- Kevin T. Kelly
The Rev. Dr. Kevin Kelly is a British
Roman Catholic priest and moraltheologian .Kelly was born in Crosby, just north of
Liverpool, England on 27th June 1933, to Patrick and Winifred Kelly from the North of Ireland. Kelly has been a pioneering priest and theologian, nurturing a compassionate approach to Catholic morality from the 1960s down to the present day. In his academic and pastoral work, he has tackled some of the most pressing issues facing the Church today - human conscience,HIV -AIDS ,divorce and secondmarriage ,bioethics ,sexual ethics and pastoral theology in general.After formative years at the
Upholland Senior Seminary , Lancashire, where he would later return to work, Kelly was further educated atFribourg University ,Switzerland and at theGregorianum University , Rome. At Fribourg he completed adoctorate in moral theology and in Rome he gained a licentiate inCanon Law . The author of seven books and well over a hundred articles and chapters elsewhere, he has worked tirelessly in urban parishes and academic settings alike, from the very outset of his priestly calling.He began his academic career at
St Joseph’s Seminary , Upholland, England (1965-75), during which time he also served as a visiting lecturer at the University of Manchester, looking after the students of the late great Ronald Preston, no less, and further honing his ecumenical vision and commitment. Kevin embarked upon that tireless combination of being both an academic moral theologian at one and the same time as being a pastor at the ‘coal face’, when he was appointed to serve as Assistant Priest at St Clare’s Parish in Liverpool from 1963-65.In 1975 Kelly became the founding director of the Upholland Institute, a centre and professional team for adult
Christian education and in-service training for clergy. In this role he initiated pioneering educational and formational programs. Kelly would bring in visiting lecturers such asBernard Häring andCharles E. Curran . Here Kelly worked tirelessly to involve the laity, women as well as men, in the Institute's many courses and activities. Thus putting into action the ecclesial vision of Vatican II.In 1980 Kelly was a visiting fellow at St Edmund's College,
University of Cambridge where pressing pastoral and ethical questions concerning divorce and second marriage preoccupied much of his research. During this time he also embarked on a tour of countries where major ethical challenges were being responded to through grass roots activism and the newly emergedliberation theology . His travels took him toIndia , thePhilippines andPeru .Kevin then played a leading role in the experimental "Team Ministry" that was in the new town of Skelmersdale, serving from 1981-85. The "Thatcher Years" of government were pressing times for the northern regions of England in particular. The early optimism that followed the founding of this new town soon turned to harsher realities for many in this part of the country. This innovative, dynamic and yet most challenging appointment left Kelly with many ideas he wished to explore in those hours of the week he gave over to his continuing academic studies. These questions pursued him so much that he eventually took leave to take up a Research Fellowship at
Queen’s College , Birmingham, where he completed his pioneering book on bioethics (1985-86).Kelly did not put his pastoral ministry on hold for very long, and he was back in parish ministry at Our Lady’s, Eldon St., in inner-city Liverpool as soon as 1986, continuing there until 1998.
This full-time ministry was actually carried out in only half of Kelly’s "real" time as he soon began a regular commute to London, where he had been asked by Jack Mahoney to teach at
Heythrop College , the specialist theology and philosophy college of theUniversity of London . Kelly soon found himself covering much of the moral theology at Heythrop and utilising histrain journeys to great effect as a makeshift study. Kevin continued this bi-locatory dual-existence from 1986 until 1993.Kelly’s most recent educational attachments came at
Liverpool Hope University , first of all as a part-time lecturer in Christian Ethics at its former incarnation as the Liverpool Institute of Higher Education between 1993 and 94. He then returned when it became a university college to be Senior Research Fellow (again part-time) between 1996 and 98. Finally, he was elevated to Emeritus Senior Research Fellow status in 1998.Kelly has contributed to research initiatives, conferences and international gatherings on almost every continent of the world. His researches and pastoral antennae have also taken him on numerous further visits to places such as the
