An exploration of the writings of African theologians John Mbiti and Jesse Mugambi, and the emergence of a distinctive African voice in post-colonial theology.
An analysis of the teachings of the largely forgotten 19th-century mystic Phoebe Palmer, seeing her as a major mystical thinker in the Wesleyan tradition.
An interdisciplinary analysis of the Book of Daniel, showing how the text can be constructively read as a narrative textbook in theological hermeneutics.
An exploration of the sayings of the historical Jesus and how they can be distinguished within the later mythologising of the Gospels.
A study of the Church as the social reality of the community of believers, with sociological and theological insights on contemporary ecclesiological issues.
A thoughtful historical study of the origins and subsequent role of systematics in theological discourse, from the time of Church Fathers to the modern era.
A commentary on the Johannine Epistles, emphasising their performative, liturgical function and the particular ethical form of worship that they preach.
An original exegesis of the Gospel of John showing how the motif of worship is woven into the text, and how this manifests the promise of life eternal in God.
An exploration of the centrality of worship in the theology of Matthew's Gospel, and how ritual worship of God is complemented by ethical worship in life.
A reassessment of the role of Paul as a man of prayer and worship, placing his letters in their original context as epistolary rituals of worship.
An important biographical study of one of the major figures of post-war Anglicanism, and his role in the modernisation of the Church of England.