Abstract
The challenge and stimulus to theology that is constituted by the scientific version of Genesis which will prevail for the foreseeable future is expounded in relation to the significance of the succeeding stages of the life process and to the general features of biological evolution. A responsive theology of evolution is discerned as involving a renewal of insights associated with the themes of immanence, panentheism, the Wisdom and Word of God, and a sacramental universe. Such a revitalized theology allows one to conceive of humanity and Jesus the Christ in a fully evolutionary perspective without loss of an emphasis on the particularity of the Incarnation.
Keywords
origin of life, monism, Wordof God, panentheism, immanence, Wisdom of God, extraterrestrial life, causality, pain, sacramental universe, death, trends in evolution, Burgess shale, complexity, evolution, naturalselection, chance and law, Jesus the Christ, humanity, suffering, emergence, rationality, propensities
How to Cite
Peacocke, A., (1999) “Biology and a Theology of Evolution”, Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science 34(4), 695–712. doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/0591-2385.00247
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© 2024 The Author(s).63
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