Theology and Science Natural Theology Re
Theology and Science Natural Theology Re
Theology and Science Natural Theology Re
Russell Re Manning
To cite this article: Russell Re Manning (2017) Natural Theology Reconsidered (Again), Theology
and Science, 15:3, 289-301, DOI: 10.1080/14746700.2017.1335064
ABSTRACT KEYWORDS
Neither the “traditional” nor the “revisionist” accounts of the nature Natural theology; faithful
and fate of natural theology are adequate to the task of explaining theology; Robert Boyle;
the peculiar trajectory of its history and, in particular, the Michael Buckley; Paul Tillich
consensus view of its apparent terminal decline. Contrary to the
accepted narrative, natural theology was not fatally undermined
by the scientific revolution. Even if temporarily marginalized by
disciplines such as systematics and dogmatics, natural theology
never went away. It is still with us, and it provides a healthy grasp
of the divine presence in the natural world.
Nothing is more disastrous for the theologian himself and more despicable to those whom he
wants to convince than a theology of self-certainty.1
In this article I propose to have another look at the very idea of natural theology and, more
specifically, to reconsider (again) the vexed question of its apparent demise. I shall also, by
way of conclusion, say something about the future of natural theology, the prospects for
which are, I think, far from as bleak as is commonly believed.
In brief, my argument will be that neither what I shall call the “traditional” nor the
“revisionist” accounts of the nature and fate of natural theology are adequate to the
task of explaining the peculiar trajectory of its history and, in particular, the consensus
view of its apparent terminal decline since its alleged “heyday” in the original series of
Boyle Lectures established by Robert Boyle’s benefaction of 1691.
To anticipate my main contention, I want to suggest that the fundamental reason
behind the seeming eclipse of natural theology in the modern era is the increasing
“specialization” of Christian theology in the attempts, characteristic of the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries, by theologians to establish an unambiguous subject matter
for theology: initially through the notion of faith and subsequently through that of rev-
elation. It is, I propose this quest for disciplinary purity that proved fatal for the inher-
ently “impure” enterprise of natural theology—namely that of looking to nature to speak
of God. The conviction of modern theology that it be primarily—indeed exclusively—
about religion or about God’s own self-revelation is, I propose, incompatible with the
idea—crucial to the vibrancy of natural theology—that knowledge of God is not
restricted to one specific domain—be it religion or revelation—but is available, in
some form or another, to all simply on the basis of their experiences of the world
they find themselves in.
But I am getting ahead of myself. Before setting out my “more revisionist” intervention
into the historiographical question of the apparent rise and fall of natural theology and its
epistemic authority (by which I simply mean whether its claims to knowledge are taken
seriously or not), I want to take a step back and say a few words about the origins of
natural theology as a style of thinking, or better perhaps, as a way of seeing the world
and the “whispers of divinity” therein. In so doing, I also hope to define my terms
more clearly and to give an indication as to why the question of its alleged eclipse is of
more than narrow academic interest.
Previously, as Foucault puts it, “the truth of all these marks – whether they are woven
into nature itself or whether they exist in lines on parchments or in libraries – [was] every-
where the same: coeval with the institution of God.”5 An important consequence of the
Baconian “sharp distinction” between the knowledge yielded by the interpretation of
the two books is that it becomes possible to define natural theology against revealed theol-
ogy in such a way that the two are presented as separate and nonoverlapping disciplines,
which then stand in some sort of relation one to the other—be that complementary or
antagonistic.
