Kenneth R. Cracknell (19 June 1935 - 26 October 2022) was a British specialist in
interfaith dialogue and the
Christian theology of religions.
Cracknell has written many articles and books on interfaith dialogue and other subjects, including ''Towards a New Relationship'' (1985), ''Justice Courtesy and Love'' (1994), ''An Introduction to World Methodism'' (2005), and ''In Good and Generous Faith'' (2005). A
festschrift, ''A Great Commission'' (2000) edited by
Martin Forward
Martin Forward is a British, Methodist Christian lecturer and author on religion and Professor of History at Aurora University, Illinois. He has taught Islam at the Universities of Leicester, Bristol and Cambridge, and had spent a period of time i ...
,
Stephen Plant and Susan White, includes scholarly articles by numerous friends and colleagues on the occasion of Cracknell's 65th birthday. He has pioneered a sensitive and respectful Christian approach to the religious Other while dealing skillfully with
Bible verses that for some demand a total condemnation of other
religions
Religion is usually defined as a social-cultural system of designated behaviors and practices, morals, beliefs, worldviews, texts, sanctified places, prophecies, ethics, or organizations, that generally relates humanity to supernatural, tran ...
and the conversion of their followers.
Wesley S. Ariarajah, former director of inter-religions relations at the
World Council of Churches describes Cracknell's discussion as "a probing exegesis of the apparently exclusive verses."
Defining mission as witnessing to the compassionate presence of God in the world modeled by the life and suffering of
Jesus Christ, Cracknell does not reject conversion from one faith to another but is more concerned with movement towards a deeper relationship with God and with loving action in God's world to reduce pain, poverty and prejudice. His ''Justice, Courtesy and Love'' examines the contributions of Christian scholars including missionaries whose encounter with the religious Other deepened their own understanding of the nature of God's concern for the restoration of human and
planetary health
Planetary health refers to "the health of human civilization and the state of the natural systems on which it depends". In 2015, the Rockefeller Foundation and ''The Lancet'' launched the concept as the Rockefeller Foundation–Lancet Commission on ...
. His career included pioneering the interfaith relations work of the
British Council of Churches
Churches Together in Britain and Ireland (CTBI) is an ecumenical organisation. The members include most of the major churches in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. CTBI is registered at Companies House with number 05661787. Its office is in Ce ...
, teaching at
University of Cambridge and at
Brite Divinity School
Brite Divinity School is a divinity school at Texas Christian University, a private university in Fort Worth, Texas. It is affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), approved by the University Senate of the United Methodist Church ...
,
Texas from where he retired in 2007 as Distinguished Professor of Theology and Global Studies.
Education
Cracknell obtained a
B.D. degree from the Universities of
London (1959) and
Oxford (1995). He was educated at the
University of Oxford (
BA,
MA) and the
University of Leeds (Post Graduate Certificate with distinction in Religion) and at the
Richmond Methodist College, London where he trained for ministry.
Career
A British subject and
Methodist minister, he began his career teaching in
Nigeria through the Methodist Church Overseas Mission Division, then served as minister in Loughborough and as chaplain to Loughborough University from 1967 to 1978. He served as the first Director for Interfaith Relations in the
British Council of Churches
Churches Together in Britain and Ireland (CTBI) is an ecumenical organisation. The members include most of the major churches in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. CTBI is registered at Companies House with number 05661787. Its office is in Ce ...
from 1978 until 1987 at first under the chairmanship of David Brown,
Bishop of Guildford and (from 1983) of Bishop
Jim Thompson. He has been associated with the
World Council of Churches as a member of the Dialogue Sub-Unit, later the Office on Inter-religious Relations. Cracknell's scholarship is widely cited. Marcus Braybrooke, historian of interreligious relations, refers to Cracknell as "the influential Methodist thinker" in his contribution to ''Islam and Global Dialogue'' (2005) (edited by Roger Boase).
