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Denys Alan Turner
Curriculum
Vitae
Contact
email: dat25@cam.ac.uk
phone: + (44) - (0)1223-763020
address: Faculty of Divinity
University of Cambridge
West Road
Cambridge CB3 9BS
Personal
Born, 5 August 1942.
Married with three children.
Nationality: British
Secondary Education:
1950-59 Mount St Mary's College, Sheffield, England.
1958 A-Levels, Latin, English, History and Ancient History,
all at A grade.
Present
Appointment
Horace Tracy Pitkin Professor of Historical Theology
Previous
Appointments
1999-2005: Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity, University
of Cambridge and Fellow of Peterhouse
1995 - 1999: HG Wood Professor of Theology, University of
Birmingham
1997- 1999 Head of Department of Theology, University of Birmingham
1989-95 Senior Lecturer in Theology, University of Bristol
1985-88 Head of Department of Theology and Religious Studies,
University of Bristol
1976-89 Lecturer in Theology, University of Bristol
1974-76 College Lecturer in Moral and Political Philosophy,
University College, Dublin.
1970 Visiting Lecturer in Theology at MA Summer School, Manhattanville
College, New York, U.S.A.
1967-74 Assistant Lecturer in Moral and Political Philosophy,
University College, Dublin.
1966-68 Part-time Lecturer in Political Theory at the Institute
of Public Administration, Dublin.
1965-67 Tutor in Philosophy, University College, Dublin.
Academic
Qualifications
1970-75 D.Phil. (Oxon) for thesis on "The Ascription
of Moral Weakness", supervisor, Professor R.M. Hare.
1963-65 MA in Philosophy, University College, Dublin, by major
thesis on "Modern Moral Philosophy". First class
honours.
1959-62 BA in Philosophy, University College, Dublin. First
class honours. Awarded the Magennis Memorial Prize and Pierce-Malone
Scholarship in competitive examination within the National
University of Ireland.
Research
and Scholarship
Until
1984 my main area of research and publication had been in
the relations between Christianity and political and social
theory, particularly between Marxism and Christianity. This
work issued in my book Marxism and Christianity, Oxford: Blackwell
(1983) and both previously and subsequently in many articles
and book chapters.
Since then I have been working on the study of the traditions
of Western Christian mysticism, with especial emphasis on
doctrines of religious language and of selfhood and on the
links between the classical traditions of spirituality and
mysticism and the social and political commitments of Christianity,
with some reference to questions of the nature of religious
language and post-modernity.
My book Eros and Allegory, which is a study of the traditions
of erotic discourse within mediaeval monastic commentaries
on the Song of Songs, was published in August, 1995 by Cistercian
Publications. Likewise, a monograph, The Darkness of God,
which is a study of the via negativa in the traditions of
mystical theology in the mediaeval and early modern periods,
was published by Cambridge University Press in September,
1995. Together they amount to a survey of both affirmative
and negative traditions of late patristic and mediaeval spiritualities
in the Latin West. Eros and Allegory contains the first English
translations of substantial portions of mediaeval commentarial
texts on the Song of Songs which is designed to facilitate
the teaching of mediaeval mysticism and of mediaeval biblical
exegesis to undergraduates and some postgraduate mediaevalists
who have no knowledge of Latin.
In 2002 I published Faith Seeking, (SCM Press) a collection
of sermons and talks delivered over the previous fifteen years
or so. My most recent publication is a monograph Faith, Reason
and the Existence of God, published by Cambridge University
Press in September, 2004, and it completes a sort of trilogy
with Eros and Allegory and The Darkness of God, in that it
is an attempt to demonstrate that there is no inconsistency
between the conception of theology as ‘mystical’
(and vice-versa) and that of a ‘rational’ doctrine
of God: at any rate, that there is no such inconsistency in
the thought of Thomas Aquinas.
Future
publications and research plans
I am contracted to submit to Brepols the MS of The Dark Vision
of God, containing a translation of Part III of the De Contemplatione
of the fifteenth century monk Denys the Carthusian and other
writings of Jean Gerson and Hugh of Balma, together with an
extended introduction of some 50,000 words.
I am currently working on a short monograph for SCM Press,
provisionally entitled Four Variations on a Theme of Julian,
a study of Julian of Norwich’s doctrines of sin and
providence.
In the longer term I am proposing to write a monograph bringing
together systematically the two halves of my academic research
career, namely the social and political interests in the ‘critique
of religion’ with those in fundamental theology, spirituality
and mysticism.
