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St Mary's College, St Andrews

College of the University of St Andrews, Scotland

St Mary's College, St Andrews

Summary

College of the University of St Andrews, Scotland

FieldValue
nameSt Mary's College
latin_nameCollegium Sanctae Mariae
image[[File:St Marys College Coat of Arms.png125pxSt Mary's College coat of arms]]
motto
mottoengIn the Beginning was the Word
established
typeCollege
principalWilliam Tooman
free_labelTeaching staff
free25
students98
undergrad60
postgrad50
colours{{scarf
citySt Andrews
stateFife
countryScotland
coor
affiliationsUniversity of St Andrews
websitewww.st-andrews.ac.uk/divinity/
St Mary's College

St Mary's College, founded as New College or College of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, is the home of the Faculty and School of Divinity within the University of St Andrews, in Fife, Scotland.

History

The college was founded in 1538 by Archbishop James Beaton, uncle of Cardinal David Beaton on the site of the Pedagogy or St John's College (founded 1418).

St Mary's College was intended to preserve the teachings of the Catholic church against the Protestant teachings of the reformers. It was dedicated to a revival of learning on the Continental trilingual model and from the outset laid emphasis on the knowledge of Latin, Greek and Hebrew. In 1579, nineteen years after the Reformation brought fundamental changes to the religious life of the Scottish nation, St Mary's College was reconstituted, under the influence of Andrew Melville, as the Faculty of Divinity of the university.

At its foundation in 1538 St Mary's was intended to be a College for instruction in Divinity, Law, and Medicine, as well as in Arts, but its career on this extensive scale was short-lived. Under a new foundation and erection, confirmed by Parliament in 1579, it was set apart for the study of Theology only, and it has remained a Divinity College ever since. From 1580 onwards each Principal has acted as primarius Professor of Divinity, or first Master.

St Mary's College retains much of its original sixteenth-century buildings, specifically the north and West ranges. The Quad contains a thorn tree said to have been planted by Mary, Queen of Scots, during her many visits to St. Andrews. The Quad also contains the historic King James Library founded by King James VI & I in 1612. In addition, the College has The Roundel, a 16th-century building dedicated for doctoral students studying divinity at the University of St Andrews.

The Roundel

The college is one of five approved centres for the training of Church of Scotland ministers. Graduates include the Very Rev Dr Finlay Macdonald, the immediate past Principal Clerk to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and a former Moderator.

Beginning May 2018, the Principal of St Mary's College was Rev. Dr. Stephen Holmes, also Head of the School of Divinity, who replaced Ian Bradley (Professor Emeritus). Oliver Crisp was Principal and Head of School from January 2022 until July 2024 after previously having been Acting Head of the School of Divinity since October 2021. Since the summer of 2024 William Tooman has been Principal and Head of School.

Rankings

As of May 2015, the Faculty and School of Divinity forms an academic community of some 131 persons: 16 members of staff; 55 postgraduate students; and 60 undergraduates. According to The Complete University Guide 2016, the School of Divinity is placed first in the United Kingdom for undergraduate studies ahead of Durham in second place and Cambridge in third. In the 2016 Guardian University Guide, it is also ranked first in the United Kingdom in religious studies and theology.

Centres

College Hall, St Mary's College

The college has four research centres.

The Institute for Theology, Imagination and the Arts (ITIA) was founded within the college by professors Trevor Hart and Jeremy Begbie (currently Thomas A. Langford Research Professor at Duke Divinity School) in 2000. It "aims to advance and enrich an active conversation between Christian theology and the arts – bringing rigorous theological thinking to the arts, and bringing the resources of the arts to the enterprise of theology." The current director is Dr Gavin Hopps.

