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GUEST
ARTICLE
Are Science and Faith Compatible?
 Well are they? Can one believe in the concept of a universe
that was created by God, and not be considered an anti-science
ignoramus?
Many people have been led
to believe that faith in God and the facts of science are
mutually exclusive propositions.
In one of his books, Vance Packard declared that “the
discoveries of astronomers, geologists, and space explorers
have undermined the faith of all but the most devout.” He
asserted that most of those who still believe in God probably
see him as some sort of “force,” rather than
a Person who is observing human behavior (1968, 27). Has
the god of “Star Wars” replaced the God of the
Bible in the minds of many? Apparently so, but without justification.
Some writers suggest that
the advent of Darwin’s evolution
theory made it no longer necessary to believe in God. In
the book, The Blind Watchmaker, which argues for “a
universe without design,” Richard Dawkins asserts that “Darwin
made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist” (1986,
6).
Steve Allen, the comic whose
dubious entertainment skills have given him a platform
for the advocacy of his skeptical
ideas, contends that “the inability to believe in God
as traditionally defined has indeed become increasingly common
in the intellectual and scientific community during the past
two centuries” (1993, 328).
These quotations are typical
of those whose “god” has
become pseudo-science.
The historical reality is this: atheism did not bring us
the age of science. A recent writer concedes:
It is widely accepted on all sides that, far from undermining
it, science is deeply indebted to Christianity and has been
so from at least the scientific revolution. Recent historical
research has uncovered many unexpected links between scientific
enterprise and Biblical theology (Russell 1984, 777).
Professor J. Macmurray, certainly
no friend to Christianity, confessed: “Science is the legitimate child of a great
religious movement, and its genealogy goes back to Jesus.” Similarly,
N. Berdyaev says, “I am convinced that Christianity
alone made possible both positive science and technics” (Smethurst
1955, 21).
Atheists, to some extent, have attempted to hijack the domain
of science within the past hundred years or so. But in reality,
some of the greatest scientific leaders of history have been
religious people. Many of them were driven to explore the
mysteries of the creation because they were intrigued with
the genius of him whom they acknowledged as the Architect
of the universe. Not a few of these luminaries were serious
students of the Bible and revered it as the Word of God.
Let us reflect upon some of these dignitaries who have bequeathed
a rich legacy to our modern era.
Johann Kepler (1571-1630)
Johann Kepler was “one of the greatest astronomers
that ever lived” (Wright 1962, 398). Though he made
numerous discoveries (e.g., the tides are caused by the moon),
he is most famous for three astronomical laws which he recognized.
First, he noted that the planets travel around the sun in
an elliptical orbit, with the sun at one focus of the ellipse.
Second, he found that a planet’s speed increases as
it nears the sun, but decreases as it gets farther away.
But no matter what its speed may be, a line drawn between
it and the sun will always sweep over exactly the same area
of space in the same length of time. Third, the time a planet
takes to circle the sun depends on its distance from the
sun. The square of the time it takes will be exactly in proportion
to the cube of its average distance away. Kepler’s
discoveries prepared the way for the work of Isaac Newton.
As Kepler studied the heavens,
he was awed by the power and wisdom of God. He once said
that in his discoveries he
was merely “thinking God’s thoughts after Him.” He
wrote:
I thank Thee, my Creator and Lord, that Thou hast given
me this joy in Thy creation, this delight in the works of
Thy hands; I have shown the excellency of Thy works unto
man, so far as my mind was able to comprehend Thine infinity
(Northrop n.d., 266).
Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
A very remarkable French
mathematician and philosopher was Blaise Pascal. Pascal
had taught himself geometry by the
time he was twelve years of age. At sixteen, he had completed
a book on the subject. He was the first to set forth what
is called the theory of probability. Pascal is best recognized,
however, for his discovery that liquid in a vessel exerts
equal pressure in all directions. This is known as Pascal’s
Law. The principle is used in hydraulic jacks, vacuum pumps,
air compressors, etc. This brilliant man of science also
invented a calculating machine.
