In the late 1950s, Domb helped found the British
Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists, based on the American model, and served as its president. Domb began writing his views reconciling the apparent contradictions between science and Judaism in 1961, when
The Jewish Chronicle of London asked him for a 1000-word article on how Jewish teachings accord with the
Big Bang and
Steady State cosmological theories. This article gained the attention of the
Lubavitcher Rebbe, who began a correspondence with Domb and encouraged him to continue his efforts to show religious sceptics that there is no contradiction between science and such Torah concepts as the
Genesis creation narrative and the
Existence of God. Unlike the Rebbe, Domb gave credence to the
theory of evolution, but held that this and other scientific theories were "only tentative summaries of our situation, whereas religion deals with what is right and what is wrong, and with many of the major driving forces in one's life". Domb went on to publish a collection of articles on science and religion in
Challenge: Torah views on science and its problems (1976), which he co-edited with Rabbi
Aryeh Carmell. ==Move to Israel==