Edited by Francis S. Collins
HarperOne, 2010
352 pp., $19.99
What kind of flowers does Francis S. Collins—one of the world’s leading geneticists—gather? His new anthology, modestly entitled Belief, answers this bizarre question. The etymological origin of anthology means “flower-gathering,” from the Greek anthologia (anthos “a flower” + logia “collection). For seekers, believers, and skeptics, Collins has gathered flowers of prose—classic and contemporary—that quietly display the harmony between reason and faith, in contrast to what he calls “the cacophony of extreme voices dominating the microphones, bookshelves, and airways.”
Readers should not be surprised that the former director of the National Human Genome Project and the current director of the National Institutes for Health is a preeminently reasonable man, equally repulsed by “a camp for kids in the United Kingdom that aims to indoctrinate them with atheism” as he is by “a Creation Museum in Kentucky that shows humans romping with dinosaurs.” By following the argument wherever it led, Collins became a disciple of Jesus Christ at age twenty-seven, overcoming his scientific skepticism through studied reflections on the moral law and the order of nature, particularly the Big Bang, fine-tuning, and evolution.
His anthology is personal, leading the reader to the scents and sights that have captured his fancy in the botanical garden. The case for the existence of God begins with N. T. Wright, who is commonly but mistakenly regarded as the “successor” to C. S. Lewis because HarperOne, the publisher of this anthology and Wright’s apologetic books, has touted him as such. Wright communicates cogently to the postmodern audience like Lewis did to the late modern audience, but the style and substance of their writing differs notably because of their respective vocations: the former as a New Testament scholar and the latter as a Medieval and Renaissance Literature scholar.
That quibble aside, Collins classifies the flowers according to themes: the meaning of truth, intellectual devotion to God, the problem of evil and suffering, the cry for justice, the concord between science and faith, the possibility of miracles, the experiences of longing and mysticism, love and forgiveness as pointers to God, and the irrationality of atheism.
All the “oldies but goodies” are present (Plato, Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Locke, Pascal), along with the “usual suspects” (C. S. Lewis, Dorothy Sayers, G. K. Chesterton) and some relative “newbies” (Os Guinness, Madeleine L’Engle, Art Lindsley, Paul Brand, Desmond Tutu). For an American, Collins has a nose for British, ergo Anglican, voices (John Stott, Keith Ward, John Polkinghorne, Alister McGrath). In the mix, there are five Catholics (Aquinas, Chesterton, Thomas Merton, Mother Teresa, Hans Küng), two Reformed (Alvin Plantinga, Tim Keller), two Jews (Elie Wiesel, Viktor Frankl), one Lutheran (Dietrich Bonhoeffer), one Quaker (David Elton Trueblood), one Baptist (Martin Luther King Jr.), and one Deist (Antony Flew). In the corner of the garden are voices from the East (Mahatma Gandhi, the Dalai Lama), lest Collins be accused of a “West and the rest” ethnocentrism.
Based on his flower gathering, we can conclude that Collins has adopted the via media sensibility of the Anglican tradition: ecumenical in his outlook and eclectic in his apologetics, although he shows a preference for classical and evidential methods. If the temptation for a scientist is to live by reason alone, we can be grateful that Collins resists, nodding to the affective and imaginative dimensions of the Christian faith. This everyman anthology offers accessible selections, “self-contained and brief enough to be read in a single sitting.” For a more philosophically and theologically sophisticated anthology, see Paul Helm’s Faith and Reason (Oxford, 1999).
Thanks to HarperOne for the review copy.