Abstract:
For researchers who are interested in the relationship between theology and the natural sciences, the year 2009 is of special importance. It is now 500 years since Calvin was born and 450 years since his ‘Institution of the Christian Religion’ was finally published. It is also 200 years since Darwin's birth and 150 years since his ‘On the Origin of Species’ appeared in print for the first time. Calvin and Darwin are representative of two separate lines which converge in a particular ‘transversal space’. These insights are regenerating light on our search for scientific truth today. Neither the absolutization of transcendant revelation nor the absolutization of immanent knowledge of nature serve as an accountable understanding of reality. Against this background, the challenge for Systematic Theology today is to conceive of a ‘theology of nature’ which can be offered as a dialectical third option. An ‘eco-hermeneutics’ offers a possibility of establishing such an option for theology. But this will on the one hand have to deconstruct reformed criticism of a natural theology and will on the other hand have to make serious work of an evolutionary epistemology.