The Four Principles of Dialogue
At the BCC, one of Cracknell's most important contributions was developing and promoting the "four principles of interfaith dialogue". He redacted these from the 13 principles contained in the WCC's
Guidelines on Dialogue with People of Living Faiths and Ideologies(1979). They are:
#Dialogue begins when people meet each other;
#Dialogue depends on mutual trust and mutual understanding;
#Dialogue makes it possible to share in service to the community;
#Dialogue becomes the medium of authentic witness.
Several member churches including the
Church of England endorsed these before Cracknell left the BCC in 1987.
Promoting Christian Reflection
Cracknell founded the Association for Ministerial Training in a Multifaith Society, which held annual conferences attended by upwards of 200 clergy over several years, exploring how theological education ought to respond to the reality and challenges of
multiculturalism. As national conversation in the United Kingdom about
citizenship, identity and belonging and the place of the nation's Christian heritage (and established Church) developed, Cracknell began the process that resulted in the publication of an important Christian contribution to this discussion, ''Belonging to Britain: Christian perspectives on religion and identity in a plural society'' (1991) (edited by Roger Hooker and John Sargant) to which he also contributed.
Cracknell's missiology
The fact that the interfaith committee at the British Council of Churches was at the time located within the Mission Division and was mainly funded by Missionary Societies made reflection on mission an almost inevitable aspect of the director's role. Cracknell's sustained interest in Christian mission is indicated by the title chosen for the 2000 volume, ''A Great Commission'', edited by Martin Forward, in honor of his scholarly contribution. Cracknell's 1985 book, ''Towards A New Relationship'' written while serving at the BCC explored many of the Biblical passages, such as John 14: 6 and Acts 4: 2 that Christian cite to defend an exclusive view of salvation as found only through an explicit, with the lips confession of Jesus as Lord and Savior. Cracknell argued that salvation is to be found "in the Name" but that "His Name is the Name because it affords the means by which human beings share in the grace and love that is the nature of God himself" His linguistic skill with the Biblical languages often disarmed critics, who saw his approach as a betrayal of Christian truth but who relied on English translations of the two testaments. Ariarajah says that "without denying any of the positive aspects of mission", Cracknell challenges Christians to re-think their attitudes to Others free from "prejudices stemming from the assumption of cultural superiority." Hugh Goddard refers to a "detailed study" of the Protestant World Missionary Conference of 1910 in Cracknell (1994) in which he "concluded that in some ways nineteenth century Christian thinking, including that of some missionaries, was readier than subsequent Christian thought to contemplate continuity rather than discontinuity between Christianity and other religions". "In that sense", says Goddard, Cracknell suggests that "under the influence of
Barth and
Kraemer the twentieth century has gone backwards rather than forwards." Cracknell was awarded his Oxford BD for this book.
Networking
Travelling widely throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland, in Europe and beyond promoting interfaith dialogue and visiting situations where Christian found themselves compelled to think about their relations with the religious Other, Cracknell was concerned to learn from their experiences but to also challenge a narrow perception of the meaning of faith, which is always God's gift and never a human work. His own experience in
Africa led him to view Western Christianity as too tied to cultural assumptions such as those of racial and civilizational superiority, from which it needs to be liberated. Ariarajah also praises Cracknell's exploration of the role of nations in God's purposes, when he asks if the cultures and faiths of all nations are not of value and worth, why did God permit their proliferation?
Working within the member churches of the BCC and outside the churches, Cracknell networked groups of committed individuals from across the faiths, encouraging and nurturing the formation of interfaith encounter groups. Many later affiliated with the Interfaith Network for the United Kingdom, a body that was launched just after he left office. Cracknell developed close personal relations with leading members of the various faith communities in the UK. A defender of religious liberty, he also helped to establish INFORM, a state-funded bureau for information on New Religious Movements including some that tend to be demonized, such as
Scientology and the
Unification Church.
As Journal founder
Cracknell was founder-editor of the journal ''Discernment'' (from 1986 until 1990), which continued to be published through until 1998.
[Cracknell was succeeded as editor by ]Clinton Bennett
Clinton Bennett (born 7 October 1955) is a British-American scholar of religions and participant in interfaith dialogue specialising in the study of Islam and Muslim-non-Muslim encounter. An ordained Baptist minister, he was a missionary in Ban ...
