Physicist and priest John Polkinghorne is this year’s winner of the Templeton Prize, first bestowed in 1973 on Mother Teresa. Founded by global investor John Templeton, the prize—rechristened this year as the Templeton Prize for Progress toward Research or Discoveries about Spiritual Realities—carries a £700 000 (about $1 million) cash award, intentionally more than the Nobel Prizes.

Polkinghorne earned his PhD in quantum field theory at the University of Cambridge in 1955; his thesis adviser, Abdus Salam, and his postdoctoral adviser, Murray Gell-Mann at Caltech, would each later win the Nobel Prize in Physics. After nearly a quarter of a century in academia, Polkinghorne gave up his Cambridge professorship and entered the Church of England, which ordained him as a priest in 1982. “I had done my bit for physics,” he says.

Since then, Polkinghorne has focused on bridging science and religion. “Both are concerned with the search for truth,”...

You do not currently have access to this content.