- George Newlands
George McLeod Newlands is
Professor of Divinity at theUniversity of Glasgow .Background
George Newlands is a Scottish liberal Christian
theologian . He isChair of theTheology ,Divinity & Religious Studies panel of the UK'sResearch Assessment Exercise for 2008.Career
Professor Newlands has held the Chair of Divinity at the
University of Glasgow since 1986. He was previously a University Lecturer at theUniversity of Cambridge and Dean of Trinity Hall (following in the footsteps ofArchbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie and Oxford's Regius Professor of DivinityKeith Ward ).He was Dean of Glasgow's Faculty of
Divinity from 1988 to 1990, Head of the Department ofTheology and Church History from 1986 to 1992 and Director of the Centre for Literature, Theology and the Arts 1998 to 2002.He was appointed by the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland to be Principal ofTrinity College, Glasgow , the Church's college within the Faculty of Divinity, from 1991 to 1997 and again from 2001 to 2008.Newlands was educated at
Edinburgh University (MA, BD, PhD, DLitt), Heidelberg (from where he traveled to attend the final seminar ofKarl Barth in Basel) [Newlands, George. "The Love of God and the Future of Theology: A Personal Engagement with Juengel's Work". In Traces of Liberality. Bern: Peter Lang, 2006. Page 66. ] , Paris, Zurich, and Cambridge (MA).Theology
Newlands' first book was Hilary of Poitiers: a Study in Theological Method in 1978. His Theology of the Love of God, followed in 1980. In the wake of '
death of God ' theology and the 'myth of God incarnate' controversy during the 1970s, Newlands here attempted a 'constructive theology'. Barth had constructed a theology around the theme of faith, and Moltmann a theology of hope, so Newlands took the third of the Pauline triad to construct a theology around love (which, after all, is also of central concern in Christian theology). Further constructive theology followed with an ecclesiology in The Church of God (1984). A book on ethics followed in 1985- Making Christian Decisions.Newlands published God in Christian Perspective in 1994. Continuing his 'constructive theology' project, he deals with the doctrine of God and-always a central concern of Newlands-
Christology . This wide-ranging book engages not just with the continental tradition, but with Reformed, Anglican and wider Christian streams of thought, and more recent concerns such as feminism and liberation theology.Generosity and the Christian Future, the 1995 Henson lectures at the University of Oxford, was published in 1997. Here Newlands returns to his concern about faith, theology, ethics and public issues, such as human rights and pluralism. He begins the book by imagining a tenth Vatican Council in the year 2517 CE, presided over by a Pope who is an American Baptist woman - a typical example of Newlands' humour, familiar to his students, which seeks to illuminate important issues. Recently Newlands has been interested in 20th Century Scottish theology. He edited Scottish Christianity in the Modern World in 2001, and produced a theological biography of John and Donald Baillie in 2002.
He has been exploring 'intercultural theology', and his most recent work reflects once more Christology and an important contemporary theme: Human Rights. This has resulted in Christ and Human Rights (2006) and, with Richard Amesbury, Faith and Human Rights (2008). A collection of essays, Traces of Liberality, was published in 2006. A
festschrift The God of Love and Human Dignity was presented in 2007.Ecclesiastical work
Professor Newlands is probably unique in being both an ordained Minister of the
Church of Scotland and a priest in theChurch of England . He is a past Convenor of theGeneral Assembly of the Church of Scotland 's Panel onDoctrine and has served on the Doctrine Commission of the Church of England.In May 2006, Newlands was involved in the creation of
Affirmation Scotland a group within the Church of Scotland seeking "to affirmand celebrate Christ's call for inclusion, generosity and hospitality, and to see the full affirmation of all Christians, progressive andtraditional, straight, gay and lesbian, within the Church of Scotland". He is also associated withOneKirk , a network "committed to workingfor an inclusive, affirming and progressive church". Both of these bodies came in the wake of controversies within the Church of Scotlandregarding theblessing ofcivil partnerships forgay andlesbian people.Important Publications
* (With Richard Amesbury) Faith and Human Rights, Fortress, Minneapolis, 2008
* Christ and Human Rights, Ashgate, London, 2006
* Traces of Liberality, Collected Essays, Peter Lang, Bern/Frankfurt, 2006
* The Transformative Imagination: Rethinking Intercultural Theology, Ashgate, London, 2004
* John and Donald Baillie - Transatlantic Theology , Peter Lang, New York, 2002
* Fifty Key Christian Thinkers, Routledge, London, 2002
* Scottish Christianity in the Modern World (ed), T & T Clark, Edinburgh, 2001
* Generosity and the Christian Future, SPCK, London, 1997
* God in Christian Perspective, T&T Clark, Edinburgh, 1994
* Making Christian Decisions, Mowbray, Oxford, 1985
* The Church of God, Marshall, Morgan & Scott, London, 1984
* Theology of the Love of God, Collins, London, 1980
* Hilary of Poitiers - a study in Theological Method, Peter Lang, Bern, 1978
* (Ed) Explorations in Theology(8), SCM, London, 1980See also
*
Professor of Divinity, Glasgow
*List of Professorships at the University of Glasgow References
External links
* [http://www.georgenewlands.com/ George Newlands - Systematic Theology Academic]
* [http://www.gla.ac.uk/departments/theology/staff/georgenewlands/ George Newlands - Departmental Profile]
* [http://www.religions.divinity.gla.ac.uk/ Department of Theology and Religious Studies]
* [http://www.gla.ac.uk/ University of Glasgow]
* [http://www.rae.ac.uk/ Research Assessment Exercise 2008]
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