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State of Affairs

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A nuanced study of the intellectual accommodation between science and theology, suggesting that theology needs to rediscover its own independent voice.The last sixty years have witnessed a virtual ...
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  • 26 March 2015
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A nuanced study of the intellectual accommodation between science and theology, suggesting that theology needs to rediscover its own independent voice.

The last sixty years have witnessed a virtual explosion of interest in how modern science and traditional Christianity intersect. This new rapprochement with science has irrevocably altered how Christians think of God, providing a foundation from which we cannot retreat, but from which we also cannot move forward until we examine the presumptions on which it is based. For the first time, Richard J. Coleman interprets in a clear and meaningful way the themes and practitioners that make this rapprochement different, and what it has achieved. But this book is more than description - it is an inquiry into whether Christian theology has lost its authentic voice by its singular focus on accommodating modern science.
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Price: $36.95
Pages: 282
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date: 26 March 2015
Trim Size: 9.02 X 6.02 in
ISBN: 9780718893927
Format: Paperback
BISACs: RELIGION / Philosophy, Philosophy of religion
REVIEWS Icon
In this candid survey and synthesis, Richard Coleman states clearly what he considers to be both right and wrong in contemporary attempts to integrate science with the world of faith and theology. This well-informed book deserves careful reading and commentary.
— John F. Haught, Georgetown University, Washington, DC

Rejecting simple models, Coleman calls for Christian theology to be a 'holy irritant,' to 'redescribe' a world only 'partially explained by science.' This is a valuable contribution to the state of affairs it describes so well.
— Karl Giberson, Stonehill College, Easton, MA

About fifty years ago, a new dialogue between science and religion began to replace the older period of conflict. While the dialogue has been rewarding, it's time for some hard questions. Is it really possible to do interdisciplinary work between science and religion? Is a new academic field being launched? Or are theologians and scholars of religion just being too accommodating, seeking to be relevant in a culture of science but losing their own distinctive voice? . . . Honest, forthright, sometimes disturbing, but always insightful and instructive.
— Ron Cole-Turner, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, Pittsburgh, PA

This book is essential reading for anyone who believes we need to reexamine the suppositions of the academic discourses of theology and science, and who wonders what it would take for Christian theology to develop a more critical - dare I say prophetic - voice.
— Lisa Stenmark, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA
Preface
1 The Contemporary Scene
2 Irreconcilable Differences
3 The New Rapprochement with Science
4 Lingering Questions and Some Tentative Conclusions
5 The Distinctiveness that Is Science
6 The Distinctiveness that Is Christian Theology
7 Where Do We Go From Here?
Selected Bibliography
Author Index
Subject Index