THE DOCTRINE OF CREATION AND MODERN SCIENCE |
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Authors: | Wolfhart Pannenberg |
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Affiliation: | Wolfhart Pannenberg is professor of systematic theology and director of the Ecumenical Institute at Universitat Munchen, Evangelisch-Theologische Facultat, Schel- IingstraBe SIIII, 8000 Munchen 40, Federal Republic of Germany. He presented this paper at the Pannenberg Symposium held at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago 16–17 April 1985. ©1988 by Wolfhart Pannenberg. |
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Abstract: | 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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Keywords: | contingency creation emergent evolution theory field God spirit of God |
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