This natural/revealed contrast has firmly established itself as the essential starting point
for an understanding of the character of natural theology. It is, however, not a helpful
point of departure. By contrast, an historical approach to defining natural theology
suggests instead that natural theology is best defined not as a body of knowledge distinct
from the systematic reflection upon revelation but as an attitude or way of thinking about
the divine that can take its place alongside other theological attitudes. In this sense, what
marks natural theology out from other forms of theology (other attitudes to or ways of
thinking about God) is not so much the source of its knowledge of the divine but
rather the manner of the thinking and a sense of what the point of that reflection is.6
To make a little more sense of this suggestion, let me turn, for a moment, in Werner
Jaeger’s words, to “the origin of natural theology and the Greeks.”7 As Jeager puts it:
the speculations of the pre-Socratics about the Divine displayed a decided singleness of char-
acter in their intellectual form, despite their diversity of aspects and the multiplicity of their
points of departure. Their immediate goal was the knowledge of nature or of Being. The
problem of the origin of all things was so comprehensive and went so far beyond all tra-
ditional beliefs and opinions that any answer to it had to involve some new insight into
the true nature of these higher powers which the myths revered as “the gods.”8
He continues to affirm that “if we ask upon what this new evaluation is based, we find that
the real motive for so radical a change in the form of the godhead lies in the idea of the All
292 R. RE MANNING
(to olon, to pan).”9 As a result, nothing finite or limited has “any right to the title of divi-
nity”: a thought that in turn leads to the first stirrings of natural theology. Natural theol-
ogy, then, in this original sense is not simply “talk about the gods” but the struggle to say
anything at all fitting to the true nature of the divine.
Crucially, however, this struggle did not take the form of an abstraction away from finite
things. Instead, it took the form of an engagement with nature. It is, as Jaeger declares, a
“fact that whenever the Greeks experienced the Divine, they always had their eyes on
reality.”10 Physics, metaphysics, and theology belong unavoidably together and it is pre-
cisely this holistic, inclusive, synthetic (impure) attitude that is characteristic of that
approach of natural theology that Jaeger describes as “a specific creation of the Greek
mind”:
Theology is a mental attitude which is characteristically Greek, and has something to do with
the great importance which the Greek thinkers attribute to the logos, for the word theologia
means the approach to God or the gods (theos1 by means of the logos. To the Greeks God
became a problem.11
This problem of God raised by the pre-Socratic concern for the absolute lies behind the
classic distinction between three types of theology: mythical, physical, and civil. Augustine
reports this distinction, which he attributes to the first century BC Roman writer Marcus
Terentius Varro, although it is clear that this is a distinction that Varro himself derives
from a well-established Greek tradition.12 Augustine cites Varro’s description:
They call one kind of theology fabulous (mythicon), and this is chiefly used by poets; another
natural (physicon), and this is used chiefly by philosophers; another civil (civile), and this is
what the people in the various countries use …
As to the first of the three I mentioned, there are in it many inventions that are inconsistent
with the dignity and the true nature of the Immortals. Such are the tales that one god was
born from a head, another from a thigh, another from drops of blood, that gods have
been thieves, and adulterers, and have been slaves of men. In a word, herein is attributed
to the gods everything which might be attributed not only to mankind, but to the most
degraded of mankind …
The second is that on which the philosophers have left us many books, wherein they discuss
the origin, dwelling-place, nature, and character of the gods: whether they came into being in
time or have existed from all eternity: whether they are derived from fire, as Heraclitus
believes, or from numbers, as Pythagoras holds, or from atoms, as Epicurus supposes; and
so on with other theories, the discussion of which is more easily tolerated within the walls
of a lectureroom than out of doors in public …
The third sort is that which it is the duty of citizens in states, and especially of those who are
priests, to know and to put into practice. From this we learn what gods are to receive public
worship and from whom; what sacrifices and what other rites are to be performed and by
whom …
The first sort of theology is best adapted to the theatre (ad theatrum), the second to the world
(ad mundum), the third to the state (ad urbem).13
Augustine censures Varro for succumbing to the pressures of a social conformity in his
endorsement of civil theology in spite of his obvious (to Augustine at least) inclination
towards the natural; for his own part, Augustine himself is unequivocal:
THEOLOGY AND SCIENCE 293
Some gods are natural, others established by men; and concerning those who have been so
established, the literature of the poets gives one account, and that of the priest another –
both of which are, nevertheless, so friendly the one to the other, through fellowship in false-
hood, that they are both pleasing to the demons, to whom the doctrine of the truth is hostile
… So then, neither by the fabulous not by the civil theology does anyone obtain eternal life
… .Both are base; both are damnable.14
To put the contrast slightly differently (and less polemically), we might identify the
three different types of theology described by Varro as indicating three alternative atti-
tudes towards the task of theology. The point of mythical theology is to tell stories of
the gods; it has an educational function in preserving the narratives of a particular religion
tradition. What is important to note here is that in spite of the creative and imaginative
character of this poetic theology, its primary purpose is to re-tell or re-narrate an estab-
lished or given set of stories. This is theology as repetition. By contrast, the purpose of
civil theology is resolutely practical; its aim is to maintain the pax deorum and to
ensure that the institutions of the state reflect their divine origins. Civil theology is political
and moral theology; it is as Hobbes put it “not philosophy but law.” As such it is important
to note that the primary concern of such a theology is with the secular and its primary
purpose is to regulate human affairs in accordance with an established religious tradition.
