The Hours of the Universe: Reflections on God, Science, and the Human Journey

IF 0.2 0 RELIGION
I. Delio
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A Franciscan sister who began her religious life as a cloistered member of the Carmelite order, Delio earned doctorates in pharmacology and historical theology and has taught at Trinity College, Washington Theological Union, Georgetown University, and Villanova University. Today, she is an award-winning author, best known for her Center for Christogenesis, which seeks to promote dialogue between faith and reason and stimulate a Christian spirituality fully infused with evolutionary consciousness. *Communicating the urgent need and prospects for that kind of spirituality is the burden of this, Delio's twentieth, book. A theology whose starting point is not evolution and the story of the universe, she insists, is a \"useless fabrication\" (p. xvi). Her work is rich in scriptural references, but the call to restore the book of nature to its primacy as the true first testament in Christianity's sacred canon is one of her signature themes. Though she displays no interest in apologetics or polemics, her basic assumption is the distinctively Catholic principle of the revelatory character of creation, a conviction at odds with the Protestant Reformers' suspicion of natural theology. A robust sacramental imagination permeates the entire book and provides its organizational design. Portraying the universe as the \"new monastery\" (p. xvii), Delio orders her reflections according to the liturgy of the hours that has structured daily prayer in Christian monastic communities for centuries: Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, and Compline. Delio clusters her chapters--along with prologues of original poetry--around these times of contemplation and guides the reader through the prayers of one rotation of the earth and toward what she calls a new synthesis of faith and science. *Delio's thirty-two brief chapters, each a free-standing essay, cover a broad spectrum of topics from the cosmic to the autobiographical--from quantum physics, gravitational waves, and artificial intelligence to the Eucharist during the coronavirus pandemic and the death of her beloved cat Mango. Delio addresses a number of social issues such as racism, consumerism, and homophobia and sets the full scope of her reflections against the backdrop of the threat of climate change. Her main objective is the nurturing of a Christianity mature enough to match the achievements and insights of contemporary science. In this effort, her primary dialogue partners include interfaith scholar Beatrice Bruteau, Passionist priest and self-styled geologian Thomas Berry, Hindu-Catholic mystic Raimon Panikkar, and luminaries from her elected Franciscan tradition such as Saint Francis, Bonaventure, and the contemporary spiritual writer and retreat leader Richard Rohr. Pope Francis's unprecedented encyclical on creation care, Laudato Si', is a constant touchstone for Delio, but pride of place in her personal communion of saints is granted to the Jesuit paleontologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, whose transposition of Catholic Christianity into an evolutionary key animates virtually every page of the book. *Delio's essays orbit this Teilhardian view of things like planets in an intellectual galaxy characterized by both order and chaos. The overall effect is a prophetic warning regarding the irrelevance and near-obsolescence of any Christian system fixated on the categories of Aristotelian or Newtonian worldviews. Like her monastic and mendicant forebears, Delio calls for church reform and creative thinking. The dominant mood of the book, though, is a blend of hope and awe, even audacity. Delio's conclusion equates the rise of a \"new species with a new God consciousness\" (p. 240) with the second coming of Christ. *Delio's engaging book is limited by its scant attention to the menacing side of science and technology, its failure to reckon seriously with the dramatic rise of nonreligion that calls her privileging of Christian myth into question, its overestimation of the general reader's science literacy, and its tendency to align scholarly and homiletic modes of communication too closely and too uncritically. Readers seeking linear arguments for theistic evolution or Christian pantheism will have to look elsewhere. Clergy, advanced students, and believing specialists in theology and the natural sciences will find a provocative and prayerful statement of a unique Christian cosmology that informs and inspires. *Reviewed by Peter A. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

