in the relationship of continuity/discontinuity
between the first and the new creation (
CREATION, VI), theology should also define more precisely some elements
linked to Original sin. Leaving out the hermeneutics underlying
the Biblical account —being the exegetes' own task to explain it
in accordance with the essential content of dogma— it seems clear
that the historical entrance of sin into a world which had been
in existence for a long time, is presented with its definite consequences
not only for human nature, but also for the material world as a
whole. Thus theology is asked to clarify whether the element of
“discontinuity” introduced by such consequences may have any scientific
observable. If so, a dialogue with the sciences would shed light
on the way of viewing human death. For instance, it may suggest
ways of distinguishing between a view death understood as the completion
of a biological cycle, which science tells us to occur in nature
well before the appearance of homo sapiens , and death understood
as the dramatic way in which a conscious rational creature feels
the end of its physical existence while putting in doubt the goodness
of its Creator. A dialogue with the sciences may further suggest
that the disorder brought into nature by human sin would allow for
interpretations stressing its anthropological implications (as a
disorder introduced in the relationship between the sinner and nature)
without necessarily insisting on its physical or natural implications
(as a disorder within nature itself). Different ways of understanding
what “physical pain” is, and what it means in God's plans, would
also emerge ( LAWS OF NATURE,
VI.3). Finally, we could thereby derive some indications on the
correct way of understanding the relationship between the historical
and meta-historical dimensions of original sin itself.
The meaning and the logic of the history of salvation —being the
history of God's freedom and of human freedom— certainly exceed
what is expressed by the evolutionary histories of the cosmos and
of life, and by any of its possible reconstructions provided by
the sciences. And yet, the history of salvation is accomplished,
that is it takes place and is intertwined in those histories studied
by science. The realism of the mystery of the Incarnation, by which
the Word-Logos, while taking upon himself human nature, also took
up all its relations with creation, calls upon us to take into due
consideration this intersection by fully exploring its consequences
( RESURRECTION, VI).
The importance of all this for theology has recently raised the need to develop a “theology of science” (cf. Heller, 1996, pp. 95-103) or even a “theology of nature” (cf. Ganoczy, 1992; Pannenberg, 1993). Despite all the limitations of these theological approaches (sometimes called “theologies of”, and thus not always met with favour because they are seen as potential sources of fragmentation), we believe that enough material is now available to start thinking along these lines. «Theology —as a contemporary author puts it— can only make a useful contribution inasmuch as it keeps in touch with the rest of the sciences. And in saying so we refer not just to the need for theology to make itself heard, but to the fact that it needs itself to listen to other sources of knowledge [...]. Theologians, just like any other scientists, need to be humble and to be so to an even greater extent; not only because they receive their knowledge from the word of God, entrusted to the Church, before which they have to maintain an attitude of devout attentiveness, but also because they recognise that theological science will not authorize them to do without other kinds of knowledge» (Illanes, 1982, p. 887).
V. Towards a Genuine Development of Christian Doctrine
Among the authors of the past who were fully aware of the value
of the natural sciences for human knowledge, including theology,
we should certainly mention Cardinal John Henry Newman (1801-1890).
Even though he did not leave any particularly elaborate discussion
of this matter, it is worth remembering that, in an epoch of hot
debate and sometimes outright conflict between science and religious
thought, he did not fail to offer meaningful reflections on the
issue of evolution.
His interest in the results of science was sincere and fully thought
through: «We live in a wonderful age; the enlargement of the
circle of secular knowledge just now is simply a bewilderment, and
the more so, because it has the promise of continuing, and that
with greater rapidity, and more signal results. Now these discoveries,
certain or probable, have in matter of fact an indirect bearing
upon religious opinions, and the question rises how are the respective
claims of revelation and of natural sciences to be adjusted. Few
minds in earnest can remain at ease without some sort of rational
grounds for their religious belief; to reconcile theory and fact
is almost an instinct of the mind. When then a flood of facts, ascertained
or suspected, comes pouring in upon us, with a multitude of others
in prospect, all believers in Revelation, be they Catholic or not,
are roused to consider their bearing upon themselves [...]»(
Apologia pro vita sua (1864), Dent, London 1993, p. 290).
