50 Key Concepts in Theology
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50 Key Concepts in Theology - Rayment-Pickard
Natural Theology
A form of theology that takes its knowledge of God from nature rather than from revelation. St Thomas Aquinas was the first to make the distinction between ‘natural theology’ and ‘revealed theology’. ‘Natural theology’ assumes that we can understand something of God using our natural faculties of reason and ordinary experience. ‘Revealed theology’ assumes that our knowledge of God must come through special channels of divine revelation, such as the Bible or supernatural experiences. Natural theology predates Christianity and can be found, for example, in Aristotle, who believed that the natural world is a rational system of causes and effects. God, for Aristotle, is ‘the first cause’ or ‘unmoved mover’. Thomas Aquinas built upon Aristotle’s philosophy to develop his own natural theology. Aquinas argued that there is an ‘analogy of being’ (analogia entis) between God and his creation. Although infinitely inferior to God, the created world is still God’s work, and consequently we can draw an analogy between what we see in nature and the reality of God. Natural theology assumes, first, that God has created a rational, purposeful and ordered world; and secondly, that God has given us the faculties of perception and reason with which to appreciate his design of his creation. This way of thinking became popular in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries when natural science appeared to be proving natural theology right by revealing the basic laws of the universe. The most famous case for natural theology was offered by William Paley, who devised the so-called ‘Watchmaker Argument’. If we found a watch on the ground, we would assume the existence of a watchmaker; similarly, when we see the design of the world, we assume the existence of a creator God. Natural theology suffered a crippling blow from David Hume, who delivered a withering attack on it in his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. Hume’s main point was that while we know from experience that watches have watchmakers, we cannot know from experience that worlds have creators. We do not know how worlds are generated, and it is not logical to assume that they are made in the same fashion as human artefacts. Hume’s arguments – and others against natural theology – have to be taken seriously. But some kind of natural theology is essential if we are to reconcile theological and scientific knowledge. If our reason and experience can tell us nothing about God, then science – whose building-blocks are reason and experience – can contribute nothing to theology. But the kind of natural theology we need is not Paley’s naïve concept of design (currently being revived by the Intelligent Design lobby) but a theology that works to reconcile the real achievements of science with the revealed insights of theology. THINKERS Aristotle (384–322 bc) argued that everything in the natural world has a teleological purpose: ‘Nature does nothing in vain.’ St Augustine (354–430) first used the term ‘natural theology’ to describe the theological reflections of the pre-Christian classical philosophers, who could not benefit from the revelation of God in Jesus Christ. Karl Barth (1886–1968) argued that all knowledge of God arises from God’s self-revelation. (See ‘Analogy of faith’.) Charles Darwin (1809–82): although he admired William Paley’s design argument as a young man, his own theory of evolution contradicted Paley’s view that the natural world had been ‘designed’ by God. Stanley Hauerwas (1940– ) has argued strongly that proper natural religion must be based upon revealed religion, because an investigation of the natural world that is not informed by God must be in error. Thus Hauerwas reckons Karl Barth, of all people, to be the best kind of natural theologian! Richard Hooker (1554–1600) argued the very Anglican view that we need both revealed and natural theology: ‘Nature and Scripture do serve in such full sort that they both jointly and not severally either of them be so complete that unto everlasting felicity we need not the knowledge of anything more than these two may easily furnish.’ William James (1842–1910), in The Varieties of Religious Experience, objected that the God of natural theology ‘must be a God of universal laws exclusively, a God who does a wholesale, not a retail business. He cannot accommodate his processes to the convenience of individuals … [whose] destinies weigh nothing and determine nothing in the world’s irremediable currents of events.’ John Ray (1628–1705) argued that God could be understood by studying his creation: ‘There is … no occupation more worthy and delightful than to contemplate the beauteous works of nature and honour the infinite wisdom and goodness of God.’ William Paley (1743–1805), in his Natural Theology, or Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity (1802), compared nature to a watch found on the ground: ‘When we come to inspect the watch, we perceive … that its several parts are framed and put together for a purpose … the inference we think is inevitable, that the watch must have had a maker.’ St Paul (3–65) argued at the Areopagus in Athens that the Athenians had reached an understanding of an ‘unknown God’ without any revealed knowledge of God. IDEAS Analogia entis: the doctrine, associated with Thomas Aquinas, that God can be known by analogy with his creation. The Bridgewater Treatises: eight books ‘on the Power, Wisdom and Goodness of God as manifested in the Creation’, commissioned by Revd Francis Henry Egerton, the Earl of Bridgewater, in the early nineteenth century. The Deists relied exclusively on natural theology, on the grounds that the being and attributes of God are revealed perfectly in the workings of the natural world. Intelligent Design: a form of the design argument revived by fundamentalist Christians in the early twenty-first century. The argument suffers from all the weaknesses of the eighteenth-century arguments from design. Revealed theology: theology that assumes that all knowledge of God must come from special divine revelation, as it says in the hymn: ‘Judge not the Lord by feeble sense’. BOOKS James Barr, Biblical Faith and Natural Theology (OUP, 1995) Stanley Hauerwas, With the Grain of the Universe: The Church’s Witness and Natural Theology (Brazos Press, 2001) Alister McGrath, The Order of Things: Explorations in Scientific Theology (Blackwell, 2006) |
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