, who had followed him at the BCC in 1987
Wesley House, Cambridge
After 10 years at the BCC, Cracknell moved to
Wesley House
Wesley House was founded as a Methodist theological college (or seminary) in Jesus Lane, Cambridge, England. It opened in 1921 as a place for the education of Methodist ministers and today serves as a gateway to theological scholarship for ...
,
Cambridge where he held the Michael Gutteridge Chair in Theology and was Senior Tutor, continuing at the same time to work closely with the interfaith desk of the
World Council of Churches and other interfaith groups. During his tenure in Cambridge, Cracknell also served as President of the
Theological Federation (1988 to 1995). In much of his writing, Cracknell drew on the scholarship of
Wilfred Cantwell Smith whose approach allows Others to define themselves, resisting the temptation to impose preconceived assumptions such as that any claim to experience God outside of Christ must be false. He was succeeded at Wesley by
Martin Forward
Martin Forward is a British, Methodist Christian lecturer and author on religion and Professor of History at Aurora University, Illinois. He has taught Islam at the Universities of Leicester, Bristol and Cambridge, and had spent a period of time i ...
who had directed interfaith relations for the British Methodist Church and who was also involved in the work of the BCC committee.
Texas Christian University
After eight years in Cambridge, he took a position as Professor of Theology and Global Studies (later appointed Distinguished Professor) at
Brite Divinity School
Brite Divinity School is a divinity school at Texas Christian University, a private university in Fort Worth, Texas. It is affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), approved by the University Senate of the United Methodist Church ...
,
Texas Christian University,
Fort Worth
Fort Worth is the fifth-largest city in the U.S. state of Texas and the 13th-largest city in the United States. It is the county seat of Tarrant County, covering nearly into four other counties: Denton, Johnson, Parker, and Wise. According ...
,
Texas. At the same time, Cracknell's wife, Susan White, began teaching at Brite as well. While at Brite, he produced his reader on Wilfred Cantwell Smith, his book on World Methodism (as co-author) and his ''Good and Generous Faith'' as well as articles and reviews. Cracknell also oversaw a summer study abroad program for Brite students through Wesley House at
University of Cambridge. He retired in 2007. He now lives in Vermont, where he operates a book shop called Sutton Books and continues to lecture and to lead seminars on interfaith relations at various Colleges and Universities.
References
Bibliography
* Braybrooke, Marcus (2005) "Christians and People of Other Faiths", 215-226 in Boase, Roger (ed) ''Islam and global Dialogue: religious pluralism and the pursuit of peace'', Aldershot and Burlington, VT: Ashgate
* Cracknell, Kenneth (1985) ''Towards A New Relationship: Christians and People of Other Faiths'', London: Epworth
* Cracknell, Kenneth (1994) ''Justice, Courtesy and Love: theologians and missionaries encountering world religions 1846-1914'', london: Epworth
* Cracknell, Kenneth (2001) ''Wilfred Cantwell Smith: A Reader'', Oxford: Oneworld
* Cracknell, Kenneth and White, Susan J (2005) ''An Introduction to World Methodism''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
* Cracknell, Kenneth (2006) ''In Good and Generous Faith: Christian Responses to Religious Pluralism'', Cleveland, OH: Pilgrim Press,
* Forward, Martin; Plant, Stephen; & White, Susan (2000). ''A great commission: Christian Hope and religious diversity: papers in honour of Kenneth Cracknell on his 65th birthday''. Bern: Lang
* Hooker, Roger H and Sargant, John (1991) ''Belonging to Britain: Christian perspectives on religion and identity in a plural society'', London: CCBI Publications
External links
Cracknell on ISKCON's relations with other faiths
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cracknell, Kenneth
1935 births
Living people
Methodist theologians
English Christian theologians
Alumni of the University of Oxford
Academics of the University of Cambridge
20th-century English theologians
English Methodist ministers
Staff of Wesley House