Elijah Interfaith Institute

The Elijah Interfaith Institute
Motto Sharing Wisdom, Fostering Peace
Formation 1997
Type NGO
Headquarters Israel Jerusalem, Israel
Head
Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein
Affiliations UNESCO
Website elijah-interfaith.org

Elijah Interfaith Institute is a nonprofit, international, UNESCO-sponsored interfaith organization which was founded by Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein in 1997.[1]

The mission of the Elijah Interfaith Institute, encapsulated in its slogan “Sharing Wisdom, Fostering Peace,” is to foster unity in diversity, creating a harmonious world. Through its various activities, Elijah deepens understanding among religious leaders and scholars, and through them, spreads its vision to their various communities. In 2016, the Elijah Board of World Religious Leaders articulated Elijah’s message: “The world’s great religions radiate wisdom that can heal the world. The spirit of Elijah is wisdom, inspiration, friendship and hope across religious traditions.”

Headquartered in Jerusalem, Elijah has offices and representatives in different countries, and holds its activities in multiple international settings.

The Elijah Board of World Religious Leaders

The Elijah Board of World Religious Leaders brings together some of the world's most prominent religious figures from Judaism, Islam, Christianity, Buddhism and the Religions of India in order to provide a platform for the exchange of ideas that leads to transformation within religions and their teachings. The Board numbers about 70 leaders from all faith traditions, and includes figures such as the Dalai Lama, Cardinal Schonborn, Mustafa Cerić, Mata Amritanandamayiand Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks. The Board represents an opportunity for these religious leaders to collectively address today's problems from within the resources of their own traditions. The Elijah Board of World Religious Leaders convenes in-person bi-annually, in different locations around the globe. It has met to date seven times, since its creation in Seville in 2003. Sub-groups have met on specific projects of common interest. Board members periodically respond jointly to issues of global concern which demand a united religious voice.

The Elijah Interfaith Academy

The Elijah Interfaith Academy provides the institutional structure to enable scholars and teachers of different traditions to share their teaching, engage in common projects, create intellectual resources and provide a powerful symbol of interfaith cooperation. The projects undertaken by the Academy deal with religion in contemporary society, and with the theoretical foundations of interfaith relations. A series of publications at Lexington Books features the research of the Interfaith Academy. Several research projects and publications have focused on theology of religions, considering the theological approaches of a given religion towards others as well of broader theoretical issues related to religious pluralism. One scholarly forum of the Elijah Interfaith Academy is devoted to the study of the mystical and spiritual life in an interreligious context. One of the contemporary research projects focuses on the study of outstanding religious individuals who have the potential of being inspiring across religious traditions. These are studied through a newly developed category - “Religious Genius”. 

Elijah School for the Study of Wisdom in World Religions (including Summer Schools)

Prior to the creation of the Board and Academy, Elijah was known as the Elijah School for the Study of Wisdom in World Religions. Not only did the school bring together twelve Jerusalem-based Jewish, Christian, and Muslim institutions within an academic consortium, but it also provided one of the few places in Israel where Orthodox, Conservative and Reform Jews met without prejudice. The educational activities continue, mainly through the annual summer school program, that has taken place in Jerusalem and elsewhere for more than two decades. An Elijah Summer School consists of academic study, which takes place not in isolation or in abstraction, but within an interfaith community of faculty and students. Interfaith dialogue forms the backbone of the school and allows for the integration of the study of religious traditions with exposure to their lived spirituality. A unique feature is the use of Bibliodrama as a creative technique to share sacred texts and the narratives of religious geniuses (see below – BASICS).

In 2017, the theme of the summer school will be “Sharing Wisdom: The Quest for One-Ness.”

Topics of Previous Elijah Interfaith Summer Schools include:

The Place of Law in World Religions

The Representation of God in Image, Icon, Word, and Thought

Mystical Prayer

Conversion and Religious Identity

Holy Lives: Saints in World Religions

Sacred Space without Holy Land: Diaspora in World Religion

Authority in World Religions

Death and Dying

Holiness in World Religions: The Idea and the Crisis

Sexuality, Textuality, and Spirituality

The Power of Prayer

Religious Genius

Religious Leadership: Ideals and Challenges

Interreligious Activism

Elijah Institute has engaged in various campaigns and public outreach activities, by means of which its vision of interfaith harmony, carrying the authority of affiliated religious leaders, is communicated to broader audiences. Elijah’s quest to make its work a transformative force in society has taken the Institute from its scholarly theological roots to various forms of interfaith activism. Some examples include:

From Scholar to Street

Elijah’s aim is to take the work of its scholars and leaders to their various communities and to find creative ways of sharing wisdom and providing inspiration to religious and interreligious communities around the world.

