A number of posters regularly claim in this forum that religion is essentially inimical to science. These sweeping assertions are typically made without any significant supporting data, and such alleged "proofs," as may be provided, usually involve only scattered anecdotes.
The point of this post is simply to remark that Isaac Newton -- whose influence on science was instant, dramatic, and enduring -- took his own religious studies seriously throughout his entire lifetime:
An Introduction to Isaac Newton's Writings
Newton was an astonishingly prolific writer. Besides the huge body of published scientific writing for which he remains most celebrated, he also penned over a million words on the subject of alchemy and somewhere in the region of two and a half million about religion. There is also a substantial collection of administrative documents mostly in his own hand dating from his years of service at the Royal Mint (1696-1727) ...
http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/prism.php?id=43 Introducing Newton's Theological Manuscripts
Newton had a clergyman for a stepfather and a clergyman for an uncle, and he was brought up as a strict Puritan.
His religion remained deeply important to him throughout his life, and he studied it quite as intensely as he did physics, optics and astronomy. Indeed, he wrote considerably more about the textual tradition of the Bible and the interpretation of Biblical prophecy than he did about light and gravity. However, his theological research led him to some highly unorthodox conclusions which he kept largely secret.
There is still much debate about whether his theological writings can be regarded as being in a completely separate category from his scientific work, but there is no doubt that he applied the same close scrutiny and rigorous discipline to both subjects ...
http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/prism.php?id=44 Some feel for Newton's seriousness regarding the matter can be gauged from this list of questions concerning ομοουσιος (omo-ousios -- the word in the Nicene Creed as "having the same essence" or "of one being"):
King's College Library
Cambridge, England
Keynes Ms. 11
23 queries about the word omoousios
... NOTE: ... Query 23 is incomplete, breaking off in mid-sentence ...
Quære 1. Whether Christ sent his Apostles to preach Metaphysicks to the unlearned common people & to their wives & children.
Qu. 2. Whether the word ομοουσιος ever was in any Creed before the Nicene; or any Creed was produced by any one Bishop at the Council of Nice for authorizing the use of that word.
Qu. 3. Whether the introducing the use of that word is not contrary to the Apostles rule of holding fast the form of sound words.
Qu. 4. Whether the use of that word was not pressed upon the Council of Nice against the inclination of the major part of the Council
Qu. 5 Whether it was not pressed upon them by the Emperor Constantine the great a Chatechumen not yet baptized & no member of the Council.
Qu. 6 Whether it was not agreed by the Council that that word when applied to the Son of God should signify nothing more then that Christ was the express image of the father, & whether many of the Bishops in pursuance of that interpretation of the word allowed by the Council, did not in their subscriptions by way of caution add τουτ εστιυ ομοιουσιος?
Quære 7. Whether Hosius (or whoever translated that Creed into Latin) did not impose upon the western Churches by translating ομοουσιος by the words unius substantiæ instead of consubstantialis & whether by that translation the Latin Churches were not drawn into an opinion that the father & son had one common substance called in the Greek Hypostasis & whether they did not thereby give occasion to the eastern Churches to cry out ( presently after the Council of Serdica) that the western Churches were become Sabellian.
Qu. 8. Whether the Greeks in opposition to this notion & language did not use the language of three hypostases, & whether in those days the word hyposta did not signify a substance.
Qu. 9. Whether the Latins did not at that time accuse all those of Arianism who used the language of three hypostases & thereby charge Arianism upon the Council of Nice without knowing the true meaning of the Nicene Creed.
Q. 10. Whether the Latines were not convinced in the Council of Ariminum that the Council of Nice by the word ομοουσιος understood nothing more then that the son was the express image of the father. the Acts of the Council of Nice were not produced for convincing them. And whether upon producing the Acts of that Council for proving this, the Macedonians & some others did not accuse the Bishops of hypocrisy who in subscribing those Acts had interpreted them by the word ομοιουσιος in their subscriptions.
Qu. 11. Whether Athanasius, Hilary & in general the Greeks & Latines did not from the time of the reign of Iulian the Apostate acknowledge the father Son & holy Ghost to be three substances & continue to do so till the Schoolmen changed the signification of the word hypostasis & brought in the notion of three persons in one single substance.
Qu. 12. Whether the opinion of the equality of the three substances was not first set on foot in the reign of Iulian the Apostate by Athanasius Hilary &c.
Qu. 13. Whether the worship of the Holy Ghost was not first set on foot presently after the Council of Serdica.
Qu. 14 Whether the Council of Serdica was not the first Council which declared for the doctrine of the consubstantial Trinity & whether the same Council did not affirm that there was but one hypostasis of the father son & H. Ghost.
Qu. 15 Whether the Bishop of Rome five years after the death of Constantine the great A.C. 341 did not receive appeals from the Greek Councils & thereby begin to usurp the universal Bishopric
Qu. 16 Whether the Bishop of Rome in absolving the Appellants from excommunication & communicating with them & did not excommunicate himself & begin a quarrel with the Greek Church.
Qu. 17 Whether the Bishop of Rome in summoning all the Bishops of the Greek Church to appear at the next Council of Rome A.C. 342 did not challenge dominion over them & begin to make war upon them for obteining it.
Qu 18 Whether that Council of Rome in receiving the Appellants into Communion did not excommunicate themselves & support the Bishop of Rome in claiming appeals from all the world.