Publications Books
1. On the Philosophy of Karl Marx, Dublin: Sceptre
(1968), pp. 93.
2. Marxism and Christianity, Oxford: Blackwell (1983),
pp. 256. Paperback edn. 1984.
3. Eros and Allegory, Kalamazoo: Cistercian Publications
(1995), pp. vi + 471.
4. The Darkness of God, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press (1995), pp. xi + 278. Paperback edition published September,
1998. Fourth impression, November, 1999. Electronic edition,
2002.
5. Faith Seeking, London: SCM (2002), pp.xiii + 146.
6. Faith, Reason, and the Existence of God, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press (2004), pp. xix + 271.
Books
edited and co-edited
Edited and contributed two chapters to The Church in the
Modern World, Dublin: Sceptre (1968).
Edited (with Oliver Davies) and contributed a chapter to Silence
and the Word, Negative Theology and Incarnation, Cambridge:
CUP (2002), pp. xii + 227.
Chapters
and Contributions to Books
1. "The Christian Layman", in Vatican II, The
Christian Layman, ed., J. Newman, Dublin, 1966.
2. "An Introduction to Liberation Theology" in Answers
for Abraham, ed. J. Maizell, NSCC Resource Centre, Bristol,
1978.
3. Entries on "Alienation", "Dialectic"
and "Objectification" in A New Dictionary of
Christian Theology, eds. A. Richardson and J. Bowden,
London: SCM (1983).
4. "Feuerbach, Marx and Reductivism" in ed. Brian
Davies O.P., Language, Meaning and God, London: Geoffrey
Chapman (1987).
5. Entry on "Marxism" (5000 words) in A New
Dictionary of Theology, New York: Michael Glazier (1987).
6. "Marxism and Morality" in Socialism and Morality,
eds D. McLellan and S. Sayers, London: Macmillan (1990).
7. "Religious Illusion and Liberation" in Cambridge
Companions to Philosophy, Marx, ed. T. Carver, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press (1991).
8. 3000 word entry on "Political Theology" in The
Dictionary of Theology and Society, London: Routledge
1996.
9. “Cupitt, the Mystics and the ‘Objectivity’
of God” in ed. Colin Crowder, God and Reality, Essays
on Christian non-Realism, London: Mowbray, 1996, pp.
114-127.
10. Entry on “Mysticism” (3000 words) in Oxford
Companion to Christian Thought, ed. Adrian Hastings,
Oxford: OUP, 1999.
11. “Why did Denys the Carthusian Write Sermons ad Saeculares?”
in Medieval Monastic Preaching, ed. Carolyn Muessig,
Brill: Leiden, 1998, pp. 19-36.
12. “Wisdom Within or Without? Denys the Carthusian
and the Predicament of Late Medieval Mysticism” in ed.
Stephen Barton, Where Shall Wisdom be Found?, Edinburgh:
T & T Clark, 1998, pp. 139 - 154.
13. “Marxism, Liberation Theology and the Way of Negation”
in ed. Christopher Rowland, The Cambridge Companion to
Liberation Theology, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1999, pp. 199 - 217 (pb and hb editions).
14. “The Darkness of God and the Light of Christ: Negative
Theology and Eucharistic Presence” in Catholicism
and Catholicity: Eucharistic Communities in Historical and
Contemporary Perspectives, ed. Sarah Beckwith, Oxford:
Blackwell (1999), pp. 31-46.
15. “Fergal O’Connor’s Plato: The Family,
Private Property and the State” in Questioning Ireland:
Debates in Political Philosophy and Public Policy, eds.
J. Dunne, A. Ingram, F. Litton, Dublin: Institute of Public
Administration (2000), pp. 95 – 110.
16. “Memory, Memorials and Redemption” in eds.
KA Read and IA Wollaston, Suffer the little Children:
Urban Violence and Sacred Space, Birmingham: University
of Birmingham Press (2000), pp. 103-116.
17. “Atheism, Apophaticism, and Différance”
in Théologie negative, ed., Marco M. Olivetti,
Roma: Biblioteca dell’Archivio di Filosofia (2002),
pp. 225-241.
18. “Material Poverty or Poverty of Spirit? Holiness
and the Liberation of the Poor”, in Holiness, Past
and Present, ed. Stephen C Barton, London: T & T
Clark, 2003, pp. 441-459.
