An appreciation of Gerald Bray
“Three decades ago,
in January 1984, the Church Society’s theological journal, Churchman, was
relaunched under new leadership. At a moment of crisis within the Anglican
movement, when confusion reigned about the authority and interpretation of
Scripture, some were beginning to ask: ‘When does neo-evangelicalism become
simply a new form of the old liberalism?’ (CEN, 6 May 1983). The Church Society
council turned to a young tutor at Oak Hill College, Gerald Lewis Bray, to take
a lead as Churchman’s new editor…”
– Andrew Atherstone commemorates 30 years of
editorial oversight of Churchman by Gerald Bray in this appreciation. (PDF
file.)
http://acl.asn.au/an-appreciation-of-gerald-bray/
By Andrew Atherstone
Three decades ago, in January 1984, the Church
Society’s theological journal, Churchman, was relaunched under new
leadership. At a moment of crisis within the Anglican movement, when confusion
reigned about the authority and interpretation of Scripture, some were
beginning to ask: ‘When does neo-evangelicalism become simply a new form of the
old liberalism?’ (CEN, 6 May 1983). The Church Society council turned to a
young tutor at Oak Hill College, Gerald Lewis Bray, to take a lead as Churchman’s
new editor. An expert in patristic theology, with a doctorate from the
Sorbonne and a monograph on Tertullian already to
his name, Bray was a rising star in the evangelical firmament. He was
determined to bring new vigour to the journal: `orthodoxy can and should be
held and proclaimed with passion; it should stir the blood of the faint-hearted
and awaken new resources of spiritual life which sleep for want of the sound of
the trumpet’ (CEN, 6 May 1983). In his first editorial he laid out Churchman’s
theological priorities under his tenure – it was to be clearly evangelical,
scholarly, ecclesiastical (speaking ‘to the church’) and evangelistic: ‘we believe
that Bible-based Christianity is as relevant today as it has ever been’.
Thirty years on, Gerald Bray is still in harness
and has managed to outlast even Sir Alex Ferguson. In the meantime other
theological journals have come and gone. Anvil was founded in 1984 to
express the views of anyone claiming the title of ‘evangelical’. It survived
until its Silver Jubilee in 2009, but subscriptions dwindled: it wobbled and
fell, to be revived instead online – instant blogs, like Fulcrum, have stolen
its market. But Churchman continues from strength to strength, due
primarily to two factors: a robust evangelical perspective and the Bray
editorials. Indeed John Pearce (chairman of the Church Society council in the
1980s) observed the main reason for recruiting him to the editor’s chair in the
first place was ‘to get clear-cut editorials’. And Bray has not disappointed. His
Churchman editorials now number 120 and counting (all recently collected
together on the Church Society webpage). In other theological journals,
editorials are dull summaries of the contents or innocuous ramblings on contemporary
events. But Bray’s style is quite different and sets his editorials apart from
the crowd. Always incisive and stimulating, sometimes trenchant and
deliberately provocative, unafraid to challenge party shibboleths and dispel
Anglican confusions, the Bray editorials are a consistent highlight.
Rather than seeing Churchman as merely a
stepping stone to greater things, Bray has stuck at the task throughout his
flourishing career, even as he grew from a precocious young talent to a
theological heavyweight of international repute.
After a dozen years at Oak Hill College it seemed
in 1993 that he might be lost to the Church of England when he transferred
across the Atlantic, to work alongside Timothy George at Beeson Divinity
School, Alabama, as Anglican Professor of Divinity. Previous conservative
evangelical exiles in North America, Philip E. Hughes and James I. Packer,
never returned home, to the detriment of Anglican evangelicalism. But Bray was
recruited by the Latimer Trust in 2006 as director of research with a roving
brief to write, teach, and encourage young theologians, based back in England
at Cambridge, a stone’s throw from Tyndale House. He remains research professor
at Beeson and travels worldwide in high demand as a doctrine lecturer, at the
nexus of the academy and the church.
Churchman is
just the tip of the iceberg in Bray’s prodigious literary output. He writes
books and essays faster than many of us can read them, and it is said (surely
legendary) that he has never in his life missed a publishing deadline. His
bibliography includes textbooks which have become standard for students and
pastors, alongside specialist tomes for the ecclesiastical historian. Early
volumes include Creeds, Councils and Christ (1984), expounding the
classic doctrinal statements of the ecumenical councils in the first five
centuries; and Biblical Interpretation: Past and Present (1996), which
was voted one of Christianity Today’s books of the year. Bray was series
edited for IVP’s ‘Contours of Christian Theology’, a set of concise
introductions on key topics from prominent evangelical authors, including
Sinclair Ferguson on the Holy Spirit, Peter Jensen on revelation, Paul Helm on
providence, and Edmund Clowney on the church. Bray himself contributed The
Doctrine of God (1993), focused on Trinitarian theology, including insights
from Eastern Orthodoxy which are often forgotten amongst Protestants.
