John Paul II, Message to the Reverend George
V. Coyne, S.J., Director of the Vatican Observatory, June, 1,
1988
The English text, originally published in Osservatore
Romano, October, 26, 1988, is presented in Physics, Philosophy
and Theology. A Common Quest for Understanding, edited by R.
Russell, W. Stoeger, G. Coyne, LEV and Univ. of Notre Dame Press,
Cittą del Vaticano 1988 and also in the volume John Paul II.
On Science and Religion, edited by R. Russell, W. Stoeger, G.
Coyne, LEV - Univ. of Notre Dame Press, Cittą del Vaticano 1990.
"Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus
Christ" (Eph 1:2).
As you prepare to publish the papers presented at the
Study Week held at Castelgandolfo on 21-26 September 1987, I take
the occasion to express my gratitude to you and through you to all
who contributed to that important initiative. I am confident that
the publication of these papers will ensure that the fruits of that
endeavour will be further enriched.
The three hundredth anniversary of the publication of
Newton's Philosophiae
Naturalis Principia Mathematica provided an appropriate occasion
for the Holy See to sponsor a Study Week that investigated the
multiple relationships among theology, philosophy and the natural
sciences. The man so honoured, Sir Isaac Newton, had himself devoted
much of his life to these same issues, and his reflections upon them
can be found throughout his major works, his unfinished manuscripts
and his vast correspondence. The publication of your own papers from
this Study Week, taking up again some of the same questions which
this great genius explored, affords me the opportunity to thank you
for the efforts you devoted to a subject of such paramount
importance. The theme of your conference, "Our Knowledge of God
and Nature: Physics, Philosophy and Theology", is assuredly a
crucial one for the contemporary world. Because of its importance, I
should like to address some issues which the interactions among
natural science, philosophy, and theology present to the Church and
to human society in general.
The Church and the Academy engage one another as two
very different but major institutions within human civilization and
world culture. We bear before God enormous responsibilities for the
human condition because historically we have had and continue to
have a major influence on the development of ideas and values and on
the course of human action. We both have histories stretching back
over thousands of years: the learned, academic community dating back
to the origins of culture, to the city and the library and the
school, and the Church with her historical roots in ancient Israel.
We have come into contact often during these centuries, sometimes in
mutual support, at other times in those needless conflicts which
have marred both our histories. In your conference we met again, and
it was altogether fitting that as we approach the dose of this
millennium we initiated a series of reflections together upon the
world as we touch it and as it shapes and challenges our actions.
So much of our world seems to be in fragments, in
disjointed pieces. So much of human life is passed in isolation or
in hostility. The division between rich nations and poor nations
continues to grow; the contrast between northern and southern
regions of our planet becomes ever more marked and intolerable. The
antagonism between races and religions splits countries into warring
camps; historical animosities show no signs of abating. Even within
the academic community, the separation between truth and values
persists, and the isolation of their several cultures - scientific,
humanistic and religious - makes common discourse difficult if not
at times impossible.
But at the same time we see in large sectors of the
human community a growing critical openness towards people of
different cultures and backgrounds, different competencies and
viewpoints. More and more frequently, people are seeking
intellectual coherence and collaboration, and are discovering values
and experiences they have in common even within their diversities.
This openness, this dynamic interchange, is a notable feature of the
international scientific communities themselves, and is based on
common interests, common goals and a common enterprise, along with a
deep awareness that the insights and attainments of one are often
important for the progress of the other. In a similar but mere
subtle way this has occurred and is continuing to occur among more
diverse groups - among the communities that make up the Church, and
even between the scientific community and the Church herself. This
drive is essentially a movement towards the kind of unity which
resists homogenization and relishes diversity. Such community is
determined by a common meaning and by a shared understanding that
evokes a sense of mutual involvement. Two groups which may seem
initially to have nothing in common can begin to enter into
community with one another by discovering a common goal, and this in
turn can lead to broader areas of shared understanding and concern.
As never before in her history, the Church has entered
into the movement for the union of all Christians, fostering common
study, prayer, and discussions that "all may be one" (Jn 17:20).
She has attempted to rid herself of every vestige of anti-semitism
and to emphasize her origins in and her religious debt to Judaism.
In reflection and prayer, she has reached out to the great world
religions, recognizing the values we all held in common and our
universal and utter dependence upon God.
