Templeton Prize Winners
How might humankind's spiritual information and advancement
increase by more than a hundredfold? This is the challenge presented
by the Templeton Prize. Just as knowledge in science, medicine, cosmology,
and
other disciplines has grown exponentially during the past century,
the Templeton Prize honors and encourages the many entrepreneurs trying
various ways for
discoveries and breakthroughs to expand human perceptions of divinity
and to help in the acceleration of divine creativity.
This award is intended to encourage the concept that resources
and manpower are needed to accelerate progress in spiritual discoveries,
which can help humans to learn more than a hundredfold more about
divinity. The Prize is intended to help people see the infinity
of the Universal Spirit
still creating the galaxies and all living things and the variety
of ways in which the Creator is revealing himself to different
people.
The Templeton Prize is awarded annually to a living person. The Templeton
Prize does not encourage syncretism but rather an understanding of the benefits
of diversity. It seeks to focus attention on the wide variety of endeavors
toward discoveries or spiritual realities research. It does not seek a unity
of denominations nor a unity of world religions; but rather it seeks to
encourage understanding of the benefits of diversity. There is no limitation
of race, creed, sex, or geographical background.
The Templeton Prize serves to stimulate this quest for deeper understanding
and pioneering breakthroughs in religious concepts and knowledge by calling
attention annually to achievements in this area. It is hoped that there
will result from this enterprise expanded spiritual awareness on the part
of humankind, a wider understanding of the purpose of life, heightened quality
of devotion and love, and a greater emphasis on the kind of research and
discovery that brings human perceptions more into concert with the divine
will.
For more information about the Templeton Prize, please visit www.templetonprize.org
Michael Heller (2008)
Heller, 72, Professor in the Faculty of Philosophy at the Pontifical Academy of Theology in Cracow, toiled for years beneath the stifling strictures of the Soviet era. He has become a compelling figure in the realms of physics and cosmology, theology, and philosophy with his cogent and provocative concepts on issues that all of these disciplines pursue, albeit from often vastly different perspectives. With an academic and religious background that enables him to comfortably and credibly move within each of these domains, Heller’s extensive writings have evoked new and important consideration of some of humankind's most profound concepts.
Charles Taylor (2007)
Taylor was born in 1931 in Montréal in French-speaking Quebec, the only Canadian province where English is not the majority language. Growing up in a Catholic home where both French (his mother’s native tongue) and English (his father’s) were spoken, in a province where language is a political touchstone, spurred an early interest in matters of identity, society and the potential value of thought that runs against the common grain. Though his first degree was in history, a Rhodes Scholarship in 1952 led him to study philosophy at Oxford, where he encountered what Taylor describes as "an unstructured hostility" to, among other things, religious belief. In reaction, he began to question the so-called "objective" approaches of psychology, social science, linguistics, history, and other human sciences.
Taylor, who lives with his wife, Aube Billard, an art historian, in Montréal, and, currently in Evanston, Illinois, has said he will use the Templeton Prize money to advance his studies of the relationship of language and linguistic meaning to art and theology and to developing new concepts of relating human sciences with biological sciences.
John D. Barrow (2006)
John D. Barrow, 53, who serves as Professor of Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge, has used insights from mathematics, physics, and astronomy to set out wide-ranging views that challenge scientists and theologians to cross the boundaries of their disciplines if they are to fully realize what they may or may not understand about how time, space, and matter began, the behavior of the universe (or, perhaps, “multiverses”), and where it is all headed, if anywhere.
His work has illuminated understanding of the universe and cast the intrinsic limitations of scientific inquiry into sharp relief. It has also given theologians and philosophers inescapable questions to consider when examining the very essence of belief, the nature of the universe, and humanity’s place in it. Barrow’s engagement with frontier science and mathematics, developing multidisciplinary perspectives on subjects such as the mysteries of nothingness and infinity, and the potentially intelligible realms of the laws of Nature and the limits of scientific explanation, has jarred religious and scientific perspectives in such a way as to open pathways of understanding which may allow both to comprehend each other more fully.
In 1989 he moved to the Astronomy Centre at the University of Sussex, becoming a full professor in 1989, and served as Director from 1995 until he was appointed Professor of Mathematical Sciences in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at Cambridge in 1999. He was also elected a Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge and has been vice president since 2004. At Cambridge he was also appointed Director of the Millennium Mathematics Project, a many-faceted education initiative aimed at young people, aged five to 19, to help them understand and appreciate mathematics and its applications. The program was awarded the Queen’s Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education in the UK Honours list.
