Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Christiana ZennerApril 17, 2020
(iStock)

Roger Haight’s newest book, Faith and Evolution, asks: “Can a conversation with science, especially with evolution...reveal more clearly the logic of Christian faith and its relationship to the method and understanding produced by the sciences?” Haight’s answer is a qualified “yes”—and the success of his project correlates to how he arrives at that conclusion.

Faith and Evolutionby Roger Haight, S.J.

Orbis Books                      

264p, $30

This is a book of systematic theology, not religious or scientific history; thus, while Darwin is mentioned from time to time, the historical debates and theological gyrations of the late 19th and early 20th century after his Origin of Species (1859) and Descent of Man (1871) make no appearance in Faith and Evolution. This means that there is no treatment of topics such as the home-grown biblical literalism (like Young Earth Creationism) that characterizes much of fundamentalist Protestantism in the United States, nor the formal, magisterial evaluations of evolution that have been issued by the Catholic Church since 1996.

This is not a detriment but a clarification, because for Haight, the core of the project is to ask “what science can teach Christian theologians about our own self-understanding” and to offer an answer to Christians who “either do not know how to process their Christian faith in this context or call it into question altogether.”

At play in this book are cosmology and astrophysics, and the phenomena of causality, emergence and complexity in numerous material domains, as well as the experience of human consciousness.

The focus on evolution in the book’s title is significant, and it is also a placeholder: The dramatic, open-system logic that now characterizes the contemporary sciences is perhaps best communicated by the Darwinian revolution. But also at play in this book are cosmology and astrophysics (e.g., the Big Bang as it relates to creation ex nihilo) and the phenomena of causality, emergence and complexity in numerous material domains, as well as the experience of human consciousness.

Undergirding the analyses throughout the book is a “negative” normativity, a principle stating that “theology cannot deny what is commonly taken as established scientific conclusions about reality and retain its credibility.” Readers looking for a “warfare” model between theology and science will have to look elsewhere. “Science should not be regarded as an enemy of theology but as a friend and ally,” writes Haight. The question is how theology can be responsive to scientific realities while also retaining its distinctive integrity.

Chapters 1 to 3 address how to think about scientific depictions of the world; the distinctive capabilities embodied by the sciences and by Christian faith; and evolution and God. Chapters 4 to 8 engage classical systematic topics, from the doctrine of God (understood here as Presence, through Christian registers of scripture, grace and spirit) to notions of sin, Christology and eschatology in evolutionary contexts.

In many chapters a concluding section addresses questions of spirituality, which for Haight “consists of personal history and should be understood in narrative terms,” and for which “metaphysical structure comes to the surface of everyday life in an ethics of communion of being and an ecological ethics,” among other ways. Animating the project is a spiritual concern: Many people “do not have and are looking for the means for processing their faith in today’s secular, evolutionary, and technological world.”

Faith and Evolution is characteristically careful, methodical and precise—hallmarks of Haight’s writing style and theological methodology.

The book is characteristically careful, methodical and precise—hallmarks of Haight’s writing style and theological methodology. Readers familiar with the development of Catholic theologies of nature and creation will find much to converse with here, as will philosophical theologians. Haight converses steadily with theologians such as John Haught, William Stoeger, S.J.; Edward Schillebeeckx, O.P.; Paul Tillich; Karl Rahner, S.J.; Kathryn Tanner; and, of course, Aquinas.

Haight is correct in his statement that “the dialogue with evolutionary science has changed the context for thinking about how God relates to the world,” and he concludes that a “differentiated integration” of the narrative structures and spheres of science and theology is what is most viable. “An evolutionary context thus changes the framework of ancient conceptualization and thinking, but it does not alter the theological vision,” writes Haight in Chapter 6.

For one semester in graduate school, I had the pleasure of learning from Roger Haight in a classroom. Like generations of his students, I learned from him to appreciate the art of a concise one-page argument and his surreptitious, wry humor (he refers to his own analysis in Chapter 8 as a “brief, abstract, and overly dense representation”). But perhaps the longest-lasting spiritual lesson I took from him appears in the pages of this book too: “If knowing were not oriented to human action, it is hard to imagine what else it would be for.”

We don’t have comments turned on everywhere anymore. We have recently relaunched the commenting experience at America and are aiming for a more focused commenting experience with better moderation by opening comments on a select number of articles each day.

But we still want your feedback. You can join the conversation about this article with us in social media on Twitter or Facebook, or in one of our Facebook discussion groups for various topics.

Or send us feedback on this article with one of the options below:

We welcome and read all letters to the editor but, due to the volume received, cannot guarantee a response.

In order to be considered for publication, letters should be brief (around 200 words or less) and include the author’s name and geographic location. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.

We open comments only on select articles so that we can provide a focused and well-moderated discussion on interesting topics. If you think this article provides the opportunity for such a discussion, please let us know what you'd like to talk about, or what interesting question you think readers might want to respond to.

If we decide to open comments on this article, we will email you to let you know.

If you have a message for the author, we will do our best to pass it along. Note that if the article is from a wire service such as Catholic News Service, Religion News Service, or the Associated Press, we will not have direct contact information for the author. We cannot guarantee a response from any author.

We welcome any information that will help us improve the factual accuracy of this piece. Thank you.

Please consult our Contact Us page for other options to reach us.

City and state/province, or if outside Canada or the U.S., city and country. 
When you click submit, this article page will reload. You should see a message at the top of the reloaded page confirming that your feedback has been received.

The latest from america

Can you be a Catholic and a feminist? Julie Hanlon Rubio gives her answer in the introduction of her new book—in the form of a confident “yes.”
Amirah OrozcoDecember 12, 2024
Joyelle McSweeney's 'Death Styles'—her 10th book across creative and critical genres—rewards our attention.
Nick Ripatrazone December 12, 2024
With his new biography, 'The Rebel’s Clinic: The Revolutionary Lives of Frantz Fanon,' Adam Shatz seeks to give us Fanon the person, and not just his most famous soundbites.
Jacqui OesterbladDecember 12, 2024
Peter Ackroyd declares at the outset of 'The English Soul: Faith of a Nation' that Christianity has been “the reflection, perhaps the embodiment of the English soul.” But his book is not about Christianity so much as it is about some notable figures in Protestant England.
Eamon DuffyDecember 12, 2024