We turn to Newman, again, to make a further step forward: what
would it mean, then, to see the sciences of nature as a source of
real development for Christian doctrine? The search for a proper
methodology and for suitable guidelines to attain such a goal is
a question that is still open. A possible answer could be achieved
by considering the useful remarks Newman made in his work The
Development of Christian Doctrine (1845). There he draws up
a list of seven criteria that would guide the authentic historical
development of a doctrine, as distinct from what determines its
corruption. The context of his reflections is not provided by the
dialogue of theology with the sciences, but by history at large
as a yard stick for the progress of human enterprises. He wonders
how Christian doctrine may be formulated in the future to incorporate
new knowledge or new events occurring in history, without losing
its own identity. It is ultimately a reflection upon the criteria
of theological work, which, within its own autonomous domain and
in line with the genuine interpretation of the Church's Magisterium
( AUTONOMY IV.4), proposes new
avenues to be taken and new ways of understanding what is still
implicit and unexpressed in the body of Biblical Revelation. The
criteria suggested were thus summarised by Newman himself: «I
venture to set down seven Notes of various cogency, independence
and applicability, to discriminate healthy developments of an idea
from its state of corruption and decay, as follows: There is no
corruption if it retains one and the same type, the same principles,
the same organization; if its beginnings anticipate its subsequent
phases, and its later phenomena protect and subserve its earlier;
if it has a power of assimilation and revival, and a vigorous action
from first to last» ( The Development of Christian Doctrine
, London 1914, p. 171). Bearing in mind the context outlined
in the previous sections about the possible intellectual contributions
of the natural sciences to theology, we shall attempt to apply these
criteria to our topic. I propose here the same headings reported
by Newman (cf. ibidem , pp. 171-203).
a) and b) Preservation of its Type and Continuity of its Principles. These two first criteria indicate in a nutshell the “identity” of the subject that develops them. If theology wishes to take into account the results of the natural sciences, it must continue to be what it is, namely genuine theology, with its own method and its own customary sources. Theology does not have to turn into physics or into biology, nor theologians into laboratory researchers. Certain strains of contemporary theology, we guess, have attempted to link up with the sciences precisely in the opposite direction to that suggested by Newman, namely by choosing to adopt their methodology. The inclusion of authors such as Kuhn or Popper in many theological textbooks shows that quite clearly.
c) Power of Assimilation. It indicates the openness of theology on truth and history, resulting from its openness to the mystery of Being or to the mystery of God. Genuine theology has an ability to assimilate new true portions of knowledge whatever their origin (see above, III.2), without corrupting its own identity or breaking into pieces. This Newmanian criterion points to the possibility of “reinterpreting reality”, again and again, by embracing its demands for truth. During our recent history, and following watershed events in the history of science, as associated with the names of Copernicus, Christopher Columbus, Darwin, Freud, and others, some reinterpretations of certain contents of Revelation were made. A kind of reinterpretation, for instance, was that proposed by those theologians who tried to comprehend an evolutionary picture of creation derived first from Bergson, and later from Teilhard de Chardin. All these were authors who were very different from each other, and their philosophical positions have not always been consistent with the contents of the Christian Revelation. However, they played a significant role due to the scientific and cultural movements which originated from them and that entered into a crucial confrontation with theology.
d) Logical Sequence. The use of scientific results and
of their implications must be such as to maintain the logical consistency
of revealed truths, in other words not to contradict what has already
been accepted as sound doctrine. This is ultimately no more than
a direct application of the principle of the analogy of faith or
analogia fidei ( ANALOGY, III.4). At first sight it would seem difficult to reconcile certain
scientific results with the body of Christian doctrine, but once
these have been examined in their true scientific value, and as
they have been correctly interpreted and cautiously adopted, sooner
or later they eventually shed new light on other contents of Revelation.