19. “Metaphor, Poetry and Allegory: Erotic Love in the
Sermons on the Song of Songs of Bernard of Clairvaux”
in eds. David Ford and Graham Stanton, Reading Texts,
Seeking Wisdom, London: SCM Press, 2003, pp. 202-216.
Forthcoming
20. “Theology in the University”, in eds., David
Ford, Ben Quash and Janet Martin Soskice, Fields of Faith:
Theology and Religious Studies for the 21st Century,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Articles
(a selection)
1. "Nominalism and Political Theory", Philosophical
Studies, Vol. XV (1966), pp.256-267.
2. "Morality is Marxism", New Blackfriars,
Oxford, Vol 54, no. 633, (1973), pp.57-66 and no. 634, (1973),
pp. 117-125.
3. "Can a Christian be a Marxist?", New Blackfriars,
Vol. 56, No. 661 (1975), pp.244-253. Reprinted in Radical
Religion, Vol. II, No. 4 (1976), as "Marxism and
Christian Praxis", Berkeley, Calif., U.S.A.
4. "Moral Weakness, Self-Deception and Self-Knowledge",
New Blackfriars, Vol. 56, No. 662, (1975), pp. 294-304.
5. "Marxism, Christianity and Morality", New
Blackfriars, Vol. 58, No. 683 (1977), pp. 181-199.
6. "The ‘Subject' and the Self'", New
Blackfriars, Vol. 59, No. 694, (1978), pp.133-141.
7. "Christianity and Politics: the Case of Gerrard Winstanley",
New Blackfriars, Vol. 62, No. 738 (1981), pp.500-509.
8. "Sacrament and Ideology", New Blackfriars,
Vol. 64, No. 754 (1983), pp.171-180.
9. "Marx, Matter and Christianity", New Blackfriars,
Vol. 65, No.764 (1984), pp.69-77.
10. "Atheism: Is it Essential to Marxism? A Comment",
Journal of Ecumenical Studies, Vol. 22, No. 3, Chicago
(1985), pp.561-566.
11. "De-centring Theology", Modern Theology,
Vol.2, No. 2, (1986), pp.125-143.
12. "St John of the Cross and Depression", Downside
Review, July, 1988, pp.157-170.
13. "The Language of Power", The Month,
November, 1988, pp.986-992.
14. "Meister Eckhart and The Cloud on Interiority, Detachment
and Paradox", Eckhart Review, 1992, pp. 9-26.
15. “Meister Eckhart: Dualist or Monist?”, Eckhart
Review, Spring, 1997, pp. 40-50.
16. “The Art of Unknowing: Negative Theology in Late
Medieval Mysticism”, Modern Theology, 14.4,
October, 1998, pp. 473-488.
17. “The Darkness of God and the Light of Christ: Negative
Theology and Eucharistic Presence” in Modern Theology,
15.2, April 1999, pp. 143 - 158.
18. “Liberation Theology in Britain Today”, Political
Theology, no. 3, November, 2000, pp. 64 – 79.
19. “How to be an Atheist”, Inaugural lecture,
University of Cambridge, Cambridge: CUP, 2002, pp. 39 (reprinted
in New Blackfriars, vol. 83, no. 977/978, July/August,
2002, pp. 317-335).
20. “Encyclopaedic perspectives on European Christendoms,
c. 500 – 1500”, in Reviews in Religion and Theology,
9.1, February, 2002, pp. 9 – 15.
21. “Memory and Forgiveness”, in Priests and
People, 17.11, November, 2003, pp. 413-17.
22. “Tradition and Faith”, in International
Journal of Systematic Theology, vol. 6, no. 1 January,
2004, pp. 21-36.
23. “On Denying the right God: Aquinas on Atheism and
Idolatry”, Modern Theology, 20.1, January,
2004, pp. 141-162.
24. “ ‘Sin is behovely’ in Julian of Norwich’s
Revelations of Divine Love”, in Modern Theology,
20.3, July 2004, pp. 407-422.
Teaching
Undergraduate
I have taught a wide variety of courses and papers in contemporary
Philosophy of Religion, Metaphysics, Ethics, Political and
Social Theory, as also in medieval philosophy and theology,
and in the history of medieval mysticism. In Bristol University
I introduced a basic course in ‘Argument Analysis’,
a series of exercise classes in informal logic, with a view
to providing first year undergraduates with skills in reading
and analysing complex arguments in classical philosophical
and theological texts. In general, I have preferred to teach
to primary sources, rather than through extended secondary
bibliographies, believing it to be better to encourage students
to get their minds in Plato’s than to attempt to get
Plato into theirs, the former strategy having the tendency
to enlarge their minds, the latter the tendency to cramp Plato’s.
