Phillip Jensen

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Phillip Jensen is an Australian clergyman of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney, and is the Dean of St. Andrew's Cathedral in Sydney. He is the brother of Peter Jensen, the Anglican Archbishop of Sydney.

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[edit] Education and ministry

Phillip Jensen studied theology at Moore Theological College, and won the Hey Sharp prize for coming first in the ThL (Licenciate of Theology, the standard course of study at that time), a year after his brother Peter also won it. Phillip became Anglican chaplain to the University of New South Wales (UNSW) in 1975 and Rector of St Matthias, Centennial Park, in 1977. Phillip Jensen could be described as deeply conservative in his Calvinist theology yet radical and iconoclastic in his ministry style.

Basing his university ministry around expository preaching and "walk-up evangelism", Phillip Jensen and his "Campus Bible Study" revolutionised student ministry. The result was a large number of conversions, large student gatherings at UNSW, and the growth of St Matthias' Church from a group of 20–30 in 1977 to well over 1000 by the mid 1990s. Forthright, sometimes brusque, Jensen gained many supporters and detractors. Examples of his sermons can be found on the St Andrew's Cathedral website [1]

His work at UNSW included the creation of the Ministry Training Strategy (MTS) which took willing young men and women and trained them in practical ministry skills, preparing them for church ministry, ordained or otherwise. Other initiatives included the establishment of the ministry's media arm - Matthias Media.

It was the strong growth of the MTS strategy in other universities and churches throughout the 1980s and 1990s that saw student numbers at Moore Theological College grow from around 150 in 1985 to over 400 in 2004. Many of these graduates are now rectors of Anglican churches in Sydney and leaders in many evangelical churches throughout Sydney and the world. Phillip Jensen founded Matthias Media. He also authored the popular Two Ways To Live gospel tract and founded The Briefing, a sometimes polemical magazine that mixes conservative Evangelical and Calvinistic theology with intellectual rigour in a uniquely Australian style—which continues to be championed by Tony Payne and Gordon Cheng. He has also been involved in the establishment of some independent evangelical churches and facilitated links between them and the Anglican Diocese of Sydney. See History of Independent Evangelical Churches in Australia.

In 2003 the Chapter of St Andrew's Cathedral in Sydney appointed Phillip Jensen as Dean of Sydney. His appointment brought accusations of nepotism on the grounds that Jensen's brother, the newly elected Archbishop of Sydney, Peter Jensen, was a member of the Cathedral Chapter responsible for Phillip's election. Archbishop Jensen, however, did not take part in the final secret ballot to appoint Phillip as dean.

[edit] Views

Phillip Jensen has spoken publicly against secularism, syncretism, intellectual relativism, gambling, same-sex relationships and Roman Catholicism[1]. He is also an opponent of ordination of women to the priesthood and episcopate within the Anglican Church of Australia. He has been described as a divisive figure by some religious leaders such as Rabbi Raymond Apple, the Sydney Orthodox Jewish rabbi, and has been criticised in the secular media [2].

It is now widely recognized that Phillip has been influential in shaping Anglican Church League policy. He and a number of other influential Sydney Anglicans have promoted lay administration of the Lord's Supper and offered opinions on the future structure and functioning of the Anglican Communion in the light of the ordination of practising homosexuals to the episcopacy.

Phillip Jensen's attitude to traditional Anglican styles of cathedral worship has drawn criticism, but he has pursued changes in the cathedral's style of worship in a successful attempt to broaden the demographic of the congregation. Phillip Jensen, like most Sydney Anglican clergy, has discarded use of the cassock and scarf and even the canonically-required[3] surplice but, idiosyncratically, has revived use of the Geneva gown. Choral Evensong on Sunday evenings has been replaced with "The Bible Talks" and a more contemporary style of gathering. The cathedral choir continues to play an active role in the life of the cathedral. The St Andrew's Cathedral School's Girls' Vocal Ensemble has, for the first time, been allowed a regular opportunity to sing in the cathedral. Liturgy in St Andrew's Cathedral has undergone considerable change since Phillip Jensen's appointment as dean, but remains grounded in the theological outlook of the Book of Common Prayer of 1662 with its emphasis on confession of sin and salvation solely through the merit of Christ.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ ABC Radio National The Religion Report March 12 2003 cf. Go to external link
  2. ^ Anglican Media Sydney, October 19, 2004 Dean Jensen Challenges SMH Inaccuracies cf. Go to external link
  3. ^ "Use of the Surplice Canon 1977 Adopting Ordinance 1977"

[edit] External links