As fascinated with science
as he was, Pascal was even more intrigued with religion.
He certainly did not subscribe to
the notion that faith and science are incompatible. In fact,
Pascal maintained that “the only perfect knowledge
[comes] through Christian revelation” (Jones 1979,
167). His famous book, Pensees, which reflected his thoughts
on religion, was subtitled, “An Apology for the Christian
Religion.” “Apology” signifies a defense.
Robert Boyle (1627-1691)
The “father of modern chemistry” was Robert
Boyle. Boyle experimented with the expansion and compression
of air and other gases. This led to the formulation of an
important law in physics (known as Boyle’s Law), which
suggests that in a gas at constant temperature the volume
is inversely proportional to the pressure. This law has had
tremendous significance for science and industry. Boyle was
the first to suggest the idea of a chemical “element.” He
argued that atoms of one kind of matter make up all substances,
and that the differences in substances are the result of
the differing arrangements and movements of the atoms.
As Boyle matured, his interest
in religion accelerated. He became convinced that the Bible
is a divine revelation.
He studied Hebrew and Greek in order to be able to read the
Scriptures in their original languages. He contributed to
the distribution of Bibles in several different languages.
One biographer observed that his thinking became more devout
the more he studied the wonders of nature. . . At his death
Boyle left a sum of money to found the Boyle lectures . .
. intended for the confutation of atheism" (Hall 1970,
382).
Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
Sir Isaac Newton has been
called “one of the greatest
names in the history of human thought” (Cohen 1979,
306). Albert Einstein once paid tribute to Newton by suggesting
that his own work would have been impossible but for the
discoveries of Newton. At the age of twenty-seven he was
known as an “unparalleled genius.” Isaac Newton’s
achievements were remarkable in a number of areas. In mathematics,
he invented the discipline known as calculus. He was the
first to describe the concept of universal gravitation, and
to note that the planets are held in place by this force.
Newton’s discoveries in the area of optics were also
phenomenal. By examining sunlight as it passed through a
prism, he showed that white light is made up of the colors
of the rainbow. He also invented the reflecting telescope.
In addition to his scientific contributions, Isaac Newton
was a deeply religious man. He was as much a student of the
Scriptures as he was of science. He authored several theological
works. As a result of his studies of the universe, Newton
wrote:
This most beautiful system of the sun, planets, and comets,
could only proceed from the counsel and dominion of an intelligent
and powerful Being (Hutchins 1952, 369).
He was buried beneath the
floor of Westminster Abby in London, where a monument reads: “Let mortals congratulate themselves
that so great an ornament of human nature has existed.” Interestingly,
he “sleeps” beside Charles Darwin!
Michael Faraday (1791-1867)
Michael Faraday “is ranked as one of the most brilliant
experimentalists science has ever known” (Sewell 1949,
146). Each time you ride in an automobile or switch on your
lights, you owe him a debt. He made the first electric motor,
the first dynamo, and the first transformer. He discovered
benzol, the basis of aniline dyes, and he was the first to
detect the phenomenon known as polarization of light, which
established a connection between light and electricity. For
more than a half century he did astounding work in the fields
of chemistry and electricity at the Royal Institution in
London. He authored 158 scientific papers listed in the catalogue
of the Royal Society.
Faraday’s religious
convictions were widely known. An agnostic associate said
of him:
I think that a good deal
of Faraday’s week-day strength
and persistency might be referred to his Sunday Exercises.
He drinks from a fount on Sunday which refreshes his soul
for a week.
A biographer notes that Faraday’s sense of the “unity
of the universe derived from the unity and benevolence of
its Creator” was the motivating factor in his scientific
drive. He devoutly believed that God was the maker and sustainer
of all things (Williams 1981, 527). Another writer notes: “Like
Pasteur, Faraday was inspired in his scientific work by his
simple but steadfast belief in the will of God” (Wright
1981, 385).
Louis Pasteur (1822-1895)
The father of modern bacteriology
was Louis Pasteur. His contributions to medicine, chemistry,
and industry were profound
indeed. Pasteur “was the first to show that living
things come only from living things” (Dubos 1979, 170).
