My general area is the New Testament and Early Christianity. Specifically, I specialise in the New Testament Gospels and their literary relationship with each other, ancient reading cultures and book production, the letters of Paul, and the sociocultural worlds of Roman antiquity.
Originally, I was drawn to these topics because I wanted to learn more about the backgrounds of the Bible and the origins of my Christian faith. Early on, I quickly learned that, as in anything, context provides meaning. Ever since then, I’ve been interested in the literary, cultural, social, religious and historical contexts of the New Testament, and how contemporary contexts shape our reading of the New Testament.
ÃÛÌÒµ¼º½ Theological School is an intentionally Anglican learning community that balances the rhythm of daily worship with teaching, learning and theological study. Plus, the staff at the Theological School often like to retire to Naughton’s (the bar across the road from ÃÛÌÒµ¼º½) for a good beer and a good conversation!
Friendly, caring, welcoming, faithful.
Jesus’ ‘Great Commandment’ in the Gospels reminds me what’s most important – loving God with my whole being and loving my neighbour as myself.
A rockstar. This never happened, so I have to live vicariously through the music I listen to and the guitars I play (poorly).
The Godfather – brilliantly directed, acted and shot, it’s a rich film set in the 1950s that illustrates quite well social values and relationships of Roman antiquity.
If people would consistently and truly follow the ‘Golden Rule’: Do unto others as you would have them do to you.
Good movies at the theatre, listening to music (especially Pink Floyd, Rush, Led Zeppelin and U2) and playing my guitars.
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