Mark Oakley

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Mark Oakley is the Archdeacon of Germany and Northern Europe, an archdeaconry in the Diocese of Gibraltar in Europe of the Church of England.

He was born on September 28, 1968, and was educated at Shrewsbury School and at King's College London, before training in Oxford for ordained ministry in the Church of England. He was ordained a Deacon (1993) and a Priest (1994) by Bishop David Hope. He served as Assistant Curate of St John's Wood Church from 1993 to 1996. He was then asked by the Bishop of London, Richard Chartres, to serve as his Chaplain (1996-2000). He was made a Deputy Priest in Ordinary to HM Queen Elizabeth II in 1996. In 2000 Oakley became Rector of St Paul's, Covent Garden, which is also known as The Actors' Church.

In 2005 the Bishop in Europe, Geoffrey Rowell, appointed Oakley the Archdeacon of Germany and Northern Europe and Chaplain of St Alban's Anglican Church in Copenhagen. His Archdeaconry is comprised of eight countries (Iceland, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Latvia, Estonia and Germany) in which there are many Church of England chaplaincies serving the international Anglican community.

Oakley wrote a popular book called The Collage of God in 2001 which earned him a great deal of positive reviews. He has also edited a book of John Donne's poetry and complied a wedding anthology. He has contributed several essays to various books.

Oakley is known for his interest in the ways literature and poetry explore theological themes and for his preaching, which is often both entertaining and noticeably rooted in his Anglicanism. A lecture given by him in Westminster Abbey and Keble College, Oxford in 2002 argued that the Church in its search to be relevant was ironically becoming too secular for the British public and that it should the deeper human resonances that the Church seeks to identify, explore and dialogue with.[1] The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, recently wrote that Oakley's thinking and approach is in the tradition of Westcott (Anglican Identities).[citation needed]

Oakley reviews for the Church Times, The Tablet and other journals. He also regularly broadcasts.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Eric Symes Abbott Memorial Lecture 2002. Spiritual Society, Secular Church? Private Prayer and Public Religion. Westminster Abbey and Keble College Oxford, May 2002.