In 2002, Barrow was appointed Gresham Professor of Astronomy at Gresham College in London, a position once held by Sir Christopher Wren. Founded in 1596, it is the world’s oldest science professorship. Barrow also has the curious distinction of having delivered lectures on cosmology in such unexpected venues as the Venice Film Festival, 10 Downing Street, Windsor Castle and the Vatican Palace.
Charles Hard Townes (2005)
When Charles Hard Townes suddenly figured out how to tame microwaves
and, in the process, set the foundation for the development of
masers and lasers, it changed the modern world. But, for Townes,
who would go on to
win the Nobel Prize in Physics for his realization that day,
it was also a moment that spoke to a larger truth, about how the
power of revelation — not
unlike that recorded in the scriptures — evidences the similarity
of science and religion.
George F. R. Ellis (2004)
George F.R. Ellis, professor of applied
mathematics at the University of Cape Town, is theoretical cosmologist
specializing in general relativity theory, an area first broadly
investigated by Albert Einstein. Dr. Ellis is considered to
be among a handful
of the world's leading relativistic cosmologists, including
luminaries such as Stephen Hawking and Malcolm MacCallum. His first
book, The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time, written
with Stephen Hawking and published in 1973, continues to be a
standard reference work on the subject. His most recent investigations
question whether or not there was ever a start to the universe
and, indeed, if there is only one universe or many.
Holmes Rolston III (2003)
Known as the "father of environmental ethics," Holmes
Rolston III is one of the world's leading advocates for protecting
Earth's biodiversity and ecology in recognition of the intrinsic
values of creation. He is University Distinguished Professor at
Colorado State University and a Presbyterian minister. His thirty years
of research, books published in eighteen languages and lectures delivered
around the world on the religious imperative to respect nature
have established the field of environmental ethics.
John C. Polkinghorne (2002)
John C. Polkinghorne is a mathematical physicist
and Anglican priest whose treatment of theology as a natural
science invigorated the search for interface
between science and religion and made him a leading figure in this emerging
field. Dr. Polkinghorne resigned a prestigious position as professor of mathematical
physics at the University of Cambridge in 1979 to pursue theological studies,
becoming a priest in 1982. Since then, his extensive writings and lectures
have consistently applied scientific habits to Christianity, resulting in
a modern, compelling, new exploration of the faith. His approach
to the fundamentals
of Christian orthodoxy creation, using the habits of a rigorous scientific
mind have brought him international recognition as a unique voice for understanding
the Bible as well as evolving doctrine.
Arthur Peacocke (2001)
As senior lecturer in biophysical chemistry at the
University of Birmingham in England, conventional church teaching
left him disenchanted. Seeking an
alternative to automatic acceptance of scriptural authority of the Church,
he began a thorough study of theology, with the encouragement of a professor,
Geoffrey Lampe. In 1960, he received a Diploma in Theology and in 1971, a
Bachelor of Divinity from Birmingham University. It was at this
time that his scientific
and theological pursuits tangibly merged with the publication of Science and the Christian Experiment,
which he wrote while still a full-time scientist with a research group working
on the physical chemistry of DNA and proteins. In 1973, the book won the
prestigious Lecomte du Noüy Prize, the first global recognition of Peacocke as a leader
in the new discipline of science and religion. That same year, he became Dean
of Clare College, Cambridge, allowing him to pursue more fully his interdisciplinary
vocation.
Freeman J. Dyson (2000)
Of the many qualities attributed to physicist and
mathematician Freeman Dyson, professor emeritus at the Institute
for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey,
perhaps nothing more fully captures his personality than "optimist." Dyson has
received 17 honorary doctorates bestowed by Oxford, Dartmouth, Princeton, Yeshiva,
and other universities. Dyson has staked out his positions in several lecture
series and books that followed, including his Gifford Lectures at Aberdeen, Scotland
in 1985 (which led to his book, Infinite in All Directions), the Danz
Lectures at the University of Washington in 1988 (published as From Eros to Gaia),
lectures at Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1995 (which became Imagined Worlds),
and in 1997 at the New York Public Library (source of the book, The Sun, the Genome and the Internet).
Ian Graeme Barbour (1999)
Professor Ian Barbour is one of the world pioneers in the integration of science
and religion. His books and articles are helping to expand the field of theology
not only for Christians but also for other faiths. A physicist and former chair
of the religion department, Dr. Barbour is Winifred and Atherton Bean Professor
Emeritus of Science, Technology and Society at Carleton College in Northfield,
Minnesota. Professor Barbour is the author of many books, including Religion in An Age of Science, Science and Religion, Issues in Science and Religion, and Christianity and the Scientist.