At
Cambridge I was the co-ordinator for undergraduate papers
in ‘Ethics and faith’, ‘Metaphysics’
(these two usually being taught in conjunction with Dr Catherine
Pickstock) and in ‘Late patristic and medieval theology’
(this being taught in conjunction with Dr Anna Williams).
Graduate
I have been the Director of Masters programmes in ‘Third
World Theologies’, ‘Medieval Studies’ and
in ‘The Philosophy of Religion’. I have supervised
over 35 PhD students to successful completion, and in Cambridge
supervised PhD research students writing on ‘The Reception
of Julian of Norwich in the English Mystical tradition’,
on ‘Participation in Thomas Aquinas’, on ‘The
Metaphysical Politics of Hobbes and Winstanley’, on
‘Word and Silence in Wittgenstein’s Tractatus’,
on ‘Music and Theology’, on ‘Christology
and Paradox in some Medieval Theologies’, on ‘Theology
and American Pragmatism’ and on ‘Aquinas and the
“Nouvelle Théologie’, among others.
Administrative
Posts
Departmental
1. Bristol
1977-81, 1984-86, 1989 -94 Admissions Tutor for joint degrees
in Theology and Philosophy, Theology and Politics and Theology
and Sociology.
1970-80 and 1985-87 Organiser of Departmental Staff Seminars
1985-88 Head of Department of Theology and Religious Studies,
Bristol University. 1990-1995
Departmental European Officer
1991-92 Compiled the Departmental Submission for Research
Assessment Exercise.
1990-1995 Departmental Examinations Officer
1993-1995 Departmental Timetabler
2. Birmingham
1995-9 Tutor to BD students
1995-7 Postgraduate Admissions Tutor
1995-9 Erasmus Officer
1995-9 Member of the Postgraduate Studies Committee
1997-9 Head of Department of Theology
Faculty
1. Bristol
1986-89 Member of Committee of Arts Professors.
1986-90 Member of Faculty Occasional Committee
1986-1995 Member of the Reed-Tuckwell Committee.
1987-88. Organiser of Reed-Tuckwell Lectures on Human Immortality,
delivered by Fr Simon Tugwell O.P., since published as Human
Immortality and the Redemption of Death, Darton, Longman and
Todd, 1990.
1992-1995 Director of the Centre for Medieval Studies
2. Birmingham
1995-9 Member of the Board of the Faculty of Arts
1995-9 Member of the Faculty of Arts Appeals Committee
1997-9 Member of Executive Committee, School of Historical
Studies
1997-9 Member of School of Historical Studies Promotions Committee
3. Cambridge
1999- Member of Faculty Board, Degree Committee, Standing
Committee, MPhil Committee, Religious Studies Subject Committee,
CARTS Management Committee, Faculty Funds Management Committees;
Chair, Faculty Board (Michaelmas and Lent Terms, 2000-1),
Teaching Committee, Burney Fund Committee, QAA Committee,
Faculty Personal Promotions Committee, ‘D’ Society
(Philosophy of Religion senior seminar), Philosophy of Religion
Subject Committee. Also, member of History Faculty Personal
Promotions Committee, 2001, appointed by the University Council.
University
1. Bristol
1986-89 Member of Senate (co-opted)
1986-89 Member of University Council
1990-93 Elected as non-Professorial member of Senate by the
Arts Faculty
1986-89 Member of Senate Committees on Overseas Students and
on Departmental Organisation
1993-95 Member of University Student Finance Committee
2. Birmingham
1995-1999 Elected member of Senate
3.
Cambridge
1999-2005 Chair, Stanton Lectures Committee, member of Select
Preachers and Hulsean Committees, member of the appointments
committees for the Regius and Lady Margaret’s Chairs.
College (Peterhouse, Cambridge)
2001-2
Chair, Governing Body Working Party on College Governance
2003-5 Member, Governing Body Committee on College Governance
2003- 5 Member, Governing Body Publications Committee
2002- 5 Chair, Governing Body Education Committee
Professional
Activities Outside the University External
Examining
1969-76 External Examiner for the Institute of Public Administration,
Dublin.
1981 for MA Degree in the Philosophy of Religion, University
of Wales (an appeal case).
1982-85 for CNAA degree in Philosophy and Religious Studies
at the College of St Mark and St John, Plymouth.