Within the Church herself, there Is a growing sense of
"world-church", so much in evidence at the last Ecumenical
Council in which bishops native to every continent - no longer
predominantly of European or even Western origin - assumed for the
first time their common responsibility for the entire Church. The
documents from that Council and of the magisterium have reflected
this new world-consciousness both in their content and in their
attempt to address all people of good will. During this century, we
have witnessed a dynamic tendency to reconciliation and unity that
has taken many forms within the Church.
Nor should such a development be surprising. The
Christian community in moving so emphatically in this direction is
realizing in greater intensity the activity of Christ within her:
"For God was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself" (2 Cor
5:19). We ourselves are called to be a continuation of this
reconciliation of human beings, one with another and all with God.
Our very nature as Church entails this commitment to unity.
Turning to the relationship between religion and
science, there has been a definite, though still fragile and
provisional, movement towards a new and more nuanced interchange. We
have begun to talk to one another en deeper levels than before, and
with greater openness towards one another's perspectives. We have
begun to search together for a more thorough understanding of one
another's disciplines, with their competencies and their
limitations, and especially for areas of common ground. In doing so
we have uncovered important questions which concern both of us, and
which are vital to the larger human community we both serve. It is
crucial that this common search based on critical openness and
interchange should net only continue but also grow and deepen in its
quality and scope.
For the impact each has, and will continue to have, on
the course of civilization and on the world itself, cannot be
overestimated, and there is so much that each can offer the other.
There is, of course, the vision of the unity of all things and all
peoples in Christ, who is active and present with us in our daily
lives - in our struggles, our sufferings, our joys and in our
searchings - and who is the focus of the Church's life and witness.
This vision carries with it into the larger community a deep
reverence for all that is, a hope and assurance that the fragile
goodness, beauty and life we see in the universe is moving towards a
completion and fulfilment which will not be overwhelmed by the
forces of dissolution and death. This vision also provides a strong
support for the values which are emerging both from our knowledge
and appreciation of creation and of ourselves as the products,
knowers and stewards of creation.
The scientific disciplines too, as is obvious, are
endowing us with an understanding and appreciation of our universe
as a whole and of the incredible rich variety of intricately related
processes and structures which constitute its animate and inanimate
components. This knowledge has given us a more through understanding
of ourselves and of our humble yet unique role within creation.
Through technology it also has given us the capacity to travel, to
communicate, to build, to cure, and to probe in ways which would
have been almost unimaginable to our ancestors. Such knowledge and
power, as we have discovered, can be used greatly to enhance and
improve our lives or they can be exploited to diminish and destroy
human life and the environment even on a global scale.
The unity we perceive in creation on the basis of our
faith in Jesus Christ as Lord of the universe, and the correlative
unity for which we strive in our human communities, seems to be
reflected and even reinforced in what contemporary science is
revealing to us. As we behold the incredible development of
scientific research we detect an underlying movement towards the
discovery of levels of law and process which unify created reality
and which at the same time have given rise to the vast diversity of
structures and organisms which constitute the physical and
biological, and even the psychological and sociological, worlds.
Contemporary physics furnishes a striking example. The
quest for the unification of all four fundamental physical forces -
gravitation, electro-magnetism, the strong and weak nuclear
interactions - has met with increasing success. This unification may
well combine discoveries from the sub-atomic and the cosmological
domains and shed light both on the origin of the universe and,
eventually, on the origin of the laws and constants which govern its
evolution. Physicists possess a detailed though incomplete and
provisional knowledge of elementary particles and of the fundamental
forces through which they interact at low and intermediate energies.
They now have an acceptable theory unifying the electro-magnetic and
weak nuclear forces, along with much less adequate but still
promising grand unified field theories which attempt to incorporate
the strong nuclear interaction as well. Further in the line of this
same development, there are already several detailed suggestions for
the final stage, superunification, that is, the unification of all
four fundamental forces, including gravity. Is it not important for
us to note that in a world of such detailed specialization as
contemporary physics there exists this drive towards convergence?
In the life sciences, too, something similar has
happened. Molecular biologists have probed the structure of living
material, its functions and its processes of replication. They have
discovered that the same underlying constituents serve in the
make-up of all living organisms on earth and constitute both the
genes and the proteins which these genes code. This is another
impressive manifestation of the unity of nature.