The Centre for the Study of Religion and Politics (CSRP) was founded in November 2004 by a group of academics attached to the Schools of Divinity, International Relations, Modern Languages, and Philosophical and Anthropological Studies. The need for a centre of learning to consider the role of religion and politics was highlighted by the support garnered from a diverse range of scholars and religious and political figures who endorsed the Centre's establishment. These supporters who have continued as Patrons of the Centre include Gustavo Gutiérrez, Cardinal O'Brien, Bishop Desmond Tutu, Carole Hillenbrand, Ian Linden, Julian Filochowski, J.D.Y. Peel, Rev Joel Edwards, Professor George P. Smith II and Dr. P.T.W. Baxter. The current director is Professor Mario Aguilar

The Institute for Bible, Theology & Hermeneutics (IBTH) was established in 2009 to give formal identity to the long-standing project of research into Scripture and theology that has been associated with the work at St Mary's School of Divinity. The institute introduces its aims as seeking, "To overcome the sense of fragmentation within the field of Divinity that burdens many within the Academy, promoting intra-disciplinary conversation between Biblical Studies and the various fields of Theology, thus providing a core identity for a more integrated discipline competent to engage in inter-disciplinary research. With the study of general hermeneutical theory and practice at its centre, it will be outward-looking and keen to engage with issues arising from the contemporary world." The current director is Dr Mark Elliott.

The Logos Institute for Analytic and Exegetical Theology was founded in 2016 by Professor Alan Torrance and Dr Andrew Torrance. The Institute "is committed to scholarship that reflects a concern for: transparency; simplicity in expression; clear, logical argumentation; and rigorous analysis. It also reflects a radical commitment to interdisciplinary engagement, particularly between the fields of philosophy, theology, biblical studies, and the sciences. Its faculty consists of world-leading scholars in the fields of biblical studies, theology, and philosophy." The current director is Professor Oliver Crisp.

Faculty

NameYears served
Robert Bannerman1539–1546
Archibald Hay1546–1547
John Douglas1547-1574
Andrew Melville1580–1607
Robert Howie1607–1647
Samuel Rutherford1647–1661
Alexander Colville1662–1666
James Hadow1707–1747
John Tulloch1854–1886
John Cunningham1886–1893
Ian Bradley2014–2017
Stephen Holmes2018–2021
Oliver D. Crisp2022–2023
William Tooman2024–Present
NameYears served
Samuel Rutherford1638–1661
James Sharp1661–1679
Thomas Halyburton1710–1712
Trevor Hart1995–2013
John Webster2013–2016
Christoph Schwöbel2018–2021

;Other notable faculty

  • John Black (martyr), Roman Catholic martyr, Second Master
  • Allan Menzies Professor of Biblical Criticism 1869 to 1916
  • Ian Bradley, Emeritus Professor of Cultural and Spiritual History and former Principal of St Mary’s College.
  • David Brown (theologian) Wardlaw Professor of Theology, Imagination, and the Arts, 2007 to 2015, now Emeritus Professor
  • N.T. Wright Research Professor (New Testament), 2010 to 2019
  • Alan Torrance, Emeritus Professor of Systematic Theology and founder of the Logos Institute for Analytic and Exegetical Theology

References

References

  1. "Search".
  2. "Facts and Figures".
  3. [[St John's College, St Andrews]]
  4. "Records of St Mary's College". University of St Andrews.
  5. (1928). "Fasti ecclesiae scoticanae; the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation". Oliver and Boyd.
  6. "St Mary's - Library Facilities".
  7. "Newsroom".
  8. "About St Mary's College {{!}} School of Divinity, University of St Andrews".
  9. (March 2023). "Graduation address Professor Ian Bradley {{!}} University of St Andrews".
  10. "Curriculum Vitae".
  11. "Author". Baker Publishing Group.
  12. "Top UK University League Tables and Rankings 2020".
  13. (2 May 2015). "Religious studies and theology". The Guardian.
  14. "Institute for Theology, Imagination and the Arts - Overview".
  15. Smith, George Patrick. (2008). "Distributive Justice and the New Medicine". Edward Elgar Publishing.
  16. "CSRP – Centre for the Study of Religion and Politics – St Andrews site".
  17. http://www.scotsman.com/news/scottish-news/edinburgh-east-fife/religion_and_politics_take_centre_stage_1_961120 {{Dead link. (February 2022)
  18. (7 Oct 2005). "Tutu is named patron at centre". The Herald (Glasgow).
  19. "Institute for Bible, Theology, & Hermeneutics".
  20. "Logos – Institute for Analytic and Exegetical Theology".
  21. "Andrew Bartholomew Torrance - University of St Andrews".
  22. "Faculty – Logos".
  23. "Logos – Institute for Analytic and Exegetical Theology".
  24. (2011). "Andrew Melville and Humanism in Renaissance Scotland 1545-1622". Brill.
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