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First Things
Books in Review
Bible and Science
Copyright
(c) 1997 First Things 71 (March 1997): 46-48.
Bible, Creed, and Science
Bible and Science. By Stanley L. Jaki. Christendom
Press. 222 pp. $9.95 paper.
Reviewed by Stephen M. Barr
In this book Father Jaki discusses with much learning,
insight, and wisdom the complex relationship between biblical
religion and science.
In the first chapters he gives an illuminating analysis of the
Bible's view of the natural world. That view, Fr. Jaki bluntly
shows, presupposed a cosmology that was extremely primitive even
by Ptolemaic standards. The earth was a flat disk supported by
pillars, and the sky a hard inverted bowl with apertures through
which rain and manna fell. The biblical authors evinced no
interest either in natural phenomena as such or in anything
remotely resembling science. Indeed, their worldview was, in some
ways, profoundly antiscientific, especially in attributing to God
continual interferences in nature to produce not only miracles
but quite ordinary phenomena such as rain, snow, and earthquakes.
The curious thing, however, is that it was precisely the God-
centeredness of the Hebrew Bible that cleared the ground for the
later emergence of science. While overwhelmingly supernatural in
its outlook, the Bible concentrated that supernaturalism in a God
distinct from nature, and in that way had the effect of
desacralizing and depersonalizing nature. Moreover, since the
world was God's creation, it necessarily had the quality of being
well designed. Indeed, Jaki observes, even the notion of a
universe governed by laws can be found in several passages:
"When I have no covenant with day and night and have given
no laws to heaven and earth, then too will I reject the
descendants of Jacob and my servant David" (Jeremiah
33:25-26); God gave the sun, moon, and stars "a law which
shall not pass away" (Psalm 148:6). One of St. Augustine's
favorite verses, and one of the most often cited by medieval
writers, was Wisdom 11:20, "But you have disposed everything
according to measure and number and weight."
Thus it was not directly, through its descriptions of natural
phenomena or its presumed accounts of natural history, that the
Bible played a positive role in the emergence of science, but
indirectly, through the Church's creed. Jaki notes that
"Instead of the relation of the Bible and Science, one
should . . . speak of the relation of the Creed and Science. In
doing so, one would also do justice to the historical reality of
the former relation. Whatever concern some Church Fathers had for
science, it was the Creed ultimately that they wanted to
vindicate."
The most important case in point is the first chapter of
Genesis. Jaki points out that "countless commentators
(patristic and scholastic) on Genesis 1 . . . use it . . . to
assert basic truths of the Christian creed and theology, [as
that] all was created by God, that He was free to create, that He
alone was the Creator, that all He created was good, . . . that
He created out of nothing and in time, . . . and that He created
for a purpose which culminated in man's special status and
destiny." One of these affirmations, that the world had a
beginning in time (defined by the Fourth Lateran Council in
1215), actually helped lead the fourteenth-century professor Jean
Buridan to the idea of an "impetus" given to the
celestial bodies in the beginning. This impetus, he argued, could
be conserved only if the celestial motions take place in a region
without friction. Thus were the new ideas of momentum and
inertial motion born. These ideas were further developed by
Nicole of Oresme, bishop of Lisieux and Buridan's successor at
the Sorbonne, and were the first stirrings of a true science of
motion and of the scientific revolution.
Unfortunately, throughout Christian history many have
attempted to forge more obvious links between the Bible and
science, and in so doing have projected ideas into the sacred
text utterly foreign to the thought of its authors. This dismal
program of "concordance," pursued in every age from the
Fathers' to our own and intended to make the Bible respectable
for the science of the day, has had the opposite effect.
Few commentators through the ages were able to resist the
temptation to correlate the events of the six days of creation
with contemporary scientific theories. (Here Jaki is a little too
hard on Pius XII, whose reference in the 1950s to a connection
between Genesis and the Big Bang was, to my mind, poetically
quite apt.) Jaki argues that the sequence of events in Genesis
had quite another meaning. Those of the first five days teach
primarily that God is the Creator of all things, with that
totality being signified by the rhetorical device of "totum
per partes" (which is used three times). The totality is
first expressed by "heaven and earth," and then on days
two and three by the firmament and the earth-the ceiling and
floor of the tentlike world, and finally on days four and five by
reference to the main contents of the world.
The middle section of Jaki's book takes us from the early
Christian era (by which time Greek science was already moribund,
due, Jaki says, to the revival of pantheistic conceptions of the
cosmos) up to the Galileo fiasco. He has many fascinating things
to say along the way, some profound, some provocative, and some
merely curious. (I was unaware, for example, that in the sixth
century John Philoponus argued from the colors of stars that they
might be made not of some kind of divine matter, as was commonly
thought, but of the same type which on earth produces flames of
various colors.) Unfortunately, this part of the book is not as
well organized as it could be, and the exposition suffers from
frequent lapses into a peculiar Jakian style, which is
unnecessarily polemical and sometimes obscure. Nevertheless, the
ideas are still there, and the line of thought can still be
discerned under the epicyclic twists and turns by a thoughtful
reader.
In the final chapters Jaki returns to the biblical text, and
discusses the best-known miracles of both Testaments. His
speculative hypotheses about some of the more dramatic Old
Testament miracles, as well as his general reflections on the
meaning and manner of divine intervention in nature, are
reasonable and valuable.
In spite of some infelicities of style, and one or two
questionable contentions, this is an admirable treatment of the
Bible and science, and would be highly suitable for a college
course.
Stephen M. Barr is Associate Professor of Physics at the
Bartol Institute, University of Delaware.
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