Sir Sigmund Sternberg (1998)
Sir Sigmund Sternberg, a Hungarian-born British philanthropist
and businessman, has consistently encouraged interfaith dialogue for decades.
His behind-the-scenes
diplomacy played a critical role in relocating a Catholic convent at Auschwitz
in the 1980s. He also has been influential in organizing the first-ever papal
visit to a synagogue, negotiating the Vatican's recognition of the state of
Israel, and opening Vatican war-time files relating to Nazis and Jews. His
leadership
in promoting better relations between Muslims, Jews, and Christians continue
to bring about extraordinary breakthroughs in interfaith dialogue.
Pandurang Shastri Athavale (1997)
In 1954 in the villages around Bombay, nineteen of Athavale's most dedicated
co-workers, primarily professionals, began bhaktiferi -- devotional visits to the villages to spread the message of love for God and others. Through bhaktiferi, Athavale and his co-workers developed the practice of swadhyaya, a form of self-study that inspires each individual to recognize an inner God, cultivate an increased self-respect, and abandon immoral behavior. By believing that God also dwells within others, those who pursue self-study can develop a loving relationship with all persons, resulting in a reduction of crime, the removal of social barriers, and an alleviation of poverty, hunger, and homelessness.
William R. "Bill" Bright (1996)
In 1951, Bill Bright sold his specialty-foods business and began
a person-to-person sharing of New Testament scripture on the campus of the
University of California
at Los Angeles, calling his movement Campus Crusade for Christ. Beginning with
a small cadre of converts, Bright led the organization through enormous growth
to become a colossal set of ministries that reach around the globe. Campus
Crusade for Christ International currently serves more than 650 university
campuses in
the United States and 470 overseas. His efforts near the end of his life included
calling for worldwide spiritual revival through prayer and fasting.
Professor Paul Davies (1995)
Paul Davies is one of the world's most brilliant
scientists. He works at the forefront of research in fundamental physics
and cosmology
and has sought out
those areas of scientific inquiry that made outstanding contributions to
quantum physics and cosmology and has gone on to examine the philosophical
and theological
implications. As a result, he has initiated a new dialogue between science
and religion that is having worldwide repercussions. Among his many books
are The Mind of God, God and the New Physics, Other Worlds and The Cosmic Blueprint.
Michael Novak (1994)
Michael Novak, journalist, university professor, former U.S. ambassador,
and currently resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, revealed
revolutionary
insights into the spiritual foundations of economic and political systems.
His groundbreaking book, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism, and
other writings are credited with influencing such diverse personalities as
Pope John Paul II, Margaret Thatcher, Lech Walesa, and Vaclav Havel, all of
whom have been drawn to his extraordinarily original thought. Besides being
a pioneer in the theology of economics, Novak's writings, lectures, and commentaries
have also extended the boundaries of religious thinking into aspects of culture
rarely associated with spirituality, including ethnicity, sports, poverty,
the family, and the moral foundations of democracy and capitalism.
Charles W. Colson (1993)
Charles W. Colson, the former Special Counsel to President Richard
Nixon, began Prison Fellowship after serving a sentence in federal prison for
Watergate-related
crimes. It is now the largest prison outreach program in the world, operating
an international network of prison ministries in 60 nations. The organization
has made substantial gains in breaking the cycle of crime and recidivism through
the work of more than 50,000 volunteers in more than 800 state and federal
prisons in the United States, who reach one quarter of a million inmates each
year.
Kyung-Chik Han (1992)
Rev. Dr. Kyung-Chik Han was one of the world's most successful
Christian evangelists. Founder of Seoul's 60,000-member Young Nak Presbyterian
Church, Dr. Han's fervent
work for refugees and the poor epitomized the growth of Christianity in Korea.
His experience as a survivor of the ravages of war and political oppression
made him one of Korea's most respected religious leaders and a symbol of the
evangelism
that has extended the Presbyterian church to unprecedented numbers in Korea.
His church, the world's largest Presbyterian congregation, has founded more
than 500 churches in Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas, including the
5,000-member
Young Nak Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles.
Lord Jakobovits (1991)
Lord Jakobovits, Chief Rabbi of Great Britain and the Commonwealth
from 1967 to 1991, spent over half a century as a spiritual leader of steadfast
principles
and unwavering ethics. Author of the groundbreaking book, Jewish Medical Ethics,
he helped found this discipline of thought. Highly regarded for his extraordinary
scholarship, his sometimes bold positions — including opposition to violence
and polarization in the Middle East and his advocacy of education and spirituality
to promote religion — extended his moral authority far beyond the Jewish community.
