Source: Steve Bond
When Lawrence Summers arrived, he banned the Dalai Lama from a conference - he didn鈥檛 want anyone in a robe in Harvard! He wanted a religion department that was secular
At a time of fierce contention with secularists and scientists, most theologians believe it is best to keep their heads down, argues Sarah Coakley, Norris-Hulse professor of divinity at the University of Cambridge.
Instead of 鈥済oing out to fight with the enemy direct鈥, they opt to 鈥渟tay within the circled wagons鈥, on the grounds that otherwise 鈥測ou will get your head bitten off 鈥 and devalue the product [theology] in the process鈥.
But if that is a common view among her peers, it is very much not hers. Not only is she someone who 鈥渓ikes a fight鈥, she also worries that theologians are 鈥渁cceding to their own marginalisation鈥 by remaining 鈥渋n the corner of the university talking to each other鈥. Her preference is rather to explore 鈥渉ow theology can come into creative interaction with secular thought, how it can make its case for itself, not in a bludgeoning but an engaging fashion鈥.
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Coakley鈥檚 recent work only confirms the boldness of her engagements. God, Sexuality, and the Self: An Essay 鈥淥n the Trinity鈥, the first of a huge four-volume work of systematic theology to be called On Desiring God, addresses many crucial debates about gender. Her 2012 Gifford Lectures at the University of Aberdeen, 鈥淪acrifice Regained: Evolution, Cooperation and God鈥, audaciously returned to the 19th-century idea of 鈥渘atural theology鈥, which held that contemplating the world around us can lead us to a belief in God. Much of her argument for this draws on the three years she spent 鈥渟itting in a top-rate Harvard research laboratory鈥, collaborating on an interdisciplinary project on evolution and cooperation with what she describes as 鈥渂rilliant international postdocs milling around the centrally positioned espresso machine, and with other eminent faculty in mathematics, psychology, clinical medicine and biological science regularly pitching in too鈥.
The same research project also underlies a聽new essay collection, Evolution, Games, and聽God: The Principle of Cooperation, that Coakley edited with Martin Nowak, professor of mathematics and biology (and director of the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics) at Harvard University. The book is almost heroically interdisciplinary, touching on everything from brain science, meerkats and slime moulds to experimental economics and the theological concept of kenosis (or divine 鈥渟elf-emptying鈥).
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All this makes Coakley exceptionally well placed to discuss the position of theology in today鈥檚 universities, and the role it can play in social and scientific debates. But I鈥檓 also keen to use our lunch at Kings Place in London to find out more about what drove her to become one of the UK鈥檚 most daring and prominent theologians.
She tells me that she comes from a religious background. Her mother is 鈥渁 profoundly religious and spiritual person鈥 and, although her father also 鈥渨orshipped on the golf course鈥, she 鈥渃an鈥檛 remember a time when God wasn鈥檛 a vibrant reality for me鈥. So much so that she already knew that she wanted to be a theologian by the age of 12.
After a first degree at Cambridge and a聽master鈥檚 at Harvard, Coakley returned to Cambridge for a short period before securing from Lancaster University a聽pioneering shared lectureship with her husband, which she held from 1976 to 1991. This experience proved 鈥渧ery cementing, as we had to stay together. The rule was: if one of you leaves, the other has to go.鈥
Since 1977, alongside her progress as an academic, she has been 鈥渆xploring a particular kind of practice of attention, a form of prayer鈥.
鈥淪ustained practices of silence are profoundly transformative over time of one鈥檚 spiritual and ethical perspective on the world,鈥 she says. 鈥淚nitially the undertaking can be quite fearful because 鈥 to put it in secular terms 鈥 you are encountering the unconscious, which can be very disturbing, destabilising, but at the same time there鈥檚 a sort of seepage into consciousness of all the creative material academics are otherwise trained to filter out鈥hen I聽talk to a Buddhist who is also a practitioner I聽feel more in common than with many Christians.鈥

After Lancaster, Coakley spent two 鈥渧ery painful鈥 years at a then highly traditionalist Oxford college, where she experienced 鈥渢he extraordinary psychic difficulties of being the first woman in an all-male environment鈥.
She was met with what she terms 鈥渢rivialisation鈥: 鈥渢he assumption I聽couldn鈥檛 really do the job but had been appointed to look nice鈥, which led to 鈥渜uite devious鈥 behind-the-scenes attempts to undermine her. The atmosphere took its toll on the female students as well, almost all of whom 鈥渉ad some kind of neurotic problem: they had eczema, they picked their fingers, they suffered from depression 鈥 there was something about the culture that was not allowing them to flourish. When I聽got to Harvard in 1993, there was such a difference! The women there were sure of their own convictions and their own giftedness.鈥 Coakley now has a rule of thumb that institutions begin to change significantly only once there are five women in senior positions.
But her 15 years at Harvard (1993-2007) 鈥 where, from 1995, she was Mallinckrodt professor of divinity 鈥 were not without their frustrations. She recalls that Lawrence Summers, who was president of the university from 2001 to 2006, was 鈥渢otally opposed to any religious practice on his campus鈥.