THE HOURS OF THE UNIVERSE: Reflections on God, Science, and the Human Journey by Ilia Delio. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2021. 242 pages, index. Paperback; $25.00. ISBN: 9781626984035. *In this exquisitely constructed book, Delio reveals the current state of her reflections on the central concern of her life and work: the relationship of God, humanity, and the universe in the context of the evolutionary process. Her unscripted career leading to this publication, narrated in her memoir Birth of a Dancing Star: My Journey from Cradle Catholic to Cyborg Christian, has exhibited the same sort of development and diversity that she finds woven into the fabric of the universe. A Franciscan sister who began her religious life as a cloistered member of the Carmelite order, Delio earned doctorates in pharmacology and historical theology and has taught at Trinity College, Washington Theological Union, Georgetown University, and Villanova University. Today, she is an award-winning author, best known for her Center for Christogenesis, which seeks to promote dialogue between faith and reason and stimulate a Christian spirituality fully infused with evolutionary consciousness. *Communicating the urgent need and prospects for that kind of spirituality is the burden of this, Delio's twentieth, book. A theology whose starting point is not evolution and the story of the universe, she insists, is a "useless fabrication" (p. xvi). Her work is rich in scriptural references, but the call to restore the book of nature to its primacy as the true first testament in Christianity's sacred canon is one of her signature themes. Though she displays no interest in apologetics or polemics, her basic assumption is the distinctively Catholic principle of the revelatory character of creation, a conviction at odds with the Protestant Reformers' suspicion of natural theology. A robust sacramental imagination permeates the entire book and provides its organizational design. Portraying the universe as the "new monastery" (p. xvii), Delio orders her reflections according to the liturgy of the hours that has structured daily prayer in Christian monastic communities for centuries: Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, and Compline. Delio clusters her chapters--along with prologues of original poetry--around these times of contemplation and guides the reader through the prayers of one rotation of the earth and toward what she calls a new synthesis of faith and science. *Delio's thirty-two brief chapters, each a free-standing essay, cover a broad spectrum of topics from the cosmic to the autobiographical--from quantum physics, gravitational waves, and artificial intelligence to the Eucharist during the coronavirus pandemic and the death of her beloved cat Mango. Delio addresses a number of social issues such as racism, consumerism, and homophobia and sets the full scope of her reflections against the backdrop of the threat of climate change. Her main objective is the nurturing of a Christianity mature enough to match the achievements and insights of contemporary science. In this effort, her primary dialogue partners include interfaith scholar Beatrice Bruteau, Passionist priest and self-styled geologian Thomas Berry, Hindu-Catholic mystic Raimon Panikkar, and luminaries from her elected Franciscan tradition such as Saint Francis, Bonaventure, and the contemporary spiritual writer and retreat leader Richard Rohr. Pope Francis's unprecedented encyclical on creation care, Laudato Si', is a constant touchstone for Delio, but pride of place in her personal communion of saints is granted to the Jesuit paleontologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, whose transposition of Catholic Christianity into an evolutionary key animates virtually every page of the book. *Delio's essays orbit this Teilhardian view of things like planets in an intellectual galaxy characterized by both order and chaos. The overall effect is a prophetic warning regarding the irrelevance and near-obsolescence of any Christian system fixated on the categories of Aristotelian or Newtonian worldviews. Like her monastic and mendicant forebears, Delio calls for church reform and creative thinking. The dominant mood of the book, though, is a blend of hope and awe, even audacity. Delio's conclusion equates the rise of a "new species with a new God consciousness" (p. 240) with the second coming of Christ. *Delio's engaging book is limited by its scant attention to the menacing side of science and technology, its failure to reckon seriously with the dramatic rise of nonreligion that calls her privileging of Christian myth into question, its overestimation of the general reader's science literacy, and its tendency to align scholarly and homiletic modes of communication too closely and too uncritically. Readers seeking linear arguments for theistic evolution or Christian pantheism will have to look elsewhere. Clergy, advanced students, and believing specialists in theology and the natural sciences will find a provocative and prayerful statement of a unique Christian cosmology that informs and inspires. *Reviewed by Peter A. Huff, Professor of Religious Studies and Director of the Center for Benedictine Values, Benedictine University, Lisle, IL 60532.
