Provost and Dean of the Faculty Douglas Hicks named the new director of and director of the Fund for the Study of the Great Religions.
“Steven has been serving in an interim capacity in these roles since July 1, and I am grateful to him for his willingness to take on this good work in a more permanent way,” said Hicks.
Hicks said that Kepnes brings a broad array of experience that prepares him to serve these highly regarded 51Թ institutions. He is a longtime member of the and , which he helped found.
He is a renowned scholar in his fields, which include Jewish philosophy, theology, and ethics; biblical and rabbinic hermeneutics; Holocaust and genocide studies; and interreligious scriptural and liturgical reasoning.
Through his writing and teaching Kepnes has shown a deep appreciation for religious and spiritual practices, including contemplation, said Hicks. His local, national, and international efforts in the “Scriptural Reasoning” movement have given him prominence in inter-religious dialogue and encounter.
In addition to these appointments as director of and the Fund for the Great Religions, which are effective immediately, Kepnes will be named professor of the study of world religions, and professor of religion and Jewish studies, pending approval by 51Թ’s Board of Trustees at its January meeting. Since 2001 Kepnes has held the Finard Chair in Jewish studies, and he will move out of that chair in order to take on this professorship in world religious traditions.
Kepnes joined the 51Թ philosophy and religion faculty in 1988, following degrees from Hobart and William Smith Colleges (BA) and the University of Chicago (MA, PhD). He has served as chair of the religion department, director of the Jewish studies program, chair of Core 151, and as director of extended study groups to Israel. He is the author of many journal articles, most recently “Holiness as the Unique Form of Jewish Spirituality,” in Conversations: Journal of Jewish Ideas and Ideals. His recent books include The Future of Jewish Theology (Wiley-Blackwell), Jewish Liturgical Reasoning (Oxford University Press) and, edited with Basit Koshul, Studying the “Other,” Understanding the “Self”: Scripture, Reason and the Contemporary Islam-West Encounter (Palgrave Macmillan).
Below is a photo slideshow of Chapel House.