★★★★★
This
is a fantastic book idea! Nearly half of America’s scientists believe
science and religion are compatible. So, let’s take believing scientists
from the three major monotheistic religions—Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam—and get them to talk about evolution. Why the evidence forces them
to acknowledge a 13.7 billion year old universe and a human race that
evolved over nearly 4 billion years, and then how they reconcile this
scientific evidence with the Bible.
The
first half of the book, which discusses the evidence for planetary and
biological evolution, is interesting but not as strong. All readers will
presumably be interested in religion, but not all will be interested in
science, and I think this section could have been summed up more
succinctly. Ten pages for each of the three writers would have been
sufficient.
The second half, however, is superb. Let me give you a sampling of each writer.
Christian scientist Howard Van Till:
Howard has learned to respect scripture in a new way. Claims of divine
inspiration and infallibility are unwarranted. Many people, he surmises,
will find this disappointing. But for him, it “feels like a load has
been taken off my shoulders.” He now recognizes the Bible as “storied
theology,” creatively crafted stories shaped by a deeply theological
agenda.
Trying to
reconcile Genesis with what we now know about our origins is “wrong,
wrong, wrong. This wonderful bit of dramatized theology should never be
mistaken for some primitive version of Big Bang cosmology.” Concordism,
says Howard, is a failed strategy.
Jewish scientist David Kay:
We are wrong to dismiss our ancient ancestors as primitives. These guys
knew the rains came (or didn’t) regardless of the faithfulness of their
fellow Hebrews. Readers of the Torah back in the day knew better than
to take it literally, but rather sought in its pages a deeper lesson.
“If
reality doesn’t conform to Scripture, don’t assume either is wrong: the
problem isn’t reality or Scripture; the problem is your own
understanding of one, the other, or most likely both.” Rabbinic
interpretation finds ways to understand sacred text that are both
reverent and relevant.
Muslim scientist T. O. Shanavas: Thankfully
for more conservative readers, they may find more of a kindred spirit
in Shanavas, who definitely believes in the Genesis story. Not that
Shanavas disagrees with evolution; on the contrary, he argues
convincingly that the Qur’an describes our evolutionary beginnings much
more directly than the Hebrew Bible. Genesis is accurate, but Adam and
Eve should be understood not as a story of biological origin. Adam was
the first spiritual man.
Prepare
to be astounded as Shanavas digs up ancient Muslim thinker after
thinker who describes natural selection and the creation of man in
evolutionary terms. These guys pre-dated Darwin by as much as a thousand
years! Yikes, while we Christians were fumbling around in the dark
ages, were the Muslims beating us to the punch? Many of us still remain
in the dark, and it’s time we realized that, in a number of ways, we
can remain Muslims/Christians/Jews without rejecting the scientific
discoveries which should leave us in awe of our world.
I should love to read this! Thanks for the review.
ReplyDeleteLee -- Thanks for reading our book and for your review. And Sheila -- please do!
ReplyDeleteQuite welcome, David, great book!
ReplyDelete