United States ,Canada ,Ireland and ContinentalEurope . In 1967, he was a co-founding member of the Association of Teachers of Moral Theology. In 1995, Kevin visitedThailand and the Philippines, taking part in anAsia n theological consultation on the challenges of HIV/AIDS, and interviewing many people in connection with research for his forthcoming book on the subject, particularly to inform his reflections on the impact of these conditions upon women and upon how the position of women in society exacerbated the dilemmas posed by HIV/AIDS. In 1997, Kelly was also a co-founding member of the International Catholic Theological Coalition for HIV/AIDS Prevention, and, in 1999, he spent the summer in Zimbabwe and Zambia, helping to run two National Winter schools in the former which sought to educate people on the moral and pastoral issues concerning the care of those whose lives are affected by HIV/AIDS. Whilst there he sought out further experiential research opportunities through visiting partners of the UK Catholic aid agency (CAFOD) responsible for the care of AIDS orphans and also for AIDS home-care initiatives.His pastoral achievements, however, were yet to take a further turn after his inner-city work and weekly sessions in the "library on wheels" that the train to and from London became for him. Kelly’s doctoral dissertation explored the work of
Anglican moral theologians of the 17th century, and his ecumenical sensitivity and commitment, as indicated, have been amongst the most constant features of his life and career. Kelly took up the post as Catholic Pastor of the Ecumenical Anglican and Roman Catholic church of St Basil’s and All Saints [http://www.stbasilandallsaints.org.uk/] , atHough Green nearWidnes .Liverpool Hope University announced that they will be awarding Kevin Kelly an honorary Doctorate at its graduation ceremony in 2007 and The Centre for the Study of Contemporary Ecclesiology [http://www.hope.ac.uk/research/ecclesiology/] has honoured Kevin Kelly by awarding him its very first Honorary Fellowship for his services to the church, to pastoral care, to moral theology, to ecumenism and to the wider community in general.
Publications
* From a Parish Base: Essays in Moral and Pastoral Theology [http://www.hope.ac.uk/artsandhumanities/hopepark/theology/staff/Kevin%20Kelly%20Texts/From%20Parish%20Base/From%20a%20Parish%20Base.rtf] (Darton Longman and Todd, 1999)
* New Directions in Sexual Ethics: Moral Theology and the Challenge of AIDS [http://www.hope.ac.uk/artsandhumanities/hopepark/theology/staff/Kevin%20Kelly%20Texts/New%20Directions%20in%20Sexual%20Ethics/New%20Directions%20in%20Sexual%20Ethics.rtf] (Continuum, 1998)
* New Directions in Moral Theology: The Challenge of Being Human [http://www.hope.ac.uk/artsandhumanities/hopepark/theology/staff/Kevin%20Kelly%20Texts/The%20Challenge%20of%20Being%20Human/The%20challenge%20of%20being%20human.rtf] (Continuum, 1992)
* Conscience: Dictator or Guide? A Study in 17th Century English Protestant Moral Theology (Geoffrey Chapman, 1967)
* Divorce and Second Marriage: Facing the Challenge, (Collins, 1982)
* Life and Love: Towards a Christian dialogue on bioethical questions, (Collins, 1987)
* Divorce and Second Marriage: Facing the Challenge, New and Expanded Edition, (Geoffrey Chapman, 1997)Selection of Contributions to Other Publications
* 'The Role of the Moral Theologian in the Church', in R Gallagher & B McConvery (edits), Conscience and History, Gill & Macmillan, 1989, 8-23
* 'Divorce and Remarriage', in Bernard Hoose (edit), Christian Ethics: An Introduction, Geoffrey Chapman, 1998, 248-265
* 'Divorce', in Adrian Hastings (editor), The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought, Oxford University Press, 2000, 172-173
* 'A Moral Theologian faces the new Millennium in a time of AIDS', in James Keenan (editor), with Jon Fuller, Lisa Sowle Cahill & Kevin Kelly, Catholic Ethicists on HIV/AIDS Prevention, Continuum, 2000, 324-332.
* 'Some theological reflections on the parish reports', in Noel Timms (edit), Diocesan Dispositions & Parish Voices in RC Church, Ashgate, 2001, 167-180
* 'Divorce and Remarriage', in James J Walter, Timothy E O'Connell & Thomas A Shannon (editors), A Call to Fidelity: On the Moral Theology of Charles E Curran, Georgetown University Press, 2002, 97-112
* 'Resuscitation', in Peter Drury, Tony Flynn, Kevin T Kelly, Resuscitation: Whose Decision? Christian Council on Ageing, 2003, 13-25
* 'It's Great to be Alive', in Linda Hogan & Barbara Fitzgerald, Between Poetry and Politics: Essays in honour of Enda McDonagh Columba Press, 2003.External links
* [http://www.hope.ac.uk/artsandhumanities/hopepark/theology/staff/kellyk.htm]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.