Against both these intentions the aim of natural theology—the theology of the philo-
sophers—is rather in a sense simply to be concerned about God. This concern, or
worry, about God is, in an important respect, gratuitous. Natural theology is concerned
about God for its own sake—simply because the attempt to think about God compels
and invites free and unconstrained reflection. God is an irresistible problem for thought.
At the same time, of course, this sense of natural theology is in Varro’s terms best
adapted to the world; God is of concern because the thought of God is unavoidable to
the philosopher—or indeed, anyone—seeking to make sense of her world and her place
in it (including a twenty-first century scientific naturalist). Such a natural theology is
the culmination of a philosophical engagement with reality, an engagement that trans-
cends reductive naturalism in the ventured hope that, in the words of the Cambridge Pla-
tonist John Smith, “the whole of this visible universe be whispering out the notions of a
Deity.” Yet, as Smith continues, “we cannot understand it without some interpreter
within,”15 namely human reason, or logos—that disclosure power that gives confidence
that these speculations whilst always risked and never finally accomplished are nonethe-
less not in vain, but rather transformative and even in some sense redemptive. And yet, we
should be wary of an over-hasty conclusion that this is pure human reason, unaided and
autonomous.
As a further speculation here, I suggest that a fourth type may usefully be added to this
tripartite scheme of mythic, natural, and civil theology. For want of a better term, I shall call
this type “faithful or pistic (pisticon) theology.”16 By this type of fideistic theology, I want to
indicate what might be called the theology of the believers; it is, to follow Varro’s formula,
best adapted to the church (ad ecclesia). This theology is above all dogmatic or creedal; its
aim is to explicate the contents of a religious tradition. In contrast to the mythical type of
theology, this is not simply a repetition but an exegetical attitude best encapsulated in
Anselm’s famous “motto” of “faith seeking understanding.” Of course, this type of theology
is often described precisely as “natural theology”—from Anselm’s aim in the Proslogion “to
prove in a single argument the existence of God, and whatsoever we believe of God” to
294 R. RE MANNING
Thomas Aquinas’ admission that the proposition “God exists” is not self-evident to us; but
needs to be demonstrated by things that are more known to us’ to name the two most
obvious examples.17 However, the key distinction that I want to make between this type
of theology—faithful theology—and that which Varro designates as natural theology lies
in the goal of the respective approaches. Faithful (or fideistic to use Ted Peters’ term) theology
takes as its starting point a certain definition of God and aims through its analyses to remain
true to its initial assertion; natural theology by contrast has no dogmatic starting point from
which to begin and which serves to constrain (or perhaps better contain) its reflections,
instead on this view natural theology is better characterized as the search for a definition
of God, a quest which it knows can never and will never be fulfilled. In this sense, far from
natural theology, what might result from an engagement with the natural from the perspec-
tive of a faithful theology would be a “theology of nature.”18
My central contention in raising this fourth type of theology, is that faithful theologies
are, from the outset undertaken on the basis of a commitment to a certain ecclesiology,
rather than from a commitment to “revealed” as opposed to “natural” sources of their
theology. Another way of putting this, echoing Martin Heidegger, is to characterize this
approach as a “positive” theology, where the positum—i.e. the “what is given for theol-
ogy”—is not primarily revelation, but faith. As Heidegger put it in the course of dis-