1987 External Assessor for the internal validation of BA Humanities
Degree, St Mark and St John, Plymouth.
1990-94 External examiner for BA in Theology Degree, Westminster
College, Oxford.
1995-98 External Examiner for BA in Theology at St David's
University College, Lampeter
1996 External Examiner for M.Phil., University of Nottingham
1997-2000 External Examiner for MA in Spirituality, Heythrop
College, University of London.
1998-1999 External Examiner, Faculty of Divinity, University
of Cambridge
2000 - 2002 External Examiner, MA in Theological Research,
University of Durham
I
have been external examiner for numerous PhDs in the Universities
of Oxford, Manchester, Edinburgh, Trinity College Dublin,
King’s College, London, and elsewhere.
The
Alan Richardson Research Fellowship
1993 (Autumn Term) Alan Richardson Research Fellow in the
Department of Theology, University of Durham
Invited
Lectures
National
I have read papers to learned societies and seminars: to the
Theology Society at the University of Keele (1978)
Politics Department Staff Seminar, Reading University (1980)
Science and Religion Forum, University of Oxford (1981)
Staff Seminar, Sociology Department, University of Durham
(1982)
Sociology of Religion Conference of the British Sociology
Association, Bristol (1982 and 1986)
Family and Social Action National Conference, Birmingham (1983)
Staff Seminar, Department of Religious Studies, University
of Lancaster (1985).
I gave lectures on:
“Liberation Theology" at the University of York
(1986); to the
Catholic Theological Association of Great Britain (1987) on
"The Language of Power"
Downside Colloquium on "St John of the Cross and Depression"
(1988)
Annual conference of the Eckhart Society on "Eckhart
and the Cloud of Unknowing on Detachment" (1991)
Downside Colloquium on "Eros and Allegory: Mediaeval
Interpretations of the Song of Songs" (1991).
I delivered the Alan Richardson lecture at
the University of Durham on "Atheism, Mysticism and Mystification:
How to Tell the Difference" in November, 1993 and
the annual Aquinas Lecture on "Spirituality: A Friar
and a Beguine" at the University of Bristol in January,
1995.
I read papers on:
"Eros and Allegory in Bernard of Clairvaux's Sermons
on the Song of Songs" and on "Why was Marguerite
Porete Burned?" at the Second International Congress
of Medieval Studies at the University of Leeds, July, 1995.
“Meister Eckhart: Dualist or Monist?” to the Eckhart
Society, Oxford (1996).
"Wisdom in Mysticism: Within or Without?" at the
University of Durham in November, 1996
“The Dazzling Darkness of Unknowing” to Symposium
on “Light” at Falmouth College of Arts, June,
1997
“Erotic Language in Bernard of Clairvaux and Nicholas
of Lyra” to the annual meeting of the Catholic Biblical
Association, Newman College, Birmingham, April, 1998
“Robert Grosseteste and the Geometry of Lincoln Cathedral”
to the Medieval Studies Seminar, Harlaxton Hall, Lincolnshire,
July, 1998
“Why was Marguerite Porete Burned?” to the Medieval
Society, University of Oxford, February, 1999
“Apophaticism and Creation Ontology” to a consultation
on “Word and Silence”, University of Birmingham,
March, 1999.
“Is Orthodoxy Radical?”, in the series of Autumn
Lectures in Wells Cathedral, 2000
“How to be an Atheist” (short version) to the
Perne Club, Peterhouse, Cambridge, 2001
“How should I love God?”, the Aquinas lecture,
Blackfriars, Cambridge, 2001
“Hobbes, Locke, and the Language of Power” to
the Peterhouse Theory Group, Cambridge, January, 2002
“How to be an Atheist”(full version), Inaugural
Lecture in the Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge,
October, 2001, subsequently delivered as the Aquinas Lecture,
Blackfriars, Oxford, January, 2002.
International
I have read papers to the Religious Studies Department, Concordia
University, Montreal and to the Philosophy Department, McGill
University, Montreal (1986). I gave two public lectures on
"Meister Eckhart and Psychotherapy" at Eckhart House,
Dublin (1989); I have read papers on "Marx, Feuerbach
and Atheism" at the Department of Religion, Duke University,
North Carolina and to the Annual Meeting of the American Academy
of Religion, Kansas City, both in November 1991. I delivered
a paper on "Nicholas of Lyra and the sensus litteralis
of the Song of Songs" at the 28 International Congress
of Mediaeval Studies at Kalamazoo in May, 1993 and an address
to the Catholic Business Study Circle in Atlanta, Georgia
on "Moral Problems of Death and Dying", May, 1993.
