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Steven L. Peck is a scientist, BYU professor, and acclaimed author. In recent years he has emerged as a powerful advocate for science and evolution, publishing two books about the topic in as many years.
His latest offering, Science the Key to Theology, is an impassioned plea to members of the LDS Church to teach the compatibility rather than a supposed conflict between science and religion.
He reaches out to individuals who can’t accept the argument for evolution to, at least, acknowledge that the LDS Church does not have a stated position on the topic. In teaching capacities, members have a duty to respect that position. He hopes that by removing conflict narratives the tension between what our youth are taught in school and what they sometimes are taught in church settings will disappear. Too many youth feel they need to make a choice between believing science and believing in religion.
As a youth, Steven became less active after learning that his Seminary teacher didn’t believe in dinosaurs. If there had been room in his teenage theology for prayers and pterodactyls, he wonders, perhaps it would have made a difference for him.
Luckily Steve moved on to BYU where he found faithful professors who modeled a healthy fidelity to both scientific and religious truths. He bemoans that some in the church insist on misusing scripture as a scientific document rather than teaching of its miraculous ability to show us how to build a relationship with God. Science speaks to the “how” of creation, but religion speaks to the “why.”
Listen in as Laura Harris Hales of the LDS Perspectives Podcast and Steven Peck share a blunt discussion about the harmful effect teaching a tension between science and religion can have on testimonies. Both science and religion can work together in Steven’s model of theology to build faith.
Check out the resources referenced in the podcast at LDS Perspectives.
HalAugust 25, 2017
I guess I never worried about trying to reconcile my beliefs about science and religion. I have lived long enough to see things that were once "proven" to be true in the past are being discredited every day with new data and information. Furthermore, I know that our current religious knowledge is also far from complete. I firmly believe the Lord "will yet reveal many great and important things pertaining to the Kingdom of God." (Article of Faith number 9). There are people in both camps (scientists and professors of religion) who claim to "know it all" and then there are those of us who believe "you ain't seen nothin' yet."
Ben JonesAugust 24, 2017
If we believe that God is Eternal and remember that Eternity is a very long time, we should not be surprised to peer into the Universe and discover that it is very big and very old. The Creation story in the Bible describes a process by which things came to be and the proceeds to tell how nations and peoples came to be, generations upon generations. That is how God works.