This paper is part of my ongoing research on religion, specifically examining the devaluation of religion and its recovery of value in contemporary times. Religion, Christianity in particular, has been subjected to philosophical critique and has often been portrayed as anti-reason, anti-anthropological, and in some cases even regarded as a hindrance to the advancement of human reason. Richard Dawkins, a popular author and professor, contended that religious faith is a delusion - “a fixed false b…
Read moreThis paper is part of my ongoing research on religion, specifically examining the devaluation of religion and its recovery of value in contemporary times. Religion, Christianity in particular, has been subjected to philosophical critique and has often been portrayed as anti-reason, anti-anthropological, and in some cases even regarded as a hindrance to the advancement of human reason. Richard Dawkins, a popular author and professor, contended that religious faith is a delusion - “a fixed false belief.” Dawkins argues that religion is both a source of conflict and a justification for belief without evidence. He considers faith—a belief that is not based on evidence—as “one of the world’s great evils.” However, there were also those who opine that faith, which is the basis of religion, and reason, as manifested in science, need not be against each other. In the 1960s, a systematic study of science and religion began with authors such as Ian Barbour, who, in his books Issues in Science and Religion (1966) and Myths, Models, and Paradigms (1974), focused on the parallels in language between these disciplines. A trained physicist and theologian, he has been at the forefront of the dialogue between scientists and theologians. Barbour presents an ‘interpretation of Christianity that is responsive both to the historical tradition and contemporary science.’ He explores the impact and challenges of science on religious life, inquiring into and answering questions about the compatibility of science and religion, as well as the influence of science on human nature. He also explores the ethical implications of technological and scientific advancements, reflecting on the value of these achievements in relation to issues such as environmental and human costs, and projecting possible future directions of control in terms of human values. He challenged the prevailing view that science and religion were either against each other or indifferent to each other.
Now more than ever, there is a need to reflect upon the value of religion and to show that religion is not anti-reason nor against science and that, in fact, religion, Christianity in particular, is the locus of the complementarity of faith and reason, providing a space for critical engagement between these two. While we can also say that other religions provide a space for engagement between reason and faith, it is in Christianity, especially in its rich history, where we can see the critical and yet productive engagements between faith and reason. In this paper, I explore the complementarity of faith and reason in Christianity through a straightforward historical approach, accompanied by discussions on the substantial relationship between faith and reason, based on a reading of Fides et Ratio.