| FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE 10/12/01
CONTACT: Robyn Florian (rflorian@greenville.edu)
Interim Director of College Relations
Internet Communications Manager
Greenville College
(618) 664-6504
Greenville College Announces the Shapiro Chair for Jewish-Christian
Studies
Karen Strand Winslow Appointed to Joint History/Religion
Professorship
GREENVILLE, IL Greenville College announces the development
of the Shapiro Chair for Jewish-Christian Studies. The announcement
follows several years of initial work as Greenville College has
sought to help students more deeply appreciate the foundational
elements of Judaism in their faith and culture. This fall, Karen
Strand Winslow was hired to a joint History/Religion position in
Jewish-Christian Studies representative of the planned chair.
The interdisciplinary chair, which will serve both the Religion/Philosophy
and History departments, would be the first endowed chair at Greenville
College. It is the intention of this project that the scholar holding
the position would provide leadership in positioning Greenville
College as a model campus in helping faculty and students respect
the Jewish roots of their faith.
Winslow, of Seattle, WA, was selected as the first professor to
serve in this role. Winslow graduated from Seattle Pacific University
(SPU) with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Religion and English. She
earned a Master of Arts degree in Biblical Literature from Asbury
Theological Seminary before teaching at SPU from 1987 to 1999.
In 1994, she took a leave from teaching full-time at SPU and began
a doctoral program in Near and Middle Eastern Studies at the University
of Washington (UW). While continuing to teach part-time at SPU,
UW, and Fuller Seminary, Winslow focused her course work and exams
on Jewish texts and history through the departments of Jewish Studies,
Comparative Religion, and Near Eastern Language and Civilization.
Professor Karen Strand Winslow brings to Greenville a life-long
interest in Judaism and the Jewish roots of our Christian faith,
said Karen Longman, vice president for Academic Affairs. Her
doctoral preparation at the University of Washington, combined with
her role as an ordained Free Methodist elder, equips her to contribute
to our campus in significant ways.
As part of her responsibilities, Winslow will teach discipline-specific
courses such as Hebrew, Pentateuch & Prophets, and the History
of Judaism in the Western World and interdisciplinary courses such
as the Implications of Anti-Semitism and Christian Responses to
the Holocaust.
Winslow will also identify resource persons who can enrich the campus
and community on topics related to Judaism such as Anti-Semitism,
the Holocaust, and the Middle East. She will network with Jewish
communities in St. Louis and Chicago with a goal of enhanced Jewish-Christian
dialogue and understanding.
I hope not only to educate Christians about Jews and Judaism,
but also to visit Jewish communities of faith for mutual dialogue
and education, Winslow said.
The Shapiro Foundation, the primary funding organization of this
project, agreed to provide the salary for the new Religion/History
faculty position, filled by Winslow, for three years. They also
promised to match funds raised by the college, up to $250,000, to
establish the planned endowed chair. In her role, Winslow will work
closely with President V. James Mannoia, Jr. and the college advancement
staff in identifying potential sources of these additional funds.
Greenville College is a four-year accredited Christian liberal
arts school with more than 1200 traditional undergraduate, graduate,
and adult degree completion students. Founded in 1892 and affiliated
with the Free Methodist Church, the college is located in Greenville,
Illinois, 45 miles east of St. Louis.
Last updated: October
12, 2001
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