《宇宙的时间:对上帝、科学和人类旅程的反思
《宇宙的时间:对上帝、科学和人类旅程的思考》作者:伊利亚·德里奥。玛利诺,纽约州:奥比斯图书公司,2021年。242页,索引。平装书;25.00美元。ISBN: 9781626984035。*在这本结构精巧的书中,Delio揭示了她对自己生活和工作的核心问题的反思现状:在进化过程的背景下,上帝、人类和宇宙的关系。在她的回忆录《舞蹈之星的诞生:我从摇篮天主教徒到半机械人基督教徒的旅程》中,她没有剧本的职业生涯导致了这本书的出版,这本书展示了她发现编织在宇宙结构中的同样的发展和多样性。Delio是一位方济会修女,她的宗教生活是从加尔默罗会的隐居成员开始的,她获得了药理学和历史神学博士学位,并在三一学院、华盛顿神学院、乔治城大学和维拉诺瓦大学任教。如今,她是一位屡获殊荣的作家,最著名的作品是她的基督诞生中心(Center for Christogenesis),该中心旨在促进信仰与理性之间的对话,并激发充满进化意识的基督教精神。*传达这种灵性的迫切需求和前景是这本书的负担,德里奥的第二十本书。她坚持认为,一个出发点不是进化和宇宙故事的神学是“无用的捏造”(第16页)。她的作品中有大量的圣经参考,但她的标志性主题之一是呼吁恢复自然之书的首要地位,作为基督教神圣正典中真正的第一部《圣经》。虽然她对护教或辩论不感兴趣,但她的基本假设是独特的天主教原则,即创造的启示性特征,这一信念与新教改革者对自然神学的怀疑不一致。一个强大的圣礼想象渗透整本书,并提供其组织设计。将宇宙描绘成“新的修道院”(第17页),Delio根据几个世纪以来在基督教修道院社区中组织日常祈祷的礼拜仪式来安排她的反思:圣餐,赞美诗,Prime, Terce, Sext, None,晚祷和Compline。德利奥将她的章节——连同原创诗歌的序言——围绕着这些沉思的时刻,引导读者通过对地球自转的祈祷,走向她所谓的信仰与科学的新综合。*德利奥的32个简短章节,每一章都是独立的文章,涵盖了从宇宙到自传的广泛主题——从量子物理学、引力波、人工智能到冠状病毒大流行期间的圣餐和她心爱的猫芒果的死亡。Delio探讨了许多社会问题,如种族主义、消费主义和同性恋恐惧症,并在气候变化威胁的背景下全面反思。她的主要目标是培育一个成熟到足以与当代科学的成就和见解相匹配的基督教。在这一过程中,她的主要对话伙伴包括跨宗教学者碧翠丝·布鲁托,激情派牧师和自封的地质学家托马斯·贝里,印度教天主教神秘主义者雷蒙·帕尼克卡尔,以及她选出的方济各会传统中的杰出人物,如圣方济各,博纳文蒂尔,以及当代精神作家和撤退领袖理查德·罗尔。教皇方济各(Pope Francis)前所未有的关于关爱受造物的通谕《赞美你》(Laudato Si)一直是Delio的试金石,但在她个人的圣人交流中,最值得骄傲的是耶稣会古生物学家皮埃尔·德·德·夏尔丹(Pierre Teilhard de Chardin),他将天主教基督教转变为一种进化的关键,几乎贯穿全书的每一页。*Delio的文章围绕着Teilhardian的观点,比如一个以有序和混乱为特征的智力星系中的行星。其总体效果是一个预言性的警告,即任何固守亚里士多德或牛顿世界观范畴的基督教体系都是无关紧要的,几乎已经过时了。像她的僧侣和乞丐祖先一样,Delio呼吁教会改革和创造性思维。然而,这本书的主要情绪是希望与敬畏,甚至是大胆的混合。德利奥的结论将“具有新的上帝意识的新物种”(第240页)的兴起等同于基督的第二次降临。*德里奥这本引人入胜的书的局限性在于,它对科学和技术的威胁方面关注不足,它没有认真考虑非宗教的急剧崛起,这使她对基督教神话的特权产生了质疑,它高估了普通读者的科学素养,它倾向于将学术和说教的交流模式过于紧密和过于不加批判地结合在一起。寻求有神论进化论或基督教泛神论线性论点的读者将不得不去别处寻找。 神职人员,高级学生,相信神学和自然科学的专家会发现一个独特的基督教宇宙论的挑衅性和虔诚的声明,告知和启发。* Peter A. Huff,宗教研究教授,本笃会价值观中心主任,本笃会大学,莱尔,伊利诺伊州60532。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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