Photo Credit: Courtesy: The Herzl Institute

Published in Jewish Business News

The Herzl Institute, a Jerusalem entity, has been awarded $2.2 million to help Christians and Jews study Jewish texts, launching what’s being billed as a new kind of Jewish-Christian cooperation. So goes the press release, which also suggests this is the first ever multimillion-dollar grant in Jewish theology given out by the U.S.-based Templeton Foundation.

Advertisement




The foundation’s website describes their mission as follows:

The John Templeton Foundation serves as a philanthropic catalyst for discoveries relating to the Big Questions of human purpose and ultimate reality. We support research on subjects ranging from complexity, evolution, and infinity to creativity, forgiveness, love, and free will. We encourage civil, informed dialogue among scientists, philosophers, and theologians and between such experts and the public at large, for the purposes of definitional clarity and new insights.

Sounds like fun.

Sir John Marks Templeton, who passed away in 2008 a few months short of his 96th birthday, was a British stock investor born in Winchester, Tennessee.

Yes, I know, those biographies usually start in England and end, well, not in Tennessee, but on the opposite side of the pond.

Templeton became a billionaire by practically inventing the use of globally diversified mutual funds. His Templeton Growth Fund, Ltd., established in 1954, was among the first who invested in Japan in the middle of the 1960s.

On the lighter side, he also served as an elder of the First Presbyterian Church of Englewood (NJ), was a trustee on the board of Princeton Theological Seminary, the largest Presbyterian seminary, for 42 years and served as its chair for 12 years.

JTF has focused much of its giving on science-related projects, and HI, in Jerusalem, is a research institute focusing on the development of Jewish ideas in philosophy and history.

The institute is named for Theodor Herzl, the relentless visionary of modern political Zionism.

Yoram Hazony is President of the Herzl Institute. He is founder and past President of the Shalem Center in Jerusalem, now Shalem College. In the press release, Hazony says: “We’re not just talking about Christians wanting to help Jews out of solidarity or charity, we are talking about the dominant faith of Western civilization saying: ‘The Jews have something to give us, something that we need.’ This is not something that appears in the old playbook for Jewish-Christian dialogue.”

The King’s College in Manhattan and the Herzl Institute also announced a partnership to send Christian students to a “Hebraic Heritage” course where they will study and learn from Orthodox Jews in Jerusalem for a summer.

Hazony said professors at Assumption College in Massachusetts and Wesleyan College in Connecticut will also recruit students to study in Jerusalem.

I have to say, I love it, and it’s just the press release!

“What we’re seeing right now is not the old kind of interfaith dialogue where Christians talked about their Messiah and Jews talked about their Messiah and everybody agrees to disagree,” Hazony said. “This is completely new dialogue, where we look at Old Testament text and rabbinic texts and Christians are willing to look at Judaism and the Jewish text through Jewish eyes with Jewish lecturers.”

Courses will include studying Hebraic tradition, the impact of biblical ideas on modern-day Israel and the Middle East, and the relationship between Jews and contemporary Christianity and Islam.

“This new sense that there are many Christians who want to hear what Jews have to say fits very well with a dormant Jewish feeling that we have a mission to say something but for a long time people weren’t interested in hearing what we have to say,” Hazony said.


Share this article on WhatsApp:
Advertisement

1
2
SHARE
Previous articleUK School Inspectors Bully Orthodox Students with Sexual and Inappropriate Questions
Next articleLetters To The Editor
Tibbi Singer is a veteran contributor to publications such as Israel Shelanu and the US supplement of Yedioth, and Jewish Business News.