By encouraging openness between the Church and the
scientific communities, we are not envisioning a disciplinary unity
between theology and science like that which exists within a given
scientific field or within theology proper. As dialogue and common
searching continue, there will be growth towards mutual
understanding and a gradual uncovering of common concerns which will
provide the basis for further research and discussion. Exactly what
form that will take must be left to the future. What is important,
as we have already stressed, is that 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.
We might ask whether or not we are ready for this
crucial endeavour. Is the community of world religions, including
the Church, ready to enter into a more thorough-going dialogue with
the scientific community, a dialogue in which the integrity of both
religion and science is supported and the advance of each is
fostered? Is the scientific community now prepared to open itself to
Christianity, and indeed to all the great world religions, working
with us all to build a culture that is more humane and in that way
more divine? Do we dare to risk the honesty and the courage that
this task demands? We must ask ourselves whether both science and
religion will contribute to the integration of human culture or to
its fragmentation. It is a single choice and it confronts us all.
For a simple neutrality is no longer acceptable. If
they are to grow and mature, peoples cannot continue to live in
separate compartments, pursing totally divergent interests from
which they evaluate and judge their world. A divided community
fosters a fragmented vision of the world; a community of interchange
encourages its members to expand their partial perspectives and form
a new unified vision.
Yet the unity that we seek, as we have already
stressed, is not identity. The Church does not propose that science
should become religion or religion science. On the contrary, unity
always presupposes the diversity and the integrity of its elements.
Each of these members should become not less itself but more itself
in a dynamic interchange, for a unity in which one of the elements
is reduced to the other is destructive, false in its promises of
harmony, and ruinous of the integrity of its components. We are
asked to become one. We are not asked to become each other.
To be more specific, both religion and science must
preserve their autonomy and their distinctiveness. Religion is not
founded on science nor is science an extension of religion. Each
should possess its own principles, its pattern of procedures, its
diversities of interpretation
and its own conclusions. Christianity possesses the source of
its justification within itself and does not expect science to
constitute its primary apologetic. Science must bear witness to its
own worth. While each can and should support the other as distinct
dimensions of a common human culture, neither ought to assume that
it forms a necessary premise for the other. The unprecedented
opportunity we have today is for a common interactive relationship
in which each discipline retains its integrity and yet is radically
open to the discoveries and insights of the other.
But why is critical openness and mutual interchange a
value for both of us? Unity involves the drive of the human mind
towards understanding and the desire of the human spirit for love.
When human beings seek to understand the multiplicities that
surround them, when they seek to make sense of experience, they do
so by bringing many factors into a common vision. Understanding is
achieved when many data are unified by a common structure. The one
illuminates the many; it makes sense of the whole. Simple
multiplicity is chaos; an insight, a single model, can give that
chaos structure and draw it into intelligibility. We move towards
unity as we move towards meaning in our lives. Unity is also the
consequence of love. If love is genuine, it moves not towards the
assimilation of the other but towards union with the other. Human
community begins in desire when that union has not been achieved,
and it is completed in joy when those who have been apart are now
united.
In the Church's earliest documents, the realization
of community, in the radical sense of that word, was seen as the
promise and goal of the Gospel: "That which we have seen and heard
we proclaim also to you, so that you may have fellowship with us;
and our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ.
And we are writing this that our joy may be complete" (1 Jn
1:3-3). Later the Church reached out to the sciences and to the arts,
founding great universities and building monuments of surpassing
beauty so that all things might be recapitulated in Christ (cf. Eph
1:10).
What, then, does the Church encourage in this
relational unity between science and religion? First and foremost
that they should come to understand one another. For too long a time
they have been at arm's length. Theology has been defined as an
effort of faith to achieve understanding, as fides
quaerens intellectum. As such, it must be in vital interchange
today with science just as it always has been with philosophy and
other forms of learning. Theology will have to call on the findings
of science to one degree or another as it pursues its primary
concern for the human person, the reaches of freedom, the
possibilities of Christian community, the nature of belief and the
intelligibility of nature and history. The vitality and significance
of theology for humanity will in a profound way be reflected in its
ability to incorporate these findings.