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鈥淲hen he arrived, he banned the Dalai Lama from a conference 鈥 he didn鈥檛 want anyone in a robe in Harvard! That was a sort of declaration of war. He wanted a religion department that was secular: he didn鈥檛 want a聽divinity school that was training ministers. He had to back off because of antagonising alumni, but what he did instead was to try to secularise the place as much as possible. That was deeply unhappy for me. The indecision about what the divinity school was for made it difficult to operate with integrity.鈥
It was partly because of this that Coakley decided to take on 鈥渁 big flagship interdisciplinary investigation鈥. She was 鈥済iven postdocs and space in Nowak鈥檚 lab, and spent a year there on a sort of sabbatical watching the number crunchers at work. He鈥檚 a devout but liberal Roman Catholic. We went out to lunch every Friday to talk about theology because he was keen to find a way of integrating his religious belief with his scientific work.鈥
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At the heart of God, Sexuality, and the Self is the compelling and perhaps disconcerting claim that sexual desire is 鈥渢he precious 鈥榗lue鈥 woven into our created being reminding us of our rootedness in God鈥, not least because 鈥渢he contemplative on her knees well knows the messy entanglement of sexual desire and the desire for God鈥. Rigorously argued, the text also makes appeal to the insights derived from contemplative practices that 鈥渋nvolve the stuff of learned bodily enactment, sweated out painfully over months and years, in duress, in discomfort, in bewilderment, as well as in joy and dawning recognition鈥.
Each planned volume of On Desiring God will take in one of the arts because, as the first volume puts it, 鈥渢o allow oneself to be caught off guard, disturbed, intrigued, irritated, freshly inspired or even reduced to mirth鈥 by such an experimental approach to academic writing is 鈥減recisely part of the searching of dark corners that my method bespeaks鈥.
Each volume will also draw on theological fieldwork. The forthcoming second volume will describe Coakley鈥檚 experiences when she was training for the priesthood and working in a Boston jail with black men between the ages of 17 and 23, most of whom were in for minor drugs offences.
鈥淚聽was asked to teach them practices of attention,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淭hey were doing a聽programme of anger management and post-addiction training, which involved learning to deal with their own inner turmoil鈥heir whole social status depended on a policing culture that ensured they would be cycled round criminality for at least the first few decades of their lives. When they engaged with practices lacking in immediate gratification, they were enormously empowered. One of them said to me: 鈥業聽get it! This practice is the opposite of drugs.鈥 It鈥檚 a wonderful insight.鈥
But, I聽suggest, doesn鈥檛 her impassioned, wide-ranging and somewhat experimental brand of theology put her at odds with the modern academic imperative to produce a聽stream of methodologically 鈥渟afe鈥 works that peers on research assessment panels are likely to smile upon?

鈥淚t鈥檚 risky to be appealing to prayer and contemplation as well as to argument,鈥 she agrees. 鈥淭he nature of the university right now, and the way our work has come to be policed, makes it seem a little unusual. But if you don鈥檛 take such risks in our subject, you are painting yourself into a corner of extinction, because the claims of theology have always been about the nature of God in relation to the world鈥It is not enough to] talk about what other people have said about the nature of God 鈥 that鈥檚 safe, but it鈥檚 reducing theology to textual criticism and anthropology.鈥
Furthermore, Coakley believes that 鈥渢here are a聽set of seeming irresolvable questions in contemporary culture鈥, such as many of those relating to gender and race, 鈥渨here we seem to have reached an impasse鈥 鈥 but which now 鈥渄eserve critical theological illumination from a left-field perspective鈥. In God, Sexuality, and the Self, she sets out to develop a聽form of feminism that disputes the idea that 鈥渟ubmission to God鈥 is 鈥渢he opposite of female empowerment鈥, noting that 鈥渋t鈥檚 a聽strong strand in my writing that submission to the right and only and true source of power empowers you better than any form of worldly power鈥.
Meanwhile, with Evolution, Games, and聽God, Coakley, Nowak and their contributors have stepped right into the heart of the disputes between science and religion.
Central to the book is an attempt to think through the implications of new mathematical models of 鈥渢he impact of cooperation on evolutionary processes鈥. Nowak argues that there are 鈥渢hree principles鈥 of evolution and cautions that mutation and selection alone, without the third principle of cooperation, 鈥渕ay not give rise to complexity鈥.
This issues a direct challenge to the 鈥渟tory of evolution as something propelled entirely by selfishness鈥, which Coakley and Nowak take to be the message of Richard Dawkins鈥 seminal 1976 book, The Selfish Gene. They also speculate that 鈥渢he intensification of the idea of evolutionary selfishness鈥 may be linked with 鈥渁 Western market bubble that has subsequently burst鈥.
I聽remind Coakley of a striking aside in her Gifford Lectures about the 鈥済reat secret that men rarely discuss鈥, namely that 鈥渟acrifice is being done all the time physiologically in the tiring and painful human business of pregnancy, birth-giving and lactation鈥.
Yes, she agrees, 鈥渟elf-giving is a reality. I聽think Nowak鈥檚 work points directly to those features of evolutionary life that haven鈥檛 been sufficiently reflected on. Nature red in tooth and claw is dominatingly there, but other things are going on as well. No clear gender theory can be read off the results of evolution. What you can read off is the productive significance of certain forms of sacrificial behaviour. The whole process can鈥檛 occur without those. That allows us to look at the spectrum of evolution in a way that has been deeply out of fashion.鈥
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But whether or not we agree that a religious perspective on sacrifice and cooperation can sustain a fruitful dialogue with modern evolutionary theory, it is hard to disagree with Coakley about the sheer importance of cooperation to our future as a species. 鈥淚聽think we are at a moment when cooperation either is or isn鈥檛 going to go into a completely different gear of operating globally,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e now have the communications systems to be able to do that. Do we have the moral purpose? If we don鈥檛, there are certain pressing problems for the human race we can鈥檛 solve.鈥濃
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