*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

Angela Tilby: Counter old hatreds round the hearth

10 October 2025

‘There is enormous potential for those who adhere to the three Abrahamic faiths in reading scripture together, especially in today’s context of tension and potential violence’

CAMBRIDGE INTER-FAITH PROGRAMME

Professor David Ford takes part in a scriptural-reasoning session

Professor David Ford takes part in a scriptural-reasoning session

AS WE wait in hope for an end to violence in Gaza, we might well wonder whether Jews, Muslims, and Christians can ever live together in peace. Since the Manchester synagogue attack, many British Jews have testified to being victims of anti-Semitic prejudice, whether or not they have visited, or even support, Israel.

Ancient hatred runs deep, and is often argued from scripture. There is St John’s Gospel, which frequently demonises “the Jews.” Bishop Tom Wright has argued that this refers only to the “Judaeans” who were opposed to Jesus, but the text does not make this distinction. St Matthew’s Gospel specifically blames the Jews for Jesus’s death. “His blood be on us and our children.”

Then there is the damning of Jews in parts of the Qur’an, which are hammered home by radical Islamists. Many Muslims do not differentiate between Jews and Israelis. I think it was an Indian visitor to Jerusalem in the 1970s who made the scathing comment: “You monotheists have too many damn gods.” You can see his point.

One way of beginning to heal the divisions could be through drawing believers together across faith traditions to debate their sacred texts. This practice has its origins in Jewish scholarship, which has always favoured vigorous debate as a means of discerning scriptural truth. Thirty years ago, Peter Ochs, a Jewish Professor of Philosophy from Drew, founded Textual Reasoning, to engage with Tanakh, the Hebrew Bible, in such a way as to bring scholarly reason and faith together.

Professor Ochs introduced his method to a meeting of the American Academy of Religion, where the Anglican priest Dan Hardy and the Cambridge academic David Ford were so taken with his approach that, together, they founded Scriptural Reasoning, enabling Jews and Christians to read each other’s scriptures, in a hospitable setting, like guests round a hearth. They were later joined by the Pakistani Muslim scholar Basit Koshul, which brought the Qur’an into the picture. As part of promoting engagement across religious traditions, Professor Ford set up the Cambridge Inter-Faith programme in 2002, which widened the options open to those studying theology at Cambridge. He has also promoted Scriptural Reasoning as both discipline and devotion.

There is enormous potential for those who adhere to the three Abrahamic faiths in reading scripture together, especially in today’s context of tension and potential violence. Jews have belonged here since the time of Cromwell. Muslims have lived in England since the 19th century. We are neighbours here and now, whatever is going on in the Middle East. Scriptural Reasoning is not an attempt to erode differences or to come to easy conclusions; but gathering round the hearth, with the fire of scripture at the centre, might help all of us to understand one another better and to counter the charge that our problem is too many damn gods.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Letters to the editor

Letters for publication should be sent to letters@churchtimes.co.uk.

Letters should be exclusive to the Church Times, and include a full postal address. Your name and address will appear below your letter unless requested otherwise.

Forthcoming Events

English Mystics Series course

26 January - 25 May 2026

A short course at Sarum College.

tickets available now

 

Springtime for the Church of England: where are we seeing growth?

31 January 2026

Join us at St John's Church, Waterloo to hear a group of experts speak about the Quiet Revival.

tickets available now

 

With All Your Heart: a retreat in preparation for Lent

14 February 2026

Church Times/Canterbury Press online retreat.

tickets available now

 

Merlin’s Isle: A Journey in Words and Music with Malcolm Guite and the St Martin's Voices

17 February 2026

Canterbury Press event at Temple Church, London. The Poet and Priest draws out the Christian bedrock at the heart of the Arthurian stories, revealing their spiritual depth and enduring resonance.

tickets available now

 

Visit our Events page for upcoming and past events

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

Non-subscribers can read up to four free articles a month. (You will need to register.)