Baba
Amte (1990; awarded jointly)
Baba Amte left his comfortable life as a wealthy Hindu lawyer to follow a personal
calling, developing modern communities to help those with Hanson's Disease (leprosy)
and other so-called untouchables of his native India. By building and funding
hospitals, schools, rehabilitation centers, a bank, library, post office, and
cooperative shops, his community brings employment, education, health, and other
services to citizens long denied dignity and compassion. He passed away on February 9, 2008 at the leprosy shelter he founded at Warora, in the western Indian state of Maharashtra. He had leukemia.
L. Charles Birch
(1990; awarded jointly)
Dr. L. Charles Birch, emeritus professor at University of Sydney,
Australia, since 1983, has been engaged in new and adventurous reflection on
questions of science
and faith throughout his career as a biologist-geneticist. He sees modern discoveries
about natural science as expanding humankind's understanding of God as designer
and creator of the universe and its creatures. He has been credited with the
development of a new understanding of the nature and role of God for a scientific
age and helping to reconcile the biological and the religious understanding
of creation.
Lord MacLeod
(1989; awarded jointly)
The Very Reverend Lord MacLeod, founder of the monastic Iona Community,
located on an island off the west coast of Scotland, spent his life reviving
a prayer-centered
spiritual movement that now has more than 100,000 supporters worldwide. This
ecumenical community's work to encourage peace in the world and help common
men and women through their struggles continues to operate with simplicity,
depending
on the scriptures to infuse new meaning to ancient ideals.
Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker
(1989;
awarded jointly)
Professor Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker's work has explored the intersection
of physics, cosmology, and theology, consistently putting him at the forefront
of the reconciliation between religion and natural science. His several key discoveries
in modern nuclear physics, along with his application of nuclear physics to astrophysics
caused him to begin questioning the estrangement of religion and science and
led to his investigation of Christianity's obligation to technology.
Inamullah Khan (1988)
Dr. Inamullah Khan, founder and former secretary-general of the
Modern World Muslim Congress in Karachi, Pakistan, devoted his life to working
tirelessly
to advance peace among Muslims, Christians, and Jews. This interfaith activism
provided important, new opportunities to foster good will and understanding.
In particular, he played a crucial role in helping to settle the war between
Iran and Iraq and to bring a message of peace to formerly apartheid South Africa.
Stanley L. Jaki (1987)
Benedictine monk and professor of astrophysics at Seton Hall University
in New Jersey, Rev. Professor Stanley L. Jaki is noted as a leading thinker
in areas
at the boundary of science and theology and issues where the two disciplines
meet and diverge. His more than two dozen books carefully delineate the importance
of differences as well as similarities between science and religion, adding
significant, balanced enlightenment to the field.
James McCord (1986)
Rev. Dr. James McCord, chancellor of the Center of Theological
Inquiry in Princeton, New Jersey, and president for 26 years of the Princeton
Theological Seminary,
spent his professional life investigating the relationship between science
and religion through his studies of the nature of reality. His center continues
to
serve as scholars' residence that encourages scientific and theological theories
to be developed and then published in books that detail the findings.
Sir Alister Hardy (1985)
Sir Alister Hardy, founder of the Sir Alister Hardy Research Centre
at Oxford, England, began his career as a marine biologist, but went on to
gain prominence
for original empirical studies that for the first time used scientific methodology
to investigate religious experience. He spent a lifetime seeking evidence of
God's centrality to the human condition, in the process gathering massive amounts
of information pointing out the key role religious experience plays in humanity.
Michael Bourdeaux (1984)
Rev. Michael Bourdeaux, founder of Keston College in England,
spearheaded a laborious, often lonely struggle to examine and explain the systematic
destruction of religion
in Iron Curtain nations during the Cold War. From his time as an exchange student
in Moscow in 1960, he worked to defend the rights of faiths in these countries
to worship as they chose. When the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc regimes
collapsed, Bourdeaux's efforts for universal religious freedom were embraced
by authorities, evidencing the strength of his beliefs.
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1983)
A living symbol of freedom of thought and conscience, Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn's struggle for open expression makes him one of the world's most
respected men.
Under the repressive Soviet regimes, he held on to his beliefs and shared his
worldview through his powerful writings and devastating critiques of the Soviet
Union. His work renewed vitality in the Orthodox tradition of spirituality
and evidence profound Christian faith, expressing a spiritual dimension long
neglected
by most novelists, and delivering a message of the unique and indestructible
quality of the soul.
