Catholic views Thomas Aquinas was the first to write a full treatment of the relationship, differences, and similarities between faith, which he calls "an intellectual assent", and reason.
Dei Filius was a
dogmatic constitution of the
First Vatican Council on the
Roman Catholic faith. It was adopted unanimously on 24 April 1870. It states that "not only can faith and reason never be opposed to one another, but they are of mutual aid one to the other". Recent
popes have spoken about faith and rationality:
Fides et ratio, an
encyclical letter promulgated by
Pope John Paul II on 14 September 1998, deals with the relationship between faith and reason.
Pope Benedict XVI's
Regensburg lecture, delivered on 12 September 2006, was on the subject of "faith, reason and the university".
Lutheran views Reformed views Alvin Plantinga upholds that faith may be the result of evidence testifying to the reliability of the source of truth claims, but although it may involve this, he sees faith as being the result of hearing the truth of the gospel with the internal persuasion by the Holy Spirit moving and enabling him to believe. "Christian belief is produced in the believer by the internal instigation of the
Holy Spirit, endorsing the teachings of
Scripture, which is itself divinely inspired by the Holy Spirit. The result of the work of the Holy Spirit is faith."
Evangelical views American biblical scholar
Archibald Thomas Robertson stated that the Greek word
pistis used for faith in the New Testament (over two hundred forty times), and rendered "assurance" in Acts 17:31 (KJV), is "an old verb to furnish, used regularly by Demosthenes for bringing forward evidence." Likewise Tom Price (Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics) affirms that when the New Testament talks about faith positively it only uses words derived from the Greek root [pistis] which means "to be persuaded." In contrast to faith meaning blind trust, in the absence of evidence, even in the teeth of evidence,
Alister McGrath quotes Oxford Anglican theologian W. H. Griffith-Thomas (1861–1924), who states faith is "not blind, but intelligent" and "commences with the conviction of the mind based on adequate evidence", which McGrath sees as "a good and reliable definition, synthesizing the core elements of the characteristic Christian understanding of faith." ==Jewish views==