The Seven Pillars of Creation
The Bible, Science, and the Ecology of Wonder
William P. Brown
Reviews and Awards
"What a pleasure to read a book this calm and commanding in place of the usual hysterics about faith and science. It ends with the only call that makes sense in this moment from either source of human wisdom: a call for self-restraint, self-mastery, before we overwhelm the world of beauty and meaning into which we were born." --Bill McKibben, author of Earth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet
"Fresh, generative work at the interface of faith and science requires a scholar of uncommon erudition and acute interpretive sensibility, who can boldly make connections and remain resilient in the face of demanding data. Bill Brown is precisely that interpreter, who here provides what will be a defining benchmark in our ongoing work in "faith and science." Readers will be dazzled by his range and depth of discernment. This book is an inviting challenge to people of faith and practitioners of science - to all who find the interface a source of wonder beyond curiosity." --Walter Brueggemann, Professor Emeritus, Columbia Theological Seminary
"Brown's book is the most creative book on creation that I've ever read." --Nancey Murphy, Professor of Christian Philosophy, Fuller Theological Seminary
"Seldom does one encounter a Biblical scholar of the Hebrew texts as well versed as Brown in evolutionary biology and ecological science. Seldom does a scholar probe so imaginatively the deep sense of wonder in both science and religion, whether in Job's Behemoth or on Darwin's Beagle. Never are the two better joined in concern that Homo sapiens, 'the dirty groundling made to image God,' celebrate and save life on wild Earth." --Holmes Rolston, III, Professor of Philosophy and University Distinguished Professor, Colorado State University
"Brown's study of the seven creation texts of the Old Testament presents exquisite biblical interpretation that destabilizes narrow assumptions about biblical creation. What makes the work unique is its deep engagement with contemporary biology and ecological science. The result is a book that calls forth praise, an ethic of responsibility and, of course, wonder." --Christian Century
"Brown's book is magisterial in its scope, beautifully written, and accessible to both sides in the science and religion debates." --Englewood Review of Books
"Brown is an engaging writer and thinker whose insights are both substantive and accessible. This is an important and timely book for biblical scholars, theologians, pastors, and educated lay people who want a reliable guide into how to think about a mutually respectful relationship between ancient Scripture and modern science. Brown's study of OT creation resources will provide a crucial resource as Christians seek new ways to tell the old story for a 21st-century world."--Interpretation