tinguishing his own philosophy from theology: “theology itself is founded primarily by
faith, even though its statements and procedures of proof formally derive from free oper-
ations of reason.”19
This is, of course, not to deny the philosophical sophistication or rigour of Anselm or
Aquinas (or of their successors in “philosophical theology”)—far from it. However, it is to
suggest that this approach entails a significantly different estimation of the character and
role of philosophy for theology. At the risk of overstating the contrast, it is instructive to be
reminded of Bertrand Russell’s gloriously allergic conclusion to his discussion of Aquinas
in his History of Western Philosophy:
There is little of the true philosophic spirit in Aquinas. He does not, like the Platonic Socrates,
set out to follow wherever the argument may lead. He is not engaged in an enquiry, the result
of which it is impossible to know in advance. Before he begins to philosophize, he already
knows the truth; it is declared in the Catholic faith … .The finding of arguments for a con-
clusion given in advance is not philosophy, but special pleading. I cannot, therefore, feel that
he deserves to be put on a level with the best philosophers of either Greece or of modern
times.20
Bertrand Russell is, of course, undoubtedly mistaken in his dismissive view of Aquinas’
engagement with philosophy as a kind of “pick and mix” exercise of opportunistic self-jus-
tification, combined with smug dogmatic indifference. He is also wrong in his denigration
of Aquinas’ philosophical acumen. But, he does have an important point: Aquinas’ starting
point is not that of the Platonic Socrates, who begins in awe and wonder knowing nothing
and whose philosophical journey culminates in the achievement of a natural theology of
learned ignorance. Aquinas’ point of departure is rather that of a faithful believer, whose
sacra doctrina aims to treat “all things … under the aspect of God” (ST 1.1.7) and which
itself is subalternated to God’s own knowledge of himself. To return to my previous dis-
tinction: whereas natural theology is in search of God, striving towards a definition of God,
faithful theology is the attempt to understand a God already in some sense known (and
THEOLOGY AND SCIENCE 295
certainly known to himself), it aims to expound upon its received and adhered to defi-
nition of God.
Bertrand Russell is correct in as much as it does seem clear that Aquinas and the Pla-
tonic Socrates do have different estimations of the scope and ambition of philosophy
within theology; this difference is partly, I suggest, explained by my distinction between
“faithful” and “natural” theologies.
For Buckley, early modern natural theology represented an attempt by Christian theo-
logians to outflank any potential atheistic natural philosophy by taking it on on its own
terms and “occupying”—and thereby neutralizing—its distinctive epistemic authority.
Unfortunately, the irony of the story for Buckley is that precisely by aping the natural
scientists the theologians in effect abandoned their own particular, native, if you will,
grounds of authority. By adopting the norms and criteria of the natural philosophers
the theologians evacuated their own—properly religious—grounds of any authority.
From such honest but misguided attempts to outplay the scientists at their own game
the legitimacy of distinctly theological argument was lost and the modern situation of
default atheism was born.
For Buckley, the lesson is clear: theology must abandon its aspiration to get the better of
atheistic natural philosophy—theology should have no desire to become scientific; such a
legitimatory tactic is bound to fail. Not because of the inevitable superiority of science over
theology, but simply because the dice are unavoidably loaded. Theology just cannot
become philosophy without ceasing to be theology. Like a cricket team endeavouring to
prove their superiority over a rugby team by playing—and obviously losing—a game of
rugby, so natural theology is a doomed enterprise—never truly natural nor truly theology.
