"Is There a Christian History
of Science?"
In Scholarship
and Christian Faith: Enlarging the Conversation, ed. Douglas Jacobsen and
Rhonda Hustedt Jacobsen (Oxford University Press, 2004), pp. 63-75.
Abstract: Is there a Christian history of science? I will answer this question by refining it, as follows.
First, I will ask: is history of science more like history or science? I conclude that it is now more like
history. Then I ask, is there a Christian history? I conclude that there is not, at least not for most leading
contemporary Christian historians; however there are several questions that tend to interest Christian
historians more than they interest other historians. At this point I ask: is there a Christian history of
science? Here, in the longest section of the paper, I examine several candidates for what a Christian
history of science might look like, choosing representative scholars in each case. I note that non-Christian historians of science have contributed in major ways to some of these positions, so that it is
problemmatic to call them "Christian" in clear, unambiguous ways, though some might be called more
"Christian" than others, in the sense that they draw favorable conclusions about the relationship between
Christianity and the development of modern science. Overall, these views tend to unite around their
opposition to the "warfare" school, according to which Christianity and science are engaged in a
protracted battle for cultural and intellectual dominance. Finally, I ask: is there a role for the Christian
scholar in doing history of science? This is the easiest question to answer, and I suggest what that role
might be.