Mark Chapman (theologian)

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Mark David Chapman (born 1960) is a British Anglican priest, theologian, historian, and academic. He served as Vice-Principal of Ripon College Cuddesdon from 2002 to 2024 and has been Professor of the History of Modern Theology at the University of Oxford since 2015. In 2021, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Theology by the Protestant Theological Faculty of the University of Bonn. In November 2024, he received the Lanfranc Award for services to theological education from the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Mark David Chapman was born in 1960 and grew up in Essex and Berkshire.[1][2] He was educated at St Bartholomew's School in Newbury, Berkshire, which was an all-boys grammar school when he entered, becoming a mixed-sex comprehensive school in 1975.[3]

He studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics (specialising in politics and philosophy) and theology at Trinity College, Oxford, graduating with a first-class honours degree in 1983, and proceeding to a Master of Arts degree in 1988.[2][4] He remained at Trinity to complete a Diploma in Theology in 1984, followed by a Doctor of Philosophy (DPhil) degree in 1989.[2][5] His doctoral thesis was entitled Theology as a vocation: Ernst Troeltsch as philosophical theologian.[6]

During his doctoral research, he spent a year as a DAAD scholar at the Protestant Theological Faculty of LMU Munich.

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