Sarah Coakley Explained

Honorific Prefix:The Reverend
Sarah Coakley
Birth Name:Sarah Anne Furber
Birth Date:10 September 1951
Birth Place:London, England
Module:
Child:yes
Religion:Christianity (Anglican)
Module2:
Child:yes
Discipline:Theology
Thesis Title:The Limits and Scope of the Christology of Ernst Troeltsch
Thesis Year:1982
Doctoral Students:J. Todd Billings

Sarah Anne Coakley[1] (born 1951) is an English Anglican priest, systematic theologian and philosopher of religion with interdisciplinary interests. She is an honorary professor at the Logos Institute, the University of St Andrews, after she retired as Norris–Hulse Professor of Divinity (2007–2018) at the University of Cambridge. She is also an honorary fellow at the Australian Catholic University, both in Melbourne and Rome.

Early life and education

Born as Sarah Anne Furber on 10 September 1951 in Blackheath, London, Coakley attended Blackheath High School.[2] Following this, she spent a year teaching English and Latin in Lesotho.[3] Her education continued at New Hall (now Murray Edwards College), University of Cambridge (BA, first-class honours, 1973), and at Harvard Divinity School (ThM, 1975), to which she went as a Harkness Fellow. Her PhD on Ernst Troeltsch is also from the University of Cambridge (1983).

Career

Academic career

Coakley has taught at Lancaster University (1976–1991), Oriel College, Oxford (1991–1993) and Harvard University in the divinity school (1993–2007; as Mallinckrodt Professor of Divinity, 1995–2007). She was a visiting professor of religion at Princeton University (2003–2004).

In 2006, she was elected the Norris–Hulse Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge (the first woman appointed to this chair) and took up the position in 2007. In 2011, she became deputy chair of the School of Arts and Humanities with a four-year appointment on the general board of the university. She retired as Norris–Hulse Professor in 2018 and was made professor emeritus. She has been an honorary professor at the Logos Institute and the University of St Andrews since 2018 and a visiting professorial fellow at the Australian Catholic University since 2019.[4] [5]

Coakley's teaching and research interests cover a number of disciplines cognate to systematic theology, including the philosophy of religion, the philosophy of science, patristics, feminist theory and the intersections of law and medicine with religion. Her contributions to these areas have generally been by way of co-ordinating research projects and editing or co-editing collections of papers. It was through these collaborative projects that her profile gained a level of international prominence. At the time of her appointment to the Norris–Hulse chair in Cambridge in 2006, Coakley had published her doctoral thesis and her widely discussed monograph Powers and Submissions.[6] She has been working on a four-volume systematic theology, the first volume of which was published in 2013 as God, Sexuality and the Self: An Essay On the Trinity.

From 2005-08, Coakley co-directed, with Martin A. Nowak, the "Evolution and Theology of Cooperation" project at Harvard University sponsored by the Templeton Foundation, out of which has come a co-edited volume, Evolution, Games, and God: The Principle of Cooperation. An earlier interdisciplinary project on "Pain and Its Transformations", undertaken with Arthur Kleinman at Harvard (as part of the Mind, Brain, Behavior Initiative), produced Pain and Its Transformations: The Interface of Biology and Culture (co-ed. with Kay Kaufman Shelemay, Harvard UP, 2007).

She delivered the Gifford Lectures in Aberdeen, Scotland, in 2012.[7]

She holds honorary degrees from Lund University, St Andrews, University of St Michael's College, Toronto, and Heythrop College, London. In July 2019, she was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (FBA), the United Kingdom's national academy for the humanities and social sciences.[8]

Ordained ministry

Coakley was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 2000 and as a priest in 2001.[9] She has assisted in parishes in Waban, Massachusetts, and at the Church of St Mary and St Nicholas, Littlemore, Oxford, England (where she served her title). Her training for the priesthood included periods working in a hospital and a prison. In 2011 she was appointed an honorary canon of Ely Cathedral where she assisted with the morning office and Eucharist until 2018.[10] Coakley now lives in the US, but returns to the UK every year for a period in the summer during which she has permission to officiate at St Barnabas Church, Jericho, Oxford.[11]

In 2012, she was invited to speak to the House of Bishops regarding a vote on consecrating women bishops.[12]

Personal life

Coakley's father, F. Robert Furber, was a lawyer, and her mother, Anne Furber, was a teacher.[13] In 1975, Coakley married James F. Coakley,[14] a Syriac scholar and fine printer. They have two daughters, Edith Coakley Stowe and Agnes Coakley Cox, who are a lawyer and a classical singer.[14] Her mother, Anne Furber, died in July 2015. Her father, the London lawyer F. Robert Furber, died in June 2016.[15]

Published works

Books authored

Books edited

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Harvard Magazine. Vol. 95. 1992.
  2. Oppenheimer . Mark . 28 June 2003 . Prayerful Vulnerability: Sarah Coakley Reconstructs Feminism . The Christian Century . 120 . 13 . Chicago . 25 . 2163-3312 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130221151356/http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=2714 . 21 February 2013 . 17 August 2013 . Religion Online.
  3. Web site: Faith, Rationality, and the Passions - Chair . Humbleapproach.templeton.org . 2013-08-17.
  4. Web site: Professor Sarah Coakley . Institute for Religion and Critical Inquiry . Australian Catholic University . 13 May 2022 . en.
  5. Web site: Professor Sarah Coakley . Faculty of Divinity . 22 July 2013 . University of Cambridge . 10 December 2018 . en.
  6. Book: Powers and Submissions . Wiley-Blackwell . 1 January 2002 . University of Cambridge . 10.1002/9780470693407 . 6 May 2024 . en . Coakley . Sarah . 978-0-631-20735-1 .
  7. Web site: Gifford Lecture Series 2012/. University of Aberdeen. 1 November 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121020122043/http://www.abdn.ac.uk/gifford/about/. 20 October 2012.
  8. Web site: New Fellows 2019 . The British Academy . 27 July 2019 .
  9. Encyclopedia: Prof Sarah Anne Coakley (née Furber) . subscription . . Church House Publishing . 11 June 2017.
  10. Web site: Sarah Coakley Curriculum Vitae . Sarah Coakley . 6 May 2024.
  11. Web site: Who's Who . St Barnabas Jericho . 28 December 2023.
  12. Web site: Has the Church of England finally lost its reason? Women bishops and the collapse of Anglican theology – Opinion – ABC Religion & Ethics (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) . Abc.net.au . 2012-11-22. 2013-08-17.
  13. Book: Coakley, Sarah . 2015 . The New Asceticism: Sexuality, Gender and the Quest for God . Bloomsbury . v.
  14. Web site: Sarah Coakley . Oxford . Jericho Press . 13 August 2019 . 7 June 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190607181702/https://www.jericho-press.com/sarah-coakley . dead .
  15. News: Bobby Furber, lawyer, collector, sportsman and bon viveur – obituary. 9 September 2016. www.telegraph.co.uk. The Telegraph.