Religion and Science Can be Besties!: It’s Time for New Friendships

Religion and Science Can be Besties!: It’s Time for New Friendships April 22, 2017

As we celebrate the March for Science, the narrative of Christianity opposing science is neither helpful nor true.  Insights from science inform Christian ethics, and Christian ethics can help us understand the implications of science.  Looking at the story of Jesus’ resurrection through the lens of chaos theory is just one example.best selves

Chaos theory?

Chaos theory is one possible way of recasting the resurrection narrative with a fresh perspective informed by science that may offer some surprising insights for Christians.

Chaos theory originated in the field of mathematics as a study of the way in which initial conditions affect dynamic systems.  Sometimes called “the butterfly effect,” chaos theory studies the way non-linear reactions happen in supposedly stable systems.  The phrase was coined by meteorologist Edward Norton in the 1960s when he described the flapping of a butterfly’s wings in one part of the world potentially creating a hurricane somewhere else on the planet.  If you’ve read Ray Bradbury’s 1950s short story “A Sound of Thunder,” where the death of a butterfly in one moment in time has unexpected ramifications thousands of years later – this is chaos theory.

What’s so refreshing about chaos theory when applied to hegemonic human structures is its ability to break open any hubristic idea that we can control (benevolently or otherwise) nature and, by extension, our fellow humans. Personified in mythology by the “trickster” figure, chaos theory shows up in characters like Br’er Rabbit in African folklore, the Coyote figure in Native American mythology, and even Bugs Bunny from Saturday morning cartoons.  They are the court jesters – the “holy fools” – who tell the truth through humor, wit and cunning.  “It is not simply that fools change our perspective, though they do that.  Rather, fools create a liminal space where new perception becomes possible, but where discernment is both invited and required,” (Campbell and Cilliers, 87).

Chaos Theory and Jesus as Trickster

Homileticians Johann Cilliers and Charles Campbell identify Jesus as the ultimate liminal figure.  So Jesus is a trickster! “[C]rossing boundaries, teaching and preaching with intentional ambiguity, and calling people to perceive and live at the threshold of the old age and the new – in the reign of God that is breaking into the world. . . [Jesus embodies] in his own person the threshold between the human and the divine, between the old age and the new,” (Campbell and Cilliers, 103).

From an ecological perspective, I’ve always been fascinated with the way in which Jesus, in his role as Trickster, enlists the elements of nature and his non-human kin to “play.”  Wind and wave obey his command (Matthew 8:24-27, Mark 4:35-41, Luke 8:22-25).  Birds and flowers serve as his teaching partners (Luke 12:24-32), as do fig trees (Matthew 24:32-35, Mark 13:28-31, Luke 21:29-33), wind and weather (Matthew 5:44-45, Luke 12:54-56, John 3:8).  Water sneakily becomes wine in stone jars at the Cana wedding (John 2:1-11), and holds him up when he walks across the sea (Mark 6:48-51, John 6:18-21).  Stones are enabled to cry out in praise (Luke 19:40). In all these cases, Creation surprises and even suspends its “natural” processes for the sake of thwarting our expectations.

Even the miraculous conception of Jesus in the womb of the Virgin Mary, normally problematic for most feminists, could be seen differently through the trickster lens. Rather than interpreting Jesus’ conception (devoid of sexual intercourse) as proof that sexuality – and thus women – are “dirty” and “sinful,”  it may be that Jesus’ surprising conception is meant as a trick played on patriarchy that tries to control and dictate the activity of procreation, often victimizing the women in the process.  In the case of Jesus’ conception – surprise! – men are taken completely out of the procreative picture.   Which opens up new possibilities for women’s liberation, agency, and power.

The Trickster-Surprise of the Resurrection

And then we come to the Resurrection story.  Now we see that Trickster-Jesus has played the ultimate joke on the forces of evil that would subjugate, humiliate and annihilate God’s life-giving love.  This means the preacher-fool can joyfully proclaim the surprise of God’s grace upending the structures of death and revealing the triumph of resurrection.  Like his crucifixion, Jesus’ resurrection “interrupts the world’s assumptions, opens a liminal space, and calls for new perception – for the bifocal vision at the juncture of the ages,” (36).

