DURHAM University’s St John’s College has been awarded £3.4 million to help Christian leaders engage with the latest scientific developments and ideas shaping society.

The major new grant, from the Templeton Religion Trust, will fund a new, expanded three-year phase of the successful Equipping Christian Leaders in an Age of Science (ECLAS) project.

The work will have five areas of focus including academic research into how Christian churches best engage with science and conferences for senior church leaders and clergy on cutting-edge scientific issues.

Reverend Professor David Wilkinson, a leading theologian and astrophysicist, principal of St John’s College, and chief project director, said: “Receiving this grant is wonderful news.

“Science is all around us and influences so much of how we think and act as a society, whether we consider ourselves scientific or not.

“It’s crucial that Christians engage with the latest scientific developments and ideas, so that we as churches understand how society is thinking and changing, and indeed we can understand more of God.”

Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who studied at the university’s St John’s College, said: “I am delighted that this project is continuing to build on its considerable achievement in promoting the significance of healthy and informed engagement with science to church leaders of all levels, together with resourcing them in this increasingly demanding and important task.

“This new stage of the project with its combination of research and provision of resources will further deepen church-wide understanding of the challenges science and technology pose for society, and continue to contribute to the mission, ministry and theological reflection of senior church leaders as they respond.”

The project will also involve the University of York and the Dialogue on Science, Ethics and Religion (DoSER) programme of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Following a two-year pilot project funded by the John Templeton Foundation, ECLAS was launched in 2015 with funding from the Templeton World Charity Foundation.

Its successes to date include a survey of 1,000 clergy and in-depth interviews with over 30 senior leaders which has revealed how scientific topics are considered, as well as eight conferences for senior church leaders held over the past four years on subjects ranging from neuroscience to cosmology.