Leonard Prestige Explained

Pre-Nominals:The Reverend
Leonard Prestige
Birth Name:George Leonard Prestige
Birth Date:1889
Death Place:London, England
Nationality:English
Module:
Child:yes
Church:Church of England
Offices Held:Canon Treasurer of St Paul's Cathedral
Module2:
Child:yes
Discipline:Theology
Sub Discipline:Patristics
Workplaces:New College, Oxford
Notable Works:Fathers and Heretics (1954)

George Leonard Prestige (1889–1955) was Fellow and Chaplain of New College, Oxford. His theological research showed particular competence in patristics and touched on ancient philosophy, e.g., in God in Patristic Thought (1936). He is perhaps best known for his illuminating and in places entertaining work, Fathers and Heretics (1954), given initially as Bampton Lectures in 1940. Prestige also wrote a biography of Charles Gore (1935) and St Paul's in Its Glory (1955).

From 1920 to 1944, Prestige held the country living of Upper Heyford, Oxfordshire. Many of his early books were written there. He was also deputy editor of the Church Times, succeeding as editor in 1941 and in the role until 1948.[1]

In 1949 Prestige was secretary of the Church of England Council for Foreign Relations. He was also sent by Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher to Rome to explore avenues for ecumenical dialogue in the course of which he met with Giovanni Battista Montini, the future Pope Paul VI.[2] Prestige died on 19 January 1955 in London.[3] At his death Prestige was Canon Treasurer of St Paul's Cathedral.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Palmer . Bernard . History of the Church Times . https://web.archive.org/web/20070310193912/http://copies.anglicansonline.org/churchtimes/980828/hist.htm . 10 March 2007 . 6 October 2006.
  2. Book: Hebblethwaite, Peter . Peter Hebblethwaite . 1993 . Paul VI: The First Modern Pope . New York . Paulist Press . 223.
  3. News: 20 January 1955 . Canon George Prestige . subscription . The New York Times . 31.