With this bi-focal vision applied to chaos theory, we are reminded us that “during stressful periods, particular changes at the micro-level of a given system can generate macro-level changes involving a massive phase shift.  In other words, local perturbations can trigger off global changes,” (Michael Zimmerman, 324).

Put another way:

a protest at a town hall meeting against injustice,

or an act of kindness extended to one’s sworn enemy,

or the closing of a coal plant,

or a refusal to return violence with more violence,

may set off shifts in social, economic and ecological dynamics that are not discernible at the outset, but have wider-ranging effects than initially realized.

 

Monarch butterfly (Public domain)
Monarch butterfly (Public domain)

What good are a butterflies wings against the hurricane?

Of course, some will still accuse Christians of being naive fools. An altar with candles is nothing against the explosions of sarin bombs.  Easter lilies against nuclear arms are laughable.  Peaceful protesters are nothing against the powers of the militarized police.  What difference does it make?  You accomplish nothing.  You are fools.

Further, Jesus’ light is nothing against the darkness of evil.   What good are a butterflies wings against the hurricane?  So what if he was resurrected – what difference did it make?  Hunger, poverty, disease, injustice, climate change, violence, war and death – those powers are still the law of the land.

And this is a fact.  But we would do well not underestimate the power of the Trickster-Jesus and the disrupting chaos of the cross.  Further, let’s not underestimate the power of Christians (and other people of faith) informed by science to themselves start interrupting systems of destruction.

For example, informed by science, people are advocating for the monarch butterfly and planting milkweed seeds and calling for the end of herbicides.  This is creating a small but noticeable increase in the population of the threatened orange-winged insects.

Houses of worship are installing solar panels at increasing rates.

El Salvador, with the support of the Catholic Church, banned gold mining in favor of protecting its fragile water systems.march for science

These are examples of micro-level changes disrupting macro-level devastations.  The wind from the butterflies wings are the hurricane!

Scientists and Christians – can we talk?

In the same way, Christians engaging with scientists to help them think through the moral and ethical ramifications of their discoveries, their technological innovations, their medical treatments, and their research methods, shows how the discourse between Christians and science is not to be shunned, but encouraged. (For a great post about the Church and Science being partners for the common good, click here.)

As citizens across this nation, and across the world take part in the #MarchforScience, I hope Christians will make it a point to take selfies with scientists. It’s time for the suspicion and antagonism to end, and new friendships to begin!


 

  • For another post on the “butterfly effect” as it relates to ecological and economic justice, click here.
  • Are you a pastor preaching a sermon for Earth Day?  Submit your sermon for the EcoPreacher Sermon Contest!
  • For a reflection about preaching on Earth Sunday, click here.
  • Wondering how green your church is?  Take this short quiz.
  • For ideas on incorporating Earth-care into faith practices and preaching, try 17 Ways to be an EcoPreacher.

Leah D. Schade is the Assistant Professor of Preaching and Worship at Lexington Theological Seminary (Kentucky) and author of the book Creation-CrisisPreaching: Ecology, Theology, and the Pulpit (Chalice Press, 2015). 

You can follow Leah on Twitter at @LeahSchade, and on Facebook at  https://www.facebook.com/LeahDSchade/.

Leah will be presenting at the Wild Goose Festival in Hot Spring, NC, July 14 and 15!  Her session info is available here:  http://wildgoosefestival.org/sessions17-24/.  Enter the special code BEMYGUEST for a 25% discount on tickets!


 

Sources:

Charles L Campbell. and Johan H. Cilliers. Preaching Fools:  The Gospel as a Rhetoric of Folly. Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2012.

Michael E. Zimmerman. Contesting Earth’s Future: Radical Ecology and Postmodernity. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994.


Browse Our Archives