Westminster abbey has been crowning and burying England’s
monarchs for 11 centuries. But it rarely pays spiritual homage to
anyone else apart from occasional statesmen, warriors, or poets of
great eminence. So it was an unusual honor when the abbey recently
held a special service of thanksgiving for a billionaire
philanthropist and Wall Street fund manager whom Money magazine in
1999 called “the greatest global stock picker of the century.” He
was the American-born Sir John Templeton, who died last year aged
95. As the packed congregation attending his memorial service
discovered, there was a lot more to Templeton than his stellar
achievements in wealth creation. For he was also a scholar,
original thinker, and philanthropist in the realms of spirituality
and science, with views that may be coming into increasing
acceptance.
John Marks Templeton was born in Winchester, Tennessee, in 1912.
As a Yale student during the Great Depression, he received a letter
from his father saying that parental support for his education was
no longer affordable. This acted as a spur to redoubled academic
effort. Templeton graduated close to the top of his Yale class in
1934 and won a Rhodes scholarship to Oxford, where he achieved an
MA (Honours) in law. As an investor Templeton thought differently
from his competitors. He was often a countercyclical optimist when
markets were in free fall.
At the outbreak of World War II in 1939 he picked 100 stocks
trading at under $1 and made multiple returns on 94 of them. He
pioneered global diversi- fication into emerging economies and
owned the first leading mutual fund to take big positions in the
postwar Japanese market. He disdained technical analysis and charts
for stock trading. Instead he searched for value by concentrating
on personal study of company fundamentals. As a result his
Templeton mutual funds were remarkably successful. Yet his triumphs
in the world of Mammon were secondary to his calling from God. For
in 1992 Templeton sold his group for $440 million in order to
concentrate on the work he considered to be of primary importance:
the advancement of spirituality and religion.
At the Westminster Abbey service every attendee was given a
digest of readings from Templeton’s book Riches for the Mind and
Spirit. Part anthology, part autobiography, the excerpts
encapsulated Sir John’s quest for spiritual wholeness. Many of the
themes were familiar Christian territory (love, forgiveness,
humility, perseverance, hope, courage, prayer, thanksgiving) but
were tackled from angles that combined vibrancy of expression with
originality of thought. Here is the author on the important subject
of gratitude:
Thanksgiving opens the door to spiritual growth. If there is any
day in our life which is not thanksgiving day, then we are not
fully alive. Counting our blessing attracts blessings. Counting our
blessings each morning starts a day full of blessings. Thanksgiving
brings God’s bounty. From gratitude comes riches—from complaints,
poverty. Thankfulness opens the door to happiness. Thanksgiving
causes giving. Thanksgiving puts our mind in tune with the
Infinite. Continual gratitude dissolves our worries.
Exploring ways of being in tune with the Infinite was an
important priority for John Templeton. Although dedicated to his
Christian beliefs, he was open to the benefits and values of other
faiths. He was also full of optimistic curiosity about the
possibility of new discoveries in the field of religious and
scientific advancement. He argued that theologically minded
scientists should utilize the meticulous techniques of their
research to make progress in spiritual exploration.
When Templeton first began voicing his thoughts on this largely
unknown area of religio-scientific study some luminaries of both
establishments thought he was a fringe or even beyond the fringe
eccentric. But times and views are changing. One of the many
interesting features of the Westminster Abbey memorial service was
the galaxy of distinguished scientists and theologians who came to
it. In conversation at the reception afterward one nuclear
physicist praised Templeton’s pioneering work and linked it to the
thesis set out in a potentially important book due to be published
in the U.S. in July, The Evolution of God by Robert Wright.
This work, by a secular author well known for his work on free
trade, is skeptical about much past and present religious doctrine.
But it suggests that God may best be understood in the future by
the evolution of human knowledge of the divine. It is surely an
argument that would have had some resonance with John Templeton.
For why should divine truth, however once revealed, stay
permanently static in earlier time warps of historical and
theological thought? Doesn’t it make more sense at least to be open
to the possibility that evolving knowledge may help us to uncover
greater truth about God? He is eternal. We human beings are
temporal. That makes us potentially fallible to theological
misunderstandings of yesterday yet capable of better understanding
today as a result of new discoveries and explorations.
Empowering exploration of divine truth is an important part of
John Templeton’s legacy. He gave much of his wealth to the
foundation that bears his name. One of its major goals is to
proliferate financial support for spiritual discoveries. The
Templeton Foundation encourages research and discussion into
“Life’s Biggest Questions” by awarding grants to institutions,
individuals, and organizations that pursue the answers to such
questions through “explorations into the laws of nature and the
universe and into questions on the nature of love, gratitude,
forgiveness and creativity.”
Your High Spirits columnist is currently reading all Sir John
Templeton’s writings and lectures with enthusiastic interest.
Through the Trinity Forum in Europe (a long-established Scottish
educational charity of which I am executive director) we are
running a Templeton-supported program in Oxford, Edinburgh, and
Westminster for tomorrow’s leaders, with special focus on Rhodes
and Marshall scholars, graduate students, young faculty members,
and young comers in parliament and government.
I knew from previous experience that studies of “Life’s Biggest
Ques tions” would go down well in an academic environment. But I
had qualms about whether the rising generation of politicians and
government appointees would take the time and trouble to travel on
Templetonsian journeys of spiritual exploration. How wrong I was!
The early gatherings of our new Westminster Forum are heavily
oversubscribed by the best and brightest. It’s a case of standing
room only at our forum on “The Importance of Gratitude” led by
Prof. Roger Scruton (well known to TAS readers), and the same looks
like it will be the case for all our summer and fall forums on
subjects such as “For give ness in the Criminal Justice System,”
“Forgive ness in Parliamentary Life” (a hot topic since a mass of
MPs have recently been caught red-handed breaking laws and expenses
regulations on their allowances), “Forgiving Former Enemies in
Northern Ire land,” and “The Limits of Science.”
These events are taking place in rooms a stone’s throw from
Westminster Abbey. So I like to imagine Sir John Templeton looking
down on our deliberations from some celestial vantage point in the
Abbey’s soaring transepts of King Henry VII’s chapel, which he
loved. I hope he will be pleased that his life’s work of spiritual
exploration on the themes he championed is now flourishing today in
21st-century Westminster.
poptropica | 4.9.10 @ 10:16PM
thanks you very much for your information
Poptropica
Poptropica
Lelani J | 6.5.11 @ 9:41AM
An interesting article and one worth noting.UTI Treatment