By Robert John Russell
Pandora Press, 2006
ISBN-10: 1894710673ISBN-13: 978-1894710671
Cosmology, Evolution, and Resurrection Hope is a collection of lectures presented by theologian and physicist Robert John Russell at the fifth annual Goshen Conference on Religion and Science, and Russell’s discussions of related topics with conference participants.
In his lectures Russell develops three themes at the cutting edge of theology and science. In the first lecture he explores an often overlooked topic: the creative role of theology in the rise of contemporary natural science as evidenced in the construction of Big Bang and steady state cosmologies and the resulting debates over them. In the second lecture he turns to the problem of “natural evil”–suffering, disease, death and extinction in nature–arguing that the most compelling response to evil is a theology of redemption that embraces all of nature. In the third lecture he explores redemption through the cross and resurrection of Jesus, opening the greatest challenge to Christian theology today: the conflict between Christian eschatology and the future of the universe according to science. By placing eschatology and cosmology into a relation of creative mutual interaction, Russell believes that eschatology can begin to address this challenge and in turn it can raise potentially fruitful questions that might lead to new directions in scientific research.
What we find here will penetrate our thoughts when we believe we can rest comfortably with our present view of “religion and science.”
Table of Contents
Editor’s Preface
Lectures
Lecture 1: Fruitful Interactions
Lecture 2: Natural Theodicy and New Creation
Lecture 3: Resurrection, Eschatology and Cosmology
Sunday Worship
If These Stones Could Speak
Discussion
General Theories / Structure
Initial Time
Comparing Science and Religion
God in the Equations
Theory of Everything
Falsification
Hoyle and Biology
Judeo-Christian Science Roots
Supernatural Explanations
Reductionism, Boundaries, and Free Will
Boundaries of Science
Theodicy and Natural Evil
General Theodicy Resources
Evil and Eschatology
Cosmic Redemption
Suffering and the New Creation
God’s Love and Complexity
Limits on Freedom
Boundaries of Natural Evil
Biological Predation and the Fall
Suffering and the Grace of the Cross
Death of a Child
Eschatology and New Creation
Physical Eschatology
Future of the Universe and Entropy
Emergence and Monism
Multiple Eschatologies
Teaching and Science / Interfaith Dialogues
Communities and the New Creation
Index