Instead, for Buckley, theologians ought to summon up the courage of their convictions and
return unapologetically to their own indigenous roots—a task that has recently been taken
up with gusto by the adherents of so-called “radical orthodoxy.”
In many ways Buckley’s argument reprises the analysis offered by David Hume in his
posthumously published Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.23 There Hume ridiculed
the efforts of the natural theologians, represented by the character of Cleanthes and
instead concluded that theological speculation ought to be governed by faith. As an
hypothesis God fails miserably to satisfy the demands of scientific enquiry, resulting iro-
nically in the triumph of the “careless skepticism” of the character Philo. The moral of the
story then—fearlessly ignored by Dawkins et al., in spite of their professed great esteem for
Hume—is that God fails as an hypothesis precisely because God is not an hypothesis: God
does not/cannot explain anything in scientific terms and hence if that is what natural
theology is, then it is obvious that it will soon enough wither and die.
Towards a “more revisionist” history of the rise and fall of natural theology
in modernity
However, and here I turn to my own “more revisionist” account, unfortunately for them
both Buckley and Hume fundamentally misrepresent the natural theology over whose
funeral they preside. Far from the disciplinary purity envisaged by such definitions of
natural theology as that offered by James Barr, the natural theology of the original
series of Boyle Lectures, for instance, by no means stood in opposition to its supposed
poetic, civil, or indeed “faithful” rivals; but rather frequently moved from one to
another without any noticeable anxiety. In some sense, indeed, it is questionable
whether the natural theology typical of this period is in fact “natural” theology at all,
for it repeatedly violates the disciplinary strictures and is as much concerned with revel-
ation as it is with nature. Instead, in their different and non-homogenous ways, the orig-
inal Boyle Lecturers may rightly be considered as the heyday of modern natural theology
in their joyful promiscuity with regard to ways of thinking about God—and in some of the
THEOLOGY AND SCIENCE 297
rather radical conclusions that such speculations led them to. What unites the Boyle Lec-
turers—and early-modern natural theology more generally—and what does, after all,
make them exemplary instances of natural theology is their insistence on the inadequacy
of any particular “essence” of Christianity—be that the experimental natural philosophy or
the “book learned” Scriptural and ecclesial traditions.
What brought this strand of natural theology to its apparent end, then, was not, I
suggest, its inappropriate mimicking of the epistemic authority of the emergent natural
philosophy, but rather an alternative loss of nerve. Rather than holding fast to the
plural and multi-disciplinary vision of natural theology as the inherently unstable enter-
prise of seeing more in nature than nature alone, panicked by the apparent threat of
atheism (the rumours of which were greatly exaggerated in the early modern period—
as they always tend to be), the theologians looked instead for certainty and the
single-minded security of an essentialist approach to theology that identified theology
with systematic reflection on religion and/or revelation.
Natural theology appears to fail, in my argument, because it got crowded out by various
quests for theological purity, with the result that it is only those exclusivist forms of natural
theology—i.e. those that affirm (precisely against the grain of the wider tradition of natural
theology) that reason (or science) alone can suffice to provide knowledge of God without
any reference to other sources—that are recognized (and condemned) as such. In other
words, natural theology became reduced to those atypical forms that construed it as con-
cerned with, as it were, epistemic access points to God, such that the persistence of the
heirs to the broader tradition of Varro’s theology of the philosophers went unrecognized.
As such, Karl Barth’s aversion to natural theology is well-founded; if the only legitimate
form of theology is faithful theology as a response to the clearly circumscribed “positum”
(or subject matter) of God’s self-revelation in Christ, then understandably any claims to
alternative sources of knowledge of God are to be resisted in the strongest possible terms.