One of Bray’s chief skills is as a critical editor
of ancient and inaccessible texts, bringing them within reach of a contemporary
audience for the first time. As a linguist he is a master of Latin and French,
and is rumoured also to be fluent in German, Dutch, Spanish, Italian,
Portuguese, Greek and Russian. Is there any European language he does not
speak? He has collaborated closely with Professor Thomas Oden in unearthing the
wisdom of the early church Fathers to resource theological renewal in the
church today. To IVP’s series of Ancient Christian Commentaries, edited
by Oden, Bray has published on Romans (1998), 1 and 2 Corinthians (1999) and
the letters of James, Peter, John and Jude (2000). These provide carefully
selected comments and homilies on Scripture from patristic authors like John
Chrysostom, Augustine of Hippo, Clement of Alexandria, the Venerable Bede, and
lesser known figures like Didymus the Blind and Severian of Gabala. Bray and
Oden are series editors of IVP’s Ancient Christian Texts, English
translations of full-length patristic commentaries and sermons – currently
running to twelve volumes including Origen on Numbers, Eusebius of Caesarea on
Isaiah, Jerome on Jeremiah, and Theodore of Mopsuestia on John. Bray himself
translated Ambrosiaster, a forgotten Bible teacher, the earliest Latin
commentator on all thirteen of Paul’s epistles (2 volumes, 2000). To IVP’s
series on Ancient Christian Doctrine, Bray contributed We Believe in
One God (2009), a survey of patristic comment on the opening clauses of the
Nicene Creed: ‘We believe in one God, the Father, the Almighty, maker of Heaven
and Earth, of all that is, seen and unseen’. Ever versatile, he has also
published the volume on Galatians and Ephesians (2011) in IVP’s Reformation
Commentary on Scripture, edited by Timothy George, a selection of material
from Latin, German, Dutch, French and English authors in the sixteenth century.
This puts nourishing Reformation material in the hands of English speaking
pastors and preachers for the first time.
Those concerned for the historical foundations of
the Anglican Communion have equal reason to value Bray’s remarkable capacity as
an editor. His Documents of the English Reformation (1994), originally
compiled for students at Oak Hill, ought to be on the bedside table of every
clergyman.
With the Church of England Record Society and the
Ecclesiastical Law Society he has published The Anglican Canons 1529-1947 (1998),
swiftly followed by Tudor Church Reform (2000), containing the Henrician
Canons of 1535 and Archbishop Cranmer’s reformatio legume ecclesiasticarum of
1552. Bray’s staggering editorial achievement, perhaps least known to Churchman
readers, is a critical edition of the entire surviving records of the
Convocations of Canterbury, York, Ireland, and Sodor and Man, from the middle
ages to the nineteenth century – running to a massive twenty volumes, and
retailing at £1,500. For any other scholar, this in itself would be a
lifetime’s work, but Bray completed the project single-handed in a few short
years.
More recently with the Latimer Trust he has
published an edition of prefaces to English Bible versions, Translating the
Bible: From William Tyndale to King James (2010). And there are high hopes
that he will soon be persuaded to publish a critical edition of the various Anglican
Homilies, a major desideratum for Anglican readers who want to move beyond
old Victorian reprints.
Gerald Bray is no ivory tower academic. These
numerous scholarly projects are for the service of the church and the building
up of God’s people. When he contributes Churchman editorials about the
contemporary Anglican scene, or popular Latimer Trust booklets like The Oath
of Canonical Obedience (2004) and The Faith We Confess: An Exposition of
the Thirty-Nine Articles (2009), we can be confident they are based on deep
doctrinal and historical scholarship, distilled for the busy minister or lay
Christian. Bray’s current project may yet prove to be one of his most
significant. A lifetime of theological reflection has borne fruit in his latest
magnum opus, God Is Love: A Biblical and Systematic Theology (2012), a
goldmine for those keen to mature in their Christian thinking. We eagerly
anticipate its companion volume on historical theology, God Has Spoken,
in 2014. It is a rare privilege, and a delight, to have a theologian of such
stature at the helm of Churchman. As he enters upon his fourth decade as
editor, we say both ‘Thank you, Gerald’, and ‘Thank you God for Gerald’. Keep
those editorials coming!
Andrew Atherstone is Latimer research fellow at
Wycliffe Hall, Oxford, and a member of the Churchman editorial board.
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