The overall new vision resulting from the adoption of this fresh
knowledge would, as a whole, turn out to be more consistent than
the earlier one.
e) Anticipation of its Future. If they are truly genuine, new developments should contain seminal material implicit in Biblical Revelation or in earlier theological traditions. For instance, the compatibility between creation and evolution could be discovered by conveniently interpreting some passages from the book of Genesis while referring back to Augustine or to Thomas Aquinas, or by finding seeds of it in St. Paul's Christology. The unlimited richness of the revealed divine Word would implicitly justify the application of this criterion.
f) Conservative Action upon its Past. Scientific or cultural
revolutions inevitably occur, but they are not entirely destructive,
either for theology or for science. Any genuine development is always
somewhat “conservative”. As a result of the dialogue with the sciences,
theology can adopt a new philosophical reference model as long as
it preserves all the aspects of the dogma that were easily explained
by the previous model. Something similar ultimately happens in the
case of physics, where the so-called “classical” solutions are surpassed
by those provided by quantum or relativity theories, but do not
lose the content of truth they had in the previous theory. In fact,
quantum and relativistic solutions often retrieve some “classical”
truth in the form of particular cases within a more general interpretative
framework. Consider the following examples: a different formulation
of the mystery of the transformation of the Eucharistic bread and
wine (transubstantiation) adjusted to contemporary scientific categories,
could only be accepted if all previously accepted dogmatic aspects
are preserved, and a better explanation of what the previous frame
eventually failed to show is provided (
EUCHARIST, III-IV); likewise, if new forms of intelligent life were
to be discovered in the universe, the fundamental elements of Christian
Christological doctrine must be preserved, although included within
an inevitably much wider horizon (
EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE, IV.3). Current doctrinal formulations are
thus theology's “classical” solutions: to accept new developments
means preserving what was provided for by previous solutions, thus
acquiring a new and better knowledge.
g) Doctrinal Strengthening. According to Newman, any genuine doctrinal development produces a strengthening in its contents as well as in the Institution professing it. If theology ever used the results of the sciences incorrectly, it would sooner or later notice a weakening in its own ability to make sense of things, and in its own prophetic dimension —«you will judge them by their fruits», as we are reminded by the Gospel (cf. Mt 12,33). Spiritual guidance and a fair amount of humility would then be needed to change the direction.
Despite our insistence on the contributions provided by science to theological reflection, we should not ignore the fact that mutual implications are still equally available from theological reflection to science. As in the past, new insights for philosophical and scientific thought have been given to science by Biblical Revelation, through the intellectual mediation of theology. In many other entries of this Encyclopedia these implications have been comprehensively highlighted. We also mean that the presence of the sciences in theological work should not merely respond to utilitarian or ancillary criteria: scientific research is a value in itself and it is meant to play, just like any other human activity and any sincere desire for knowledge, a precise role in the divine plan on creation, the plan of leading all things, by human work, to the Father, through Christ, in the Spirit. Our goal has been to point out that there is significant room for reflection in order to incorporate more decisively some achievements of scientific research into theological knowledge. We believe, in fact, that without such an assimilation —respectful of the past but open to future developments, cautious in discernment but also consistent with itself in the face of truth— theology could run the risk of engaging only in “defending” what a given age understood in the doctrinal content of the faith. As a result, it could impede the genuine development of the Church's doctrine, even to the extent of possibly weakening her mission of proclaiming the Gospel of salvation, in a credible and significant way, to all men and women of all ages.
Giuseppe Tanzella-Nitti
(translated by Eric Puosi)
See also: AUTONOMY;
DIALOGUE, SCIENCE AND THEOLOGY; SACRED SCRIPTURE; THEOLOGY.
Documents of the Catholic Church related to the subject:
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