In this sense, Barth’s antipathy towards natural theology is equally shared by his sup-
posed adversary, the “Father of liberal theology,” F. D. E. Schleiermacher. Whereas Barth’s
“Nein!” to any prospect of natural theology is justly famous, Schleiermacher’s identifi-
cation of theology with systematic reflection on the Christian faith (theology as Glauben-
slehre) is equally dogmatic in its rejection of the messy uncertainty of open-ended natural
theology. And this in spite of Schleiermacher’s heroic work in translating Plato into
German and insisting on the importance of the aesthetic for theology. Ultimately,
however, for Schleiermacher, theology is to be subordinated to faith, such that the
“father of liberal theology” seems to have had more in common with that most dramati-
cally “faithful” of the nineteenth-century theologians, Søren Kierkegaard, than he did with
his contemporary, great rival and proponent of a synthetic form of natural theology,
G. W. F. Hegel.
But: before we disappear down the rabbit hole of German philosophical theology, I
want to turn from its apparent demise to the strange persistence of natural theology
after its official eclipse.
natural theology was fatally undermined, by the scientific revolution; nor indeed, as
Buckley suggests, that it originated with the emergence of early-modern natural philos-
ophy. It is undeniable that natural theology was indeed side-lined in the course of the nine-
teenth and twentieth centuries as a result of the consensus turn to theological positivism in
theology’s search for disciplinary purity. And yet throughout the same period natural
theology’s epistemic authority remained largely intact: it just no longer appealed as the
preferred option for the theologians, replaced instead by the rise and institutional estab-
lishment of systematics or dogmatics as the truly theological discipline.
Whilst marginalized, however, natural theology never really went away and continued
to develop, frequently in some surprising situations. For example, natural theologies are
found in the works of the German Idealists, Hegel Schelling, and their English co-con-
spirator, S. T. Coleridge, as well as with the reforming theologians of Lux Mundi. That
there was so much more to nineteenth-century natural theology than our exclusive
focus on Paley and the Bridgewater Treatises deserves far greater recognition. Indeed
John Henry Newman’s strident rejection of natural theology—as what he called a “religion
of inferences” that turns “theology into evidences”—is echoed by Coleridge, who con-
demned Paley’s misguided efforts to prove the existence and nature of God through an
extended argument from design even as he advanced his own of natural theology as
part and parcel of his wider project of reanimating the Christian imagination of his time.24
One further compelling example of the persistent yet transformed presence of natural
theology late into the twentieth century is Paul Tillich and his radical reformulation of the
very task of theology away from dogmatics to what he called “theology of culture.” Whilst
Tillich explicitly rejected any appeals to “nature” for his constructive theology, his reti-
cence was not a rejection of the logic and aspirations of Varronian natural theology,
but instead a (mare) revisionist view of how best to characterize the world in which we
live and through which we can come to knowledge of God. For Tillich, simply put, the
world that we experience is that of historical existence and not merely nature as given
to us by the sciences. Hence, Tillich’s call for a project of “theology of culture” in which
claims about God are to be made through normative cultural interpretation and not
only through the systematic unpacking of doctrinal loci. In this sense then, Tillich’s theol-
ogy of culture, even if it has little whatsoever to do with arguments to prove the existence
of God—an enterprise that Tillich found ridiculous and not a little blasphemous—is one of
the most developed natural theologies of the twentieth century. Of course, Tillich also
wrote a Systematic Theology and yet this fact hardly distracts from his basic allergy
(characteristic of natural theologians) to all attempts to identify the subject matter of
theology exclusively in anything specifically “religious.”25
Notes
1. Paul Tillich, “The Theologian,” in The Shaking of the Foundations (London: SCM Press,
1949), 125.
2. See Helen de Cruz and Johan de Smedt, A Natural History of Natural Theology. The Cognitive
Science of Theology and Philosophy of Religion (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014).
3. James Barr, Biblical Faith and Natural Theology (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993), 1.
4. Tertullian, Heretics, 7.
300 R. RE MANNING
5. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: an Archaeology of the Human Sciences 2nd edn
(Routledge, 2001).
