In a bow to the growing diversity of America's religious landscape, the
Claremont School of Theology, a Christian institution with long ties to
the Methodist Church, will add clerical training for Muslims and Jews to
its curriculum this fall, to become, in a sense, the first truly
multi-faith American seminary.
The transition, which is being formally announced Wednesday, upends
centuries of tradition in which seminaries have hewn not just to single
faiths but often to single denominations within those faiths.
Eventually, Claremont hopes to add clerical programs for Buddhists and
Hindus.
Although there are other theological institutions that accept students
of multiple faiths, or have partnerships with institutions of other
religions, Claremont is believed to be the first accredited institution
that will train students of multiple faiths for careers as clerics. The
275-student seminary offers master's and doctoral degrees.
"It's really kind of a creative, bold move," said David Roozen, director
of the Institute for Religion Research at the Hartford Seminary in
Connecticut. "It kind of fits, to some extent, California.... I think
there will be a lot of us who will be watching that experiment."
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