Now this is a point of delicate importance, and it has
to be carefully qualified. Theology is not to incorporate
indifferently each new philosophical or scientific theory. As these
findings become part of the intellectual culture of the time,
however, theologians must understand them and test their value in
bringing out from Christian belief some of the possibilities which
have not yet been realized. The hylemorphism of Aristotelian natural
philosophy, for example, was adopted by the medieval theologians to
help them explore the nature of the sacraments and the hypostatic
union. This did not mean that the Church adjudicated the truth or
falsity of the Aristotelian insight, since that is not her concern.
It did mean that this was one of the rich insights offered by Greek
culture, that it needed to be understood and taken seriously and
tested for its value in illuminating various areas of theology.
Theologians might well ask, with respect to contemporary science,
philosophy and the other areas of human knowing, if they have
accomplished this extraordinarily difficult process as well as did
these medieval masters.
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? Can theological method fruitfully appropriate insights
from scientific methodology and the philosophy of science?
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. It would entail
that some theologians, at least, should be sufficiently well-versed
in the sciences to make authentic and creative use of the resources
that the best-established theories may offer them. Such an expertise
would prevent them from making uncritical and overhasty use for
apologetic purposes of such recent theories as that of the "Big
Bang" in cosmology. Yet it would equally keep them from
discounting altogether the potential relevance of such theories to
the deepening of understanding in traditional areas of theological
inquiry.
In this process of mutual learning, those members of
the Church who are themselves either active scientists or, in some
special cases, both scientists and theologians could serve as a key
resource. They can also provide a much-needed ministry to others
struggling to integrate the worlds of science and religion in their
own intellectual and spiritual lives, as well as to those who face
difficult moral decisions in matters of technological research and
application. Such bridging ministries must be nurtured and
encouraged. The Church long ago recognized the importance of such
links by establishing the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, in which
some of the world's leading scientists meet together regularly to
discuss their researches and to convey to the larger community where
the directions of discovery are tending. But much more is needed.
The matter is urgent. 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?
Can science also benefit from this interchange? It
would seem that it should. For science develops best when its
concepts and conclusions are integrated into the broader human
culture and its concerns for ultimate meaning and value. Scientists
cannot, therefore, hold themselves entirely aloof from the sorts of
issues dealt with by philosophers and theologians. By devoting to
these issues something of the energy and care they give to their
research in science, they can help others realize more fully the
human potentialities of their discoveries. They can also come to
appreciate for themselves that these discoveries cannot be a genuine
substitute for knowledge of the truly ultimate. Science can purify
religion from error and superstition; religion can purify science
from idolatry and false absolutes. Each can draw the other into a
wider world, a world in which both can flourish.
For the truth of the matter is that the Church and the
scientific community will inevitably interact; their options do not
include isolation. Christians will inevitably assimilate the
prevailing ideas about the world, and today these are deeply shaped
by science. The only question is whether they will do this
critically or unreflectively, with depth and nuance or with a
shallowness that debases the Gospel and leaves us ashamed before
history. Scientists, like all human beings, will make decisions upon
what ultimately gives meaning and value to their lives and to their
work. This they will do well or poorly, with the reflective depth
that theological wisdom can help them attain, or with an
unconsidered absolutizing of their results beyond their reasonable
and proper limits.
Both the Church and the scientific community are faced
with such inescapable alternatives. We shall make our choices much
better if we live in a collaborative interaction in which we are
called continually to be more. Only a dynamic relationship between
theology and science can reveal those limits which support the
integrity of either discipline, so that theology does not profess a
pseudo-science and science does not become an unconscious theology.
Our knowledge of each other can lead us to be more authentically
ourselves. No one can read the history of the past century and not
realize that crisis is upon us both. The uses of science have on
more than one occasion proven massively destructive, and the
reflections on religion have too often been sterile. We need each
other to be what we must be, what we are called to be.
And so on this occasion of the Newton Tricentennial,
the Church speaking through my ministry calls upon herself and the
scientific community to intensify their constructive relations of
interchange through unity. You are called to learn from one another,
to renew the context in which science is done and to nourish the
inculturation which vital theology demands. Each of you has
everything to gain from such an interaction, and the human community
which we both serve has a right to demand it from us.
Upon all who participated in the Study Week sponsored
by the Holy See and upon all who will read and study the papers
herein published I invoke wisdom and peace in our Lord Jesus Christ
and cordially impart my Apostolic Blessing.
John Paul II
From the Vatican, June, 1, 1988
|