Bishop Robert Barron of Winona-Rochester, Minn., is seen speaking at the spring general assembly of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Baltimore in this June 11, 2019, file photo. CNS photo/Bob Roller

Boldly going to frontier of ‘science and religion’

By  Gina Christian, OSV News
  • January 18, 2023

Are science and religion fundamentally opposed to each other? That common notion has “worked a lot of mischief,” said Bishop Robert Barron, who launched a new conference Jan. 13-14 to show how the Catholic Church champions “the unity of faith and reason.”

Some 1,000 clergy, religious and lay attendees joined the first-ever Wonder Conference in Dallas. The inaugural event was hosted by the Word on Fire Institute, part of the nonprofit Word on Fire Catholic Ministries media apostolate founded by Barron.

In 2020, the apostolate received a $1.7 million, three-year grant from the John Templeton Foundation to address the perceived disconnect between religious belief and scientific inquiry, with the funding helping to sponsor the conference, which featured an array of experts in physics, philosophy, technology, theology and history.

The “supposed conflict between religion and science, or faith and reason” has become “a major reason for (religious) disaffiliation among our young people,” said Barron in his Jan. 14 keynote address. He added that St. Thomas Aquinas, a famous Dominican theologian and philosopher from the 13th century, would be “turning in his grave” at the prospect, since the Catholic Church “(stands) for the unity of faith and reason.”

Barron said part of the blame for that opposition lay with the Catholic Church itself.

“We dumbed down the faith after the (Second Vatican) Council, and it was a pastoral disaster,” he said, prompting applause from the audience.

A 2015 study by Pew Research found that 59 per cent of the U.S. public viewed science and religion as often conflicting. Nearly three out of four of those who seldom or never attended religious services were most likely to think science and religion mostly conflict; however, 68 per cent of U.S. adults surveyed at the time said their personal religious beliefs and science did not conflict. Pew Research found religion most likely affected people’s views of scientific topics when it came to human evolution and the creation of the universe.

Barron said the “fundamental problem” is not science, but rather scientism, or “the reduction of all knowledge to the scientific form of knowledge.”

But scientism cannot address questions of beauty, morality or transcendence, which become “meaningless” when reduced to scientific facts, the bishop said.

Barron said he aimed to survey how the world is fundamentally knowable, the mind is not material but immaterial, and the “inescapability” of metaphysics, or knowledge about what exists beyond the physical world. He cited the late Pope Benedict XVI whose writings stressed the “unique creative Intelligence” to which both the universe and human reason pointed.

In his Jan. 13 presentation entitled “The Evidence for God from Science,” Fr. Robert Spitzer, president of the California-based Magis Center of Reason and Faith and the Spitzer Center, said the once-popular concept of an “eternally inflating, infinite multiverse” is now “(fading) into the world of fantasy.”

As scientific inquiry into its origins is refined, the universe is shown to be “exceedingly fine-tuned for life” by “a super intelligent, transcendent creator whose image cannot be suppressed,” said Spitzer.

Fr. Sinclair Oubre, pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Orange, Texas, sent two of his religious education directors to participate so they could better prepare young people in their high school programs as they head to universities where they may be challenged by atheistic professors.

The priest said he was grateful for Barron’s initiative in addressing the “false conflict” between science and religion.

“The Catholic Church has always recognized that reason and what is revealed in natural law is an aspect of God’s revelation,” he said.

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