God Created Wholes, Not Parts
by Peter J. LeithartAs time progresses, science points more towards teleology and away from Darwin. Continue Reading »
As time progresses, science points more towards teleology and away from Darwin. Continue Reading »
As junior members of the company of living souls, animals are summoned, along with human beings, to worship God. Continue Reading »
Theology seems to require a “first parent” of the human race. How does that square with recent findings?
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William Lane Craig defends his reading of Genesis against its critics. Continue Reading »
It’s doubtful that Craig’s minimalist creation account can nourish the Evangelical imagination or sustain Christian orthodoxy. Continue Reading »
What historical claims does the Bible make about Adam and Eve? And is belief in a historical Adam and Eve compatible with the scientific evidence? In order to avoid the pitfalls of reading contemporary science into the biblical texts, it is best to treat these questions separately. Only after having . . . . Continue Reading »
DeSilva has written one of the most interesting “science books” I’ve read in the last five years and one of the most interesting “walking books” over the same span. Continue Reading »
The War That Never Was: Evolution and Christian Theology by kenneth w. kemp cascade, 234 pages, $28 Conventional wisdom has it that science and religion have perennially been at war. This “conflict thesis,” as historians call it, can be traced to the late nineteenth century and to two . . . . Continue Reading »
Looking to bonobos as co-architects of modern systems of morality is a troubling trend. Continue Reading »
A. N. Wilson's biography of Charles Darwin freely criticizes the scientist and his theories—and committed evolutionists are enraged. Continue Reading »