Some of its initiatives in this direction have included:

Media projects

Elijah’s activities have been carried out with awareness of taking its work from the domain of religious elites to the broadest public realm. Elijah is actively engaged in outreach through multiple platforms: its website, YouTube channel, active Facebook page and blogging activities of its staff and members of the Elijah Board of World Religious Leaders. The Elijah Interfaith Institute developed together with the Dutch advertising firm LEMZ the groundbreaking and record-breaking media project “Making Friends Across Religions” that brought to the man on the street a friendship call by the world’s most prominent faith leaders. 

Projects Under Development

Elijah’s accomplishments to date serve as the foundation for a comprehensive development plan, developed following the meeting of the Board of World Religious Leaders in Salt Lake City, November 2016. A list of projects under development is available.

Elijah’s development plans are framed by two central concepts:

A. Global Hope Network

In a sense, Elijah has always been a global network. Elijah’s leaders have carried its message to their communities and used its resources for continuing educational activity. Various community outreach activities have been carried out, including study and training programs in multiple localities. Elijah’s leaders and scholars are presently developing initiatives that will take the work of the Elijah Board of World Religious Leaders and extend it from the global to the regional and local levels. These include meetings of regional religious leaders as well as online study and communications programs.

Elijah envisions that as an outgrowth of the regional gatherings and the online platform, a global community, a movement, will emerge based on sharing wisdom across religions and building a common global vision

B. HOPE Center

The Center of HOPE, an acronym for House of Prayer and Education, in Jerusalem, is the heart of the global vision. It is inspired by the prophecy of God’s house being a House of Prayer for all people. Presently, there is not a single institution in all of Jerusalem in which its religions share and come together. The HOPE Center would be Jerusalem's first center for education and spiritual life, owned and shared by all religions. As the Global Hope Network becomes a global phenomenon, the Center of Hope will be established as a physical facility in Jerusalem. The Center will provide a powerful symbol of the potential that Jerusalem has to be a city of unity, rather than one of division. The Center would involve members of all religions, East and West, in learning opportunities. It will include a museum on prayer and the spiritual life, and a pilgrimage center for inter-religious pilgrimage. It will have parallel prayer spaces for all major faith traditions to pray side by side and to share prayer experiences. It would model collaboration, education, service and prayer for peace in Jerusalem and worldwide. It would inspire people outside Jerusalem, worldwide, to both support the collaborative spiritual vision of Jerusalem and to seek to emulate it and to extend it to their various localities.

Publications

A. Interreligious Reflections

Research projects of the Elijah Institute are published through a dedicated series at Lexington Books, titled “Interreligious Reflections”. The following titles have appeared to date:

Sharing Wisdom: Benefits and Boundaries of Interreligious Learning

The Religious Other

The Crisis of the Holy

Friendship across Religions

The Future of Religious Leadership

Memory and Hope

More details can be found here.

B. Other publications

Several projects devoted to theology of religions have also yielded publications of single authors or groups of scholars. (Details can be found here.)

Titles include:

Religious Genius: Appreciating Inspiring Individuals Across Traditions

Jewish Theology and World Religions

The Jewish Encounter with Hinduism: Wisdom, Spirituality, Identity

Same God, Other god: Judaism, Hinduism, and the Problem of Idolatry

Dov Schwartz, The Religious Genius of Rav Kook in Academic Studies Press, 2015

C. Teaching resources

Many publications are available on the Elijah Institute’s website. These are based on conferences or are the work of Elijah’s scholars and think tanks. Resources for community interfaith engagement appear in the “Scholars’ Activity” section, under the heading “Courses.” 

There are four courses in the category of “Mystical and Spiritual Life”, and courses entitled “Hostility to Hospitality”, “The Future of Religious Leadership”, “Sharing Wisdom: The Case of Forgiveness.” New courses will be released soon.

Partnerships

UNESCO 

Museum of World Religions 

Fetzer Institute

Interfaith Encounter Association

International Forgiveness Institute

Tantur

BASICS

Friends of the Earth Middle East

Global Interfaith WASH Alliance

Brahma Kumaris

References

Praying for One Another Even When We Disagree

Jesus Loaves Church Reopens 20 Months After Arson Attack

Rivlin to Join Interfaith Gathering at Church of Loaves and Fishes

Indonesian Muslim Leaders Promote Dialogue in Israel and Palestinian Authority

Multi Faith Prayer Fulfills Jerusalem’s Biblical Destiny House Prayer Nations

Church calls on Christians to combat anti-Semitism

Interfaith Group Prays Peace Jerusalem

An Interfaith Forum on the Pope’s Visit

Elijah Interfaith Leaders Claim Hope as a Shared Principle

Alon Goshen Gottstein at Latrun Monastery

Elijah Interfaith Institute Condemns Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira’s Book

One step closer to peace

Top religious leaders urge followers to ‘make friends’ across faiths

World’s Top Religious Leaders Issue Rare Joint Appeal

Jewish Groups Raise More than $17,000 To Repair Torched ‘Miracle’ Church In Israel

Why rabbis support restoring the burnt church

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