6. For a collection that attempts to engage the breadth of natural theology from a variety of per-
spectives (historical, religious, philosophical, scientific, and aesthetic-cultural), see Russell Re
Manning, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Natural Theology (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2013).
7. Werner Jaeger begins the 1947 published version of his 1936 Gifford lectures, The Theology of
the Early Greek Philosophers (Oxford: Clarendon, 1947) with the claim that the book might
well have this alternative title.
8. Jaeger (1947), 172.
9. Jaeger (1947), 173.
10. Jaeger (1947), 173.
11. Jaeger (1947), 4.
12. Augustine, City of God, VI.5.
13. Augustine, City of God, VI.5.
14. Augustine, City of God, VI.6.
15. John Smith, “Discourse Of the Existence and Nature of God” in Select Discourses (Cam-
bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1859), 129.
16. For an earlier version of this typology, see Russell Re Manning, “A Perspective on Natural
Theology from Continental Philosophy” in Russell Re Manning, ed. The Oxford Handbook
of Natural Theology (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 262–275, 265–268.
17. Anselm, “Preface” to Proslogion in The Prayers and Meditations of Saint Anselm with the Pro-
slogion (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1973); Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica (New York:
Benziger Brothers, 1946), 1.2.1.
18. This relates to, but crucially reformulates, Ian Barbour’s influential distinction between
"natural theology" and "theology of nature" in Ian Barbour, Religion and Science: Historical
and Contemporary Issues (New York: Harper, 1977).
19. Martin Heidegger, “Phenomenology and Theology,” in John D. Caputo, ed. The Religious
(Oxford: Blackwell, 2002), 57.
20. Bertrand Russell, History of Western Philosophy (Routledge, 1946, 1961), 453–4.
21. John Hedley Brooke, Science and Religion. Some Historical Perspectives (Cambridge: Cam-
bridge University Press, 1991).
22. Buckley’s argument is most comprehensively developed in his At the Origins of Modern
Atheism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1987).
23. David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. And Other Writings, ed. Dorothy
Coleman. Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2007).
24. See Douglas Hedly, Coleridge, Philosophy and Religion. Aids to Reflection and the Mirror of
the Spirit (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000).
25. See Russell Re Manning, ed., Retrieving the Radical Tillich. His Legacy and Contemporary
Importance (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
26. William Lane Craig and J. P. Moreland, eds., The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology
(Chichester: Blackwell Publishing, 2009).
27. See Alister McGrath, The Open Secret. A New Vision for Natural Theology (Oxford: Wiley-
Blackwell, 2008) and Sarah Coakley, "Sacrifice Regained: Evolution, Cooperation and God"
2012 Gifford Lectures at the University of Aberdeen, forthcoming from Oxford University
Press, 2017. Their respective Boyle Lectures are available at https://www.gresham.ac.uk/
series/the-boyle-lectures/.
Acknowledgement
This article is a revised version of a talk with the same title delivered as the 2015 Boyle Lecture at the
Church of St. Mary-le-Bow, City of London on February 25 2015. I am grateful to the Convenor, Dr
THEOLOGY AND SCIENCE 301
Michael Byrne and the Trustees for the kind invitation to deliver the lecture and to the Revd George
Bush and The Worshipful Company of Grocers for the warmth and generosity of their reception. I
am also grateful to Dr. Louise Hickman, Newman University, Birmingham, who gave an insightful
response to the original lecture.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes on contributor
Russell Re Manning is Reader in Religions, Philosophies and Ethics at Bath Spa University, UK and
a Visiting Fellow of St Edmund’s College, University of Cambridge, UK. He is author of Theology at
the End of Culture. Paul Tillich’s Theology of Culture and Art (2005) and editor of The Cambridge
Companion to Paul Tillich (2009), The Oxford Handbook of Natural Theology (2013), Science and
Religion in the Twenty-First Century (2013), and Retrieving the Radical Tillich (2015).
ORCID
Russell Re Manning http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8766-3143