Templeton Foundation Prize for Progress in Religion
Updated September 9, 2022 |
Infoplease Staff
The Templeton Prize, an award to encourage progress in religion, was established in 1972 by Sir John Templeton, a Tennessee-born financial analyst and Presbyterian layman, and first presented in 1973. Its value has increased over the years to nearly $1 million, depending on exchange rates.
- 1973
- Mother Teresa of Calcutta, founder, the Missionaries of Charity
- 1974
- Brother Roger, founder and prior, the Taize Community in France
- 1975
- Dr. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, former president of India and Oxford Professor of Eastern Religions and Ethics
- 1976
- H. E. Leon Joseph Cardinal Suenens, Archbishop of Malines-Brussels
- 1977
- Chiara Lubich, founder of the Focolare Movement, Italy
- 1978
- Prof. Thomas F. Torrance, president of International Academy of Religion and Sciences, Scotland
- 1979
- Nikkyo Niwano, founder of Rissho Kosel Kai and World Conferences on Religion and Peace, Japan
- 1980
- Prof. Ralph Wendell Burhoe, founder and editor of Zygon, Chicago
- 1981
- Dame Cicely Saunders, originator of Modern Hospice Movement, England
- 1982
- The Rev. Dr. Billy Graham, founder, The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association
- 1983
- Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, U.S.
- 1984
- The Rev. Michael Bourdeaux, founder, Keston College, England
- 1985
- Sir Alister Hardy, Oxford, England
- 1986
- Rev. Dr. James McCord, Princeton, N.J.
- 1987
- Rev. Professor Stanley L. Jaki, Princeton, N.J.
- 1988
- Dr. Inamullah Khan, secretary-general, World Muslim Congress
- 1989
- The Very Reverend Lord MacLeod of the Iona Community, Scotland, and Professor Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, Starnberg, West Germany
- 1990
- Baba Amte, India, and Professor Charles Birch, Sydney, Australia
- 1991
- The Rt. Hon. Lord Jakobovits, chief rabbi of Great Britain and the Commonwealth
- 1992
- Dr. Kyung-Chik Han, founder, Seoul's Young Nak Presbyterian Church
- 1993
- Charles W. Colson, founder, Prison Fellowship, Virginia
- 1994
- Michael Novak, scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, Washington, D.C.
- 1995
- Dr. Paul Davies, professor, University of Adelaide, Australia
- 1996
- William R. “Bill” Bright, president and founder, Campus Crusade for Christ International, California
- 1997
- Pandurang Shastri Athavale, founder and leader of Swadhyaya, a spiritual movement credited with improving the lives of 20 million people
- 1998
- Sir Sigmund Sternberg, founder and chairman, Sternberg Centre for Judaism, London
- 1999
- Ian Barbour, professor emeritus, Carleton College, Minnesota
- 2000
- Freeman J. Dyson, professor emeritus, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J.
- 2001
- Arthur Peacocke, physical biochemist and Anglican priest, Oxford, England
- 2002
- John C. Polkinghorne, mathematical physicist and Anglican priest, Cambridge, England
- 2003
- Holmes Rolston III, professor of philosophy and Presbyterian minister, Colorado State University
- 2004
- George F. R. Ellis, professor of applied mathematics, University of Cape Town, South Africa
- 2005
- Charles Hard Townes, professor of physics, University of California, Berkeley, California
- 2006
- John D. Barrow, professor of mathematical sciences, University of Cambridge, England
- 2007
- Charles Taylor, professor of law and philosophy, Northwestern University, Illinois
- 2008
- Michael Heller, professor of philosophy, Pontifical Academy of Theology, Cracow, Poland
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