The relationship between religion and science is not the simple conflict narrative that Western popular imagination inherited from the nineteenth century — a war in which science inevitably wins. The actual history is far more complex: the great medieval Islamic scientists were also theologians; the founders of modern science were motivated by a vision of God's rational cosmos; the most sophisticated theologians of every tradition have always known that their claims and scientific claims address different kinds of questions. The genuine tensions are real and worth examining honestly — but so is the history of mutual influence, shared curiosity, and the possibility that the deepest questions require both kinds of attention.
Each step builds on the last.