The doctrine of creation and modern science

Zygon 23 (1):3-21 (1988)
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Abstract

In contrast to Christian theology that has ignored science, this essay suggests that a credible doctrine of God as creator must take into account scientific understandings of the world. The introduction of the principle of inertia into seventeenth‐century science and philosophy helped change the traditional idea of God as creator (which included divine conservation and governance) into a deist concept of God. To recapture the idea that God continually creates, it is important to affirm the contingency of the world as a whole and of all events in the world. Reflecting on the interrelationship of contingency and natural law provides a framework for relating scientific theories of a universal field, the concept of emergent evolution, and the theological concept of eternal divine spirit active in all creation.

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References found in this work

Personal knowledge.Michael Polanyi - 1958 - Chicago,: University of Chicago Press.
Church Dogmatics.Karl Barth - 1956 - Edinburgh: T and T Clark. Edited by Thomas F. Torrance & Geoffrey Bromiley.
Concepts of Force.Max Jammer - 1959 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 20 (1):132-132.

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