Frederick Robert Tennant


Frederick Robert Tennant, best known as F. R. Tennant was a British theologian, philosopher of religion and writer.

Career

Tennant studied mathematics, physics, biology, and chemistry at Caius College, Cambridge prior to becoming a theologian. After hearing the 1889 Huxley lectures, Tennant’s interest in religion grew in the 1890s ultimately leading him to prepare for ordination in the Church of England. While he was ordained he taught science at Newcastle-under-Lyme High School, and became a lecturer in Theology and fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge in 1913.
As an Anglican theologian, Tennant assimilated much of Huxley’s lectures culminating in the 1901-1902 Hulsean Lecture entitled Origin and Propagation of Sin where he integrated evolutionary ideas into a Christian synthesis.
One of Tennant's goals in his writings was an integrative synthesis of the doctrines of the fall and original sin with Huxley’s claims of conflict between Darwinian thought and Christianity.

Evolution and purpose

Tennant believed that the existence of a god was needed to explain the purposive quality of evolution. Tennant was the first theist widely known to put forward such an argument. In volume 2 of his book Philosophical Theology he says:
"The multitude of interwoven adaptations by which the world is constituted a theatre of life, intelligence, and morality, cannot reasonably be regarded as an outcome of mechanism, or of blind formative power, or aught but purposive intelligence."

He was an advocate of theistic evolution. Tennant made an argument from design from the "quality of the evolution process".

Publications