Timothy Gorringe

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The Reverend Professor Timothy Jervis Gorringe is St Luke's Professor of Theological Studies in the University of Exeter.

Born in 1946, Gorringe was educated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford (BA 1969, MPhil 1975) and Sarum Theological College (1969-72). He was ordained deacon in 1972 and priest in 1973 and served as Assistant Curate at Chapel Allerton (1972-75) and Oxford St Mary the Virgin with St Cross and St Peter (1976-78). From 1979 until 1986 he taught Theology at Tamil Nadu Theological Seminary. He was Official Fellow, Chaplain, and Tutor in Theology at St John's College, Oxford 1986-95, Reader in Contextual Theology in the University of St Andrews 1995-98, and became St Luke's Professor of Theological Studies in the University of Exeter in 1998.

His academic interests focus on the interrelations of theology, culture, art, social science, criminal justice, economics, and politics, as well as the theology of Karl Barth. He is a member of the Iona Community.

His other interests include apiculture, poultry keeping, home wine-making, the theatre, poetry, and political activism.

[edit] Publications

  • Redeeming Time: Atonement Through Education (Darton Longman Todd, 1986)
  • Discerning Spirit: A Theology of Revelation (SCM, 1990)
  • God's Theatre: A Theology of Providence (SCM, 1991)
  • Capital and the Kingdom: Theological Ethics and Economic Order (Orbis Books, 1994)
  • Alan Ecclestone: Priest as Revolutionary (Cairns, 1994)
  • God's Just Vengeance: Crime, Violence and the Rhetoric of Salvation (CUP, 1996)
  • The Sign of Love: Reflections on the Eucharist (SPCK 1997)
  • Karl Barth: Against Hegemony (OUP, 1999)
  • Fair Shares: Ethics and the Global Economy (Thames & Hudson, 1999)
  • Salvation (Epworth, 2000)
  • The Education of Desire: Towards a Theology of the Senses (SCM, 2001)
  • A Theology of the Built Environment: Justice, Empowerment, Redemption (CUP, 2002)
  • Furthering Humanity: A Theology of Culture (Ashgate, 2004) (shortlisted for the Michael Ramsay Prize 2005)
  • Crime (SCM, 2004)
  • Harvest: Food, Farming and the Churches (SPCK, 2006)