Billy Graham (1982)
When the Rev. Dr. Billy Graham took his message of Christianity into the electronic
world of radio and television, he invigorated an entire generation with a simple,
yet poignant message of salvation. During his rise as media celebrity, however,
he maintained a dignity that continues to draw enormous audiences and enthusiastic
support with an interpretation of the Gospel that speaks to the problems and
pressures of today.
Dame Cicely Saunders (1981)
As a longtime caregiver, Dame Cicely Saunders spent years close to the dull,
agonizing suffering of terminally ill patients as they expressed their physical,
psycho-social, and spiritual pain. From this, Saunders moved to found the Hospice
and Palliative Care Movement, invoking a scientifically rigorous program combined
with a unique social and spiritual awareness. The program continues to develop
across cultural borders worldwide.
Ralph Wendell Burhoe (1980)
As founder and former editor of Zygon, Journal of Religion and Science, Prof. Ralph Burhoe pursued a passionate investigation into the differences and similarities of theology and science, becoming one of the world's most informed voices in communicating this evolving research. Zygon has played an unparalleled role in the interdisciplinary pursuit of issues at the boundary of science and religion by offering a common ground for dialogue.
Nikkyo Niwano (1979)
Literally translated, Rissho Kosei-Kai means "establishing the teaching of the true law in the world, mutual exchange of thought among people of faith, and the perfection of the personality." When
Rev. Nikkyo Niwano and Masa Naganuma founded Rissho Kosei-Kai, they set forth
on a mission that has blossomed from a handful of adherents into the world's
largest Buddhist lay group of more than five million people. Niwano is also
the founder of the World Conference of Religion and Peace.
Thomas F. Torrance (1978)
Through his intense scrutiny of the relationship between science and religion,
Professor Thomas Torrance, former Moderator of the Church of Scotland, became
one of the first religious thinkers to win the respect of both theologians and
scientists. His revelations on the rationality of the universe attempt to evidence
God through scientific reasoning. Torrance passed away in December 2007 in his home in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Chiara Lubich (1977)
Unhappy with the limitations of the cloistered existence for women dedicated
to becoming Catholic nuns, Chiara Lubich founded and developed Italy's Focolare
Movement as an alternative. Her community in Trent, Italy, dedicated itself to
serving the poor. Soon, it expanded to include men and married people. It then
spread to other Italian cities, followed by Focolare settlements in Belgium,
Germany, France, the United States, Japan, and Hong Kong. She has underscored
this legacy with longtime efforts to heal the theological breach between Catholics
and Protestants. She passed away on March 14, 2008.
Leon Joseph Cardinal Suenens (1976)
Cardinal Suenens, Archbishop of Malines-Brussels, Belgium, was a pioneer in the
research and discourse of the Charismatic Renewal Movement. As the movement gained
popularity in the early 1970s, many worried what effect this ancient, biblical
phenomenon would have on modern Christianity. The Cardinal's enlightened discourse
on the movement provided guidance and reassurance, eliminating misunderstanding
and offering thoughtful insight to followers and observers alike.
Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan (1975)
Throughout his life, Sir Sarvepalli — President of India from 1962 to 1967 — served as a voice of peace and justice. An Oxford professor of Eastern religions
and ethics, he consistently advocated non-aggression in India's long-simmering
conflicts with neighbor Pakistan, maintaining a defensive military posture as
well as working to end political corruption in his nation. His lucid writings
underscored his country's religious heritage and presented it in a way that made
it accessible to all. He also sought to convey a universal reality of God that
embraced love and wisdom for all people, regardless of race or religious belief.
Brother Roger (1974)
When
the Nazis occupied France during World War II, Brother Roger, founder and
prior (director) of the Taizé Community in France, harbored Jewish refugees. It was typical of Brother Roger's long history of helping the less fortunate. After the war, when he established the religious brotherhood known as the Taizé Community, he initiated efforts to aide orphans in the region surrounding the community. This led to the founding of the Council of Youth, and then the Intercontinental Meetings of Young Adults, which annually bring tens of thousands of young adults from throughout the world to pray and reflect in Taizé.
Mother Teresa (1973)
Six years before Mother Teresa received
the Nobel Peace Prize, she was recognized by the Templeton Prize for Progress
in Religion for her extraordinary efforts to help the homeless and neglected
children of Calcutta. Founder of India's Missionaries of Charity, Her heroic work not only affected real change among those
she served, but inspired millions of others around the world. |