Qu. 19 Whether the Council of Serdica in receiving the Appellants into Communion & decreeing Appeals from all the Churches to the Bishop of Rome did not excommunicate themselves & become guilty of the schism which followed thereupon, & set up Popery in all the west.
Qu. 20 Whether the Emperor Constantius did not by calling the Council of Millain & Aquileia A.C. 365, abolish Popery, & whether Hilary, Lucifer, were not banished for adhering to the authority of the Pope to receive appeals from the Greek Councils.
Qu. 21 Whether the Emperor Gratian A.C. 379 did not by his Edict restore the Vniversal Bishopric of Rome over all the west? And whether this authority of the Bishop of Rome hath not continued ever since
Qu 22 Whether Hosius St Athanasius, St Hilary, St Ambrose, St Hierome, St Austin were not Papists.
Qu. 23 Whether the western Bishops upon being convinced that the Council of Nice by the word ομοουσιος did
http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/texts/viewtext.php?id=THEM00011&mode=normalized Since "of one being" belongs to a trinitarian formulation, the above list of questions may be related to:
Newton's Views on the Corruptions of Scripture and the Church
Newton's history of the Church was in essence the history of its corruption from a pristine original, both in terms of its doctrine and of its relationship with the ruling state. This perversion of Christianity reached its peak in the fourth century after Christ, a period which coincided with what he took to be a monumental tampering with Scripture. Newton had noted discrepancies between different versions of the New Testament from an early period in his study, but he undertook his most serious research into putative corruptions of Scripture after conversations with John Locke in early 1690. These conversations in turn had been prompted by Locke inquiring what Newton thought of the recent 'antitrinitarian controversy' ... Drawing on the 1657 Polyglot of Brian Walton and the 1675 Oxford Greek New Testament, Newton argued (in a letter to Locke of November 1690) that the earliest Greek and Latin manuscripts lacked passages that supported the Trinity. He showed by means of often convoluted arguments that two central texts invoked in support of the doctrine of the Trinity (1 John 5:7-8 -- containing the long-disputed Johannine Comma -- and 1 Timothy 3:16) were absent from the earliest manuscripts ...
http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/prism.php?id=73 Although I am strongly inclined to regard Newton's scientific work as more important and more lastingly influential than his theology -- though I must admit I have never really carefully examined any of his theological efforts -- the sheer quantity of his religious writing is rather stunning, and it clearly shows Newton was not simply seeking politically convenient religious formalisms to utter:
Newton's Views on Doctrine
Like most protestants, Newton placed great stress on the literal meaning of Scripture and on the power of the Holy Spirit to direct the attentive Christian to a true understanding of the text. Again, he shared the reformed view that the true meaning of gospel lay in the simple message preached by Christ in his own lifetime and then afterwards by his apostles. Newton's understanding of the subordinate nature of Christ was necessarily consonant with his understanding of the overwhelming domination of God, whose being he most famously described in the General Scholium to the second and third editions (1713 and 1726) of his Principia ...
Newton was a credal minimalist, who thought that in order to be considered true Christians ordinary people had only to believe that Christ was the long-awaited Messiah who rose again on the third day and who would return one day to 'judge the quick and the dead'. Nevertheless, his own Christology was more complicated. For Newton, Christ taught that he was the Son of God but was not God himself, in no way sharing (as the trinitarians or 'homoousians' would have it) in the physical substance of God ...
http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/prism.php?id=76 A number of issues that concerned Newton are still considered regularly in this forum. That he insisted on a distinction between religion and "philosophy" must understood in context: what we now call "science," Newton called "natural philosophy." Thus he appears to believe that science and religion do
not address the same subject. Newton also wanted a separation between religion and politics:
SOURCE: Kings College Library, Cambridge, England: Keynes Ms. 6: Seven Statements on Religion
... NOTE: ... The Ms. breaks off after the figure '8' ...
1 That religion & Philosophy are to be preserved distinct. We are not to introduce divine revelations into Philosophy, nor philosophical opinions into religion ...
2 That Religion & polity or the laws of God & the laws of man are to be kept distinct. We are not make the commandements of men a part of the laws of God ...
5 By dead works we are to understand Idolatry, inordinate lusts of the flesh, covetousness & ambition. We are to forsake the Devil & his works that is fals gods & idols with the works which accompany such worship as being contrary to the love of God: & we are to refrain from the lust of the flesh the lust of the eye & the pride of life, that is from inordinate desires of the flesh, & from covetousness & ambition [] as being contrary to the love of our neighbour. And we are to beleive aright in one God & one Christ & in the Holy Ghost & be baptized in their name & to love our neighbour as our selves, & being admitted into the communion of some particular Church by the governours thereof upon these conditions, we are not to be deprived of that communion without breach of those conditions ...
7 This communion men are to be admitted into or deprived of by Order of the board of the governours of that Church & the Order is properly to be declared by the President of the board & the Declaration may be accompanied with some ceremony , as of imposition of hands The Declaration by imposition of hands is a Iewish ceremony. We call it confirmation, meaning a confirmation of what was done by the Godfathers in baptizing the Infant.
8.
http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/texts/viewtext.php?id=THEM00006&mode=normalized It is clear from the foregoing that Newton's views were sometimes conventional and sometimes unconventional, and he apparently made substantial efforts to justify his views with rigorous historical and textual scholarship: the problems of scriptural interpretation have a long history. But Newton's theology is not merely a collection of exercises in historical or philological analysis: the last excerpt shows that proper church procedure mattered to him, too.