This, of course, is the basis of the scientific Law of Biogenesis
(life comes only from life). The law is dramatically antagonistic
to the evolutionary concept of spontaneous generation, which
argues that somehow life must have come from non-life originally.
Pasteur, who is acknowledged even by atheism as “one
of the greatest scientists in history,” was a strong
opponent of Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural
selection (Asimov 1982, 425).
This renowned scientist discovered
that the sterilization of drink/food substances will kill
the microbes. The process,
known today as “pasteurization,” has saved countless
lives. This great man also discovered that diseases are caused
by germs that invade the body. He found that if one’s
body is inoculated with a weakened form of the microbe, it
will produce an immunity. The process of vaccination resulted
from his work.
Pasteur’s accomplishments
in industry were many. He saved the silk industry by isolating
a germ that was destroying
silkworms, he combated fowl cholera and anthrax in cattle,
and developed the treatment for rabies. These are but a sampling
of his astounding achievements.
Rather than destroying his
belief in God, Pasteur’s
brilliant discoveries made him humble as he contemplated
the marvels of divine creation. He argued that the notion
of “spontaneous generation (like materialism in general)
threaten[s] the very concept of God the Creator” (Geison
1970, 371).
George Washington Carver (1864-1943)
In a discussion of scientists
who sought to honor God by their endeavors, it is a difficult
task to decide which ones
to include for consideration. George Washington Carver is
selected because his unusual accomplishments took their rise
from such a humble background. Carver was born to slave parents
whom he never knew. At the age of ten, he set out on his
own to educate himself; which he did, finally receiving a
master’s degree in 1896.
He became the director of agricultural research at Tuskegee
Institute in Alabama the same year. From scrapheap odds and
ends, Carver constructed a laboratory, out of which came
some truly amazing developments.
For example, Dr. Carver (his only doctorate was honorary)
developed 118 different products from the sweet potato (e.g.,
tapioca, starch, vinegar, molasses, library paste, rubber,
etc.). From pecans he produced more than sixty different
items. He made some three hundred synthetic products from
the peanut, including milk, cheese, coffee, ink, dye (thirty
kinds), shoe polish, cereal, soap, woodstain, insulation
board, etc.
Carver once invited some
friends to dinner. He served salad, soup, a creamed vegetable, “chicken,” coffee,
cookies and ice cream. What his guests did not know was that
he had made all of these items from peanuts!
George Washington Carver
marveled at God’s fascinating
creation. He arose daily at 4:00 a.m. for solitary walks
in the woods. He told a friend, “At no other time have
I so sharp an understanding of what God means to do with
me.” Every Sunday at Tuskegee he conducted an afternoon
Bible class, during which he read from the Scriptures and
talked of God and nature.
Dr. Carver was once asked why he developed such an interest
in the peanut. Tongue-in-cheek, he told this story.
One day, while talking with
God, he asked: “Mr. Creator,
why was the universe made?” He said the Lord told him: “You
want to know too much. Your mind is too small to know that.” “Well,” he
inquired, “why then did you make man?” To which
the Creator responded: “Little man, you still want
to know too much.” Finally, he asked: “Well,
Mr. Creator, what’s the peanut for?” And the
Lord said: “That’s more like it!”
Carver said his work on the peanut was an attempt to discover
why God made it (Moore 1971, 88). Dr. Carver received numerous
tributes, both in America and abroad. He would never have
entertained the notion that science and religion are mutually
exclusive.
Wernher von Braun (1912-1977)
One of the pioneers of modern
rocketry was Wernher von Braun. Dr. von Braun was perhaps
the leading force behind America’s
space program. His team developed the four-stage Jupiter
rocket that launched Explorer I, the first United States
satellite. Another of his projects was the launching of the
Saturn V rocket which put the first astronauts on the moon.
Von Braun was considered one of the world’s foremost
rocket engineers.