I chaired a session at the 32 Congress of Medieval Studies
at Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA in May, 1996. I gave the keynote
paper at a session devoted to the discussion of my book The
Darkness of God at the American Academy of Religion meeting,
San Francisco, November, 1997, a paper on “Ruusbroec,
Gerson and Denys the Carthusian on ‘Union with God’”
to the Department of Religion, Catholic University of America,
November, 1997, a paper on “The Darkness of God and
the Light of Christ: Negative Theology and Eucharistic Presence”
at a conference on “Eucharistic Communities” at
Duke University, April, 1998 and the keynote address at the
annual meeting of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance
Association, University of Montana, June, 1998. I read papers
on “Deconstruction and Negative Theology” to the
III LEST Conference, Catholic University of Leuven, October,
2001, on “Derrida, Deconstruction and Negative Theology”
at the International Colloquium, ‘E. Castelli’
in Rome, January, 2002, on “Metaphor, Poetry and Allegory:
Erotic Love in the Sermons on the Song of Songs of Bernard
of Clairvaux and the Spiritual Canticle of John of the Cross”
at the conference on Eros and the Religious Imagination in
New York University, New York, April, 2002, and the Aquinas
Lecture on “Faith, Reason and the Eucharist: music as
a model for their Harmony” at the Priory Institute,
Dublin, January, 2004.
Other
1984-92 Member of the Religious Studies Panel of the Council
for National Academic Awards. Undertook validation visits
and consultancies to many colleges throughout the UK.
Community
Activities
1998 - Member of the Council of St Mary’s Hospice, Selly
Park, Birmingham
1983-86 Member of the Executive Committee, Catholic Institute
for International Relations
1989-95 Chair of the Executive Committee, Catholic Institute
for International Relations.
1987-91 Chair of the Bristol Centre, Catholic Marriage Advisory
Council.
1986- 1990 Consultant to Bishop Howard Tripp on ‘Citizenship'.
1987-90 Member of Commission of the Methodist Conference on
the Ministry of the People of God.
1982- 1985 Member of RC Bishop of Clifton's Diocesan Pastoral
Committee.
1979-1985 Ex-officio member of the Clifton Diocesan Pastoral
Council.
1983- 1986 Member of the Clifton Diocesan Justice and Peace
Commission.
1979-83 Member of the Committee for the World of Work, RC
Conference of Bishops of England and Wales.
1980 Diocesan Delegate and Chair of Sector on the Laity at
the National Pastoral Congress, Liverpool.
1980-83 Member of the Laity Commission of the RC Conference
of Bishops of England and Wales.
1980-84 Governor of St Brendan's Sixth Form College, Bristol.
1980-82 I taught in the Catholic Teachers' Certificate courses
in Bristol since 1983.
1982-9 I regularly lectured on "Moral Problems of Death
and Dying" at in-service training days to nurses and
nurse-tutors at Bath Royal Hospital Group, Bath.
1984-89 Vice-Chair, St Brendan's Sixth Form College Governors.
1982-3 Advisor to the Bishop of Clifton on RE, member of the
Ecumenical Monitoring Team for RE teaching in Third-Level
Colleges in Avon area.
1993 - Member of the Anglican Roman Catholic Commission for
England (ARC).
1996- Trustee of the Eckhart Society, London/Chicago.
1998- Member of the Council of St Mary’s Hospice, Selly
Park, Birmingham.
1995-1999 University of Birmingham representative, Governing
Body of Newman College, Birmingham.
I gave
a BBC Radio 4 talk on Amos in the Lent series Voices in the
Wilderness, February 1985; Contributed "Thought for the
Day" on Radio Bristol each Wednesday, September-December
1985 and December 1986-March 1987.
October,
1994, jointly with my brother, Bruno Turner, I took part in
a Radio 3 discussion of the Song of Songs in medieval music
and literature, chaired by Christopher Page.
Until
September, 1993 I taught annually on the Salisbury-Wells Theological
Placement course on "The Social, Economic and Religious
Meanings of `Poverty'".
From 1989- 1998 I was Chair of the Newman Fellowships Trust,
a charitable foundation whose aim was to fund Fellowships
in Catholic Studies at British Universities. Between 1988
and 1992 NFT funded its first Fellowship at Bristol University.
In 1994, the Trust appointed a second Newman Research Fellow
in Theology at Bristol University.
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