Boyle Lecture

 

A tradition revived: 2004 to date

The new Boyle Lectures have been given annually at the parish church of St Mary-le-Bow in the City of London since 2004. These lectures are designed to address topics which explore the relationship between Christianity and our contemporary understanding of the natural world.

Each year, a distinguished theologian or scientist is invited to address this theme through a topic of his or her own choosing, and a responder is invited to respond to the lecturer’s comments.

Please see the other links on this site which will allow you to read about the lecturers and responders, read the text of their addresses, and (in some cases) view a webcast of the lecture itself or download a podcast.

Portrait of Robert Boyle (c.1689), by Johann Kerseboom (fl.c.1683; d.1708) on display at Historical Portraits in Dover Street, London

history

Robert Boyle (1627-91) was one of the most celebrated natural philosophers of the seventeenth century. A gifted experimentalist and innovative thinker, Boyle was also a devoutly religious man who wrote a number of important books of philosophical theology (principally his Discourse of Things Above Reason (1681), Disquisition About the Final Causes of Things (1688) and The Christian Virtuoso (1690)). In these works Boyle reflected deeply on God's role in the world and the importance of the new experimental science in adding complementary insights to the truths of revealed Christianity set forth in the Scriptures.

Boyle died in 1691. In his Will he set aside funds to establish a lecture series for the defence of the Christian religion against atheists and other unbelievers. The first Boyle Lectures were delivered in 1692 by Richard Bentley, an important protégé of Sir Isaac Newton and later Master of Trinity College Cambridge. Some of Bentley's lectures were delivered at St Mary-le-Bow, thus establishing a connection between St Mary's and the Boyle Lectures, which endured for many years.

One of St Mary-le-Bow's own rectors, the Rev Samuel Bradford DD, rector from 1693 to 1720, delivered the Boyle Lectures in 1699 in which he spoke about "The Credibility of the Christian Religion". Bradford's Boyle Lectureship did his ecclesiastical career no harm: he went on to become successively Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, Bishop of Carlisle, Bishop of Rochester and Dean of Westminster Abbey!

The most famous of the Boyle Lectures took place in the 40 years from 1692 until 1731. Although the lectures continued after 1731, the later lectures were perhaps less important than those which took place in the early years of the series. An exception was in 1812, however, when another rector of St Mary-le-Bow, William Van Mildert (later the last of the Prince-Bishops of Durham) delivered that year's Boyle Lectures at his own church.

A detailed account of the history of the Boyle Lectures will be found in the chapter by Johannes Wienand in the forthcoming History of St Mary-le-Bow (2007).

Robert Boyle's first air-pump, as it appeared in an engraving in New Experiments Physico-Mechanical (1660), Edinburgh University Library

Robert Boyle demonstrated that the vacuum does not transmit sounds; a bell which rings in a vacuum cannot be heard. Robert Boyle: New Experiments Physico-Mechanical touching the spring of air and its effects, Oxford, 1660

trustees

The lectures are administered by a board of trustees. Full details of the trustees are available at the ink onthe left.

financial support

The lecture series has been greatly assisted by generous financial support provided by the Worshipful Company of Grocers, the Worshipful Company of Mercers, and Gresham College. The trustees record their deep gratitude to these institutions for their invaluable support.

publication

The 2004 lecture (by John F. Haught), together with a series of papers commenting on it, was published in:

Science and Christian Belief, vol.17,no. 1, April 2005

The 2005 lecture (by Simon Conway Morris), together with a series of papers commenting on it, was published in: Science and Christian Belief, vol.18, no. , April 2006

The 2006 lecture (by Philip Clayton) and the response (by Niels Gregersen) were published in:

Theology and Science, vol.4, no.3, November 2006

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