Dr. von Braun recognized that science alone can never satisfy
the soul. He wrote:
It is as difficult for me to understand a scientist who
does not acknowledge the presence of a superior rationality
behind the existence of the universe as it is to comprehend
a theologian who would deny the advance of science. Far from
being independent or opposing forces, science and religion
are sisters. . . There is certainly no scientific reason
why God cannot retain the same position in our modern world
that He held before we began probing His creation with the
telescope and cyclotron (1981, 35,38).
Conclusion
Quack religionists and pseudoscientists
(and some are an admixture of both) may be antagonists,
but genuine religion
and true science are not. The fact is, many scientists are
giving serious consideration to religion in these times of
technological stress. Science writer Lincoln Barnett, in
his book, The Universe and Dr. Einstein, commented that the
continuing discoveries of modern science have made it “more
difficult” to ignore the idea of God (1959, 22). James
Jauncy, who holds ten academic degrees, authored a significant
volume titled, Science Returns To God. Therein he wrote: “The
atheist or the hostile agnostic, even in scientific circles,
is becoming a rare bird indeed” (1971, 17). May the
species become extinct!
Agnostic science writer, Dr. Robert Jastrow, probably said
more than he intended when he concluded one of his books
in the following fashion:
For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power
of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled
the mountains of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest
peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted
by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for
centuries (Jastrow 1978, 116).
God has gloriously revealed himself in the book of nature,
and in his Holy Book, the Bible. Explore his message, and
honor him in your life each day.
--Wayne Jackson
Sources/Footnotes
Allen, Steve. 1993. More Steve Allen on the Bible, Religion, & Morality.
Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books.
Asimov, Isaac. 1982. Asimov’s Biographical Encyclopedia
of Science and Technology. New York, NY: Doubleday & Co.
Barnett, Lincoln. 1959. The Universe and Dr. Einstein. New
York, NY: Mentor.
Cohen, I. Bernard. 1979. The World Book Encyclopedia. Vol.
14. Chicago, IL: Worldbook-Childcraft International, Inc.
Dawkins, Richard. 1986. The Blind Watchmaker. New York,
NY: W.W. Norton & Co.
Dubos, Rene. 1979. The World Book Encyclopedia. Vol. 15.
Chicago, IL: Worldbook-Childcraft International, Inc.
Geison, Gerald L. 1970. Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Vol. 10. Charles C. Gillispie, ed. New York, NY: Charles
Scribner’s Sons.
Hall, Maria Boas. 1970. Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Vol. 2. Charles C. Gillispie, ed. New York, NY: Charles Scribner’s
Sons.
Hutchins, Robert M., ed. 1952. Great Books of the Western
World. Vol. 34. Chicago, IL: Encyclopedia Britannica.
Jastrow, Robert. 1978. God and the Astronomers. New York,
NY: W.W. Norton & Co.
Jauncey, James. 1971. Science Returns to God. Grand Rapids,
MI: Zondervan.
Jones, Phillip S. 1979. The World Book Encyclopedia. Vol.
15. Chicago, IL: Worldbook-Childcraft International, Inc.
Moore, Eva. 1971. The Story of George Washington Carver.
New York, NY: Scholastic Book Services.
Northrop, Stephen Abbot. n.d. A Cloud of Witnesses. Cincinnati,
OH: John F. McCurdy.
Packard, Vance. 1968. The Sexual Wilderness. New York, NY:
David McKay Co.
Russell, Colin. 1984. Nature 308, April 26.
Sewell, W. Stuart. 1949. Brief Biographies of Famous Men
and Women. New York, NY: Permabooks.
Smethurst, Arthur F. 1955. Modern Science and Christian
Beliefs. New York, NY: Abingdon Press.
von Braun, Wernher. 1981. Science Verifies God. Science
and Religion. David L. Bender and Bruno Leone, eds. St. Paul,
MN: Greenhaven Press.
Williams, L. Pearce. 1970. Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Vol. 4. Charles C. Gillispie, ed. New York, NY: Charles Scribner’s
Sons.
Wright, Ernest and Mary Wright. 1962. Richards Topical Encyclopedia.
Vol. 13. New York, NY: The Richards Co., Inc.
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