
We’ll let this quote from Andrew Brown’s review of Paul Tyson’s book, A Christian Theology of Science: Reimagining a Theological Vision of Natural Knowledge, speak for itself:
This book is a blue cheese of sorts: sharp, strident, of an unmistakable flavour, not to be ignored, probably not to everyone’s taste. It is very much worth obtaining and reading.
Brown also says:
There are Christian works available that undertake a scientific view of theology, or place Christian theology and science side-by-side, but when we seek Christian theologies of science as we might a theology of the environment, a theology of work, or the like, they seem distinctly thin on the ground. Tyson’s title caught my eye soon after its publication for that reason. It begins to fill a space where theological reflection seems to have been lacking, despite the Christian’s sense that all domains of life deserve and need such reflection.
Read Andrew Brown’s full review here, which complements an earlier review by Charles Sherlock.