There is a version of intellectual history that most educated people have absorbed without realizing it. It goes like this: ancient people had mythology. Medieval scholars had theology. The Enlightenment arrived, swept away the cobwebs, and replaced faith with reason. Philosophy stepped in. Science stepped in further. Progress marched forward. Theology is what people believed before they knew better.
This version of history is not accurate. It is a narrative constructed in the 19th century by people with philosophical commitments of their own, and it has been remarkably effective at making the prior 2,000 years of rigorous inquiry invisible. The people erased by this narrative include Anselm, Aquinas, Duns Scotus, Ockham, Newton, Leibniz, Pascal, Berkeley, Butler, Paley, and a hundred years of analytical theologians whose work appeared in journals that still exist and are still accessible — but that almost no one in contemporary intellectual culture has read.
This article is about that gap. Not theology as confession. Not theology as devotion. Theology as the most rigorous form of philosophical inquiry conducted across the widest range of questions human reason can address — questions about the nature of mind, the foundation of ethics, the structure of knowledge, the origin of the universe, and what kind of thing a person is. The contemporary academy didn't transcend these questions. It stopped asking them.
I. The Narrative and Its Origins
John William Draper published History of the Conflict Between Religion and Science in 1874. Andrew Dickson White published A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in 1896. These two books invented the warfare thesis — the idea that science and theology are fundamentally in conflict, that every advance in knowledge has come at the expense of religious belief, and that the progress of civilization can be measured by the retreat of theology.
Both books have been thoroughly debunked by historians of science. The examples they cited were either fabricated, grossly distorted, or the opposite of what they claimed. The flat-earth myth — the idea that medieval scholars believed the earth was flat and that Columbus had to fight the Church to prove otherwise — was invented wholesale by Washington Irving in 1828 and laundered into academic respectability by Draper and White. No educated medieval person believed the earth was flat. The idea that the Church opposed heliocentrism as a matter of religious doctrine is a significant distortion of a political controversy about specific astronomical claims.
Yet the warfare thesis dominates educated culture. Ask any educated person whether science and religion are in conflict, and you will get the Draper-White answer — from someone who has never read Draper or White, and who does not know their scholarship was refuted more than a century ago. The narrative outlasted the evidence for it because it was useful, not because it was true.
II. What Was Actually Being Done
While the warfare narrative was being assembled in the late 19th century, a different kind of work was being published. Its home was a journal — the oldest continuously published theological journal in the United States, still running today, founded when Darwin was twenty-four years old and Charles Lyell had just published the third volume of the Principles of Geology.
The articles in that journal, across its first hundred years, addressed — with full rigor — questions the secular academy now treats as its own invention:
These were not Sunday school lessons. They were peer-reviewed scholarly articles by people who had read Kant and were responding to him, who had read Hume and were answering him, who had read Darwin and were evaluating him — often before the ink was dry on the original publications.
B.B. Warfield — Princeton Seminary's most formidable intellect — reviewed Darwin's theory in 1888 with full command of the biological literature. His conclusion was not that evolution disproved God. His conclusion was that it was a question of mechanism, not of metaphysics, and that the design argument operated at a level Darwin's biology could not address. This is not fundamentalism. This is a more sophisticated reading of the relationship between science and theology than most biology departments offer today.
Lewis Sperry Chafer, writing at Dallas Theological Seminary through the 1920s and 30s, developed a systematic theology that engaged the full range of contemporary philosophical objections — empiricism, positivism, pragmatism, idealism — and argued each case with precision. Whether you agree with his conclusions or not, the quality of the engagement was at the level of professional philosophy. It appeared in a journal. It was read. Then the discipline changed, and it was forgotten.
III. What Contemporary Philosophy Left Behind
When logical positivism swept through English-language philosophy in the early 20th century, it did not resolve the questions theology had been asking. It ruled them out of order. A.J. Ayer's Language, Truth and Logic (1936) declared that any claim not verifiable by empirical observation or logically tautological was meaningless — not false, but meaningless. Metaphysics, theology, ethics: all expelled from the domain of legitimate inquiry. Not defeated. Disqualified.
Logical positivism itself was falsified within a generation. The verification principle — the claim that only empirically verifiable statements are meaningful — is not itself empirically verifiable. It is self-refuting. By 1967, Ayer had largely abandoned it. The movement collapsed.
But the cultural damage was done. The presumption that theology is not serious inquiry had been installed in the academy, and it proved stickier than the philosophy that installed it. Contemporary secular philosophy has rediscovered many of the same questions — consciousness, moral realism, the nature of causation, the problem of free will — but it often proceeds as if the prior 500 years of theological engagement with those questions simply didn't happen. It didn't stop at the frontier. It lost the map.
IV. The Living Archive
Bibliotheca Sacra is not a historical curiosity. It is a living archive of rigorous inquiry across 180 years, covering every major question in philosophy of religion, natural theology, ethics, epistemology, and historical scholarship. Its early volumes — now in the public domain — are accessible through BiblicalStudies.org.uk, which has digitized and indexed thousands of articles from this and dozens of other scholarly journals.
The contemporary DTS archive continues this tradition. If you want to understand how serious scholarship has engaged the questions this site raises — the problem of evil, the origin of life, the fine-tuning of physics, the historical case for the resurrection — the Bibliotheca Sacra archive is not a starting point. It is a complete library.
We have curated the most relevant articles — 92 entries spanning theology, apologetics, philosophy of religion, natural theology, history of science, and ethics — and organized them by the argument track they best support. The Stacks: Our Curated Research Library →
V. Why It Matters Now
Contemporary culture operates under the assumption that the good arguments are on the secular side — that theology was the rough draft and philosophy, then science, wrote the final version. What actually happened is that a narrow philosophical school, already refuted in its own terms, drew a line around legitimate inquiry that excluded its most serious competition, and the exclusion became institutional before anyone checked the credentials.
The result is a kind of intellectual asymmetry. The average educated person has encountered Dawkins, Dennett, and Hitchens. They have not encountered Warfield, Chafer, Alvin Plantinga, or J.P. Moreland — not because these thinkers are obscure or lightweight, but because the institutional filters that determine what educated people read were designed with a conclusion in mind.
You cannot evaluate a position you have not been allowed to read. The Stacks are an attempt to close that gap — not to win an argument, but to put the argument on the table with the evidence it deserves.
The question isn't whether theology was serious.
The question is who decided it wasn't — and why.
Sources & Further Reading
What follows from this?
Select the conclusion you find most defensible given the evidence above: