Oak Hill College

Oak Hill College is a conservative evangelical theological college located on Chase Side in Southgate, London, England. Its aim is to prepare men and women from the Church of England and Independent churches for ministry in the real world.

Oak Hill College
PrincipalJohnny Juckes
Students206 (2015)[1]
Location,
51.6405°N 0.1461°W / 51.6405; -0.1461
Websitewww.oakhill.ac.uk

Overview

The College trains men and women from the Church of England and other denominations for ministry in the real world. This includes for ordination, community work, youth and children's work and world mission. Courses can be full-time or part-time, leading to a Certificate or Diploma in Higher Education or a Bachelor of Arts (Hons) in Theology.

It has been associated with conservative evangelical theology since its foundation in 1932, and continues to have a strong emphasis on Bible teaching and theology which is then applied to life and ministry. It is an associate college of Middlesex University. Dr Daniel Strange was for a time Acting Principal following the sudden and unexpected death in January 2017 of Revd Dr Michael Ovey. Dr Ovey succeeded New Testament Scholar, Revd Professor David Peterson at the start of the 2007–2008 academic year. Dr Ovey co-authored the book Pierced For Our Transgressions (Leicester: Apollos, 2006) with Dr Steve Jeffery and Dr Andrew Sach.

The Latimer Trust, an Anglican think tank, is located at Oak Hill Theological College.[2]

Current Leadership

  • President: Revd Johnny Juckes
  • College Director: Dr Daniel Strange

Notable former staff

List of principals

Notable alumni

gollark: Strictly speaking, no, but much of it doesn't really seem intended as information and doesn't exactly have a truth value.
gollark: Especially amongst people you really disagree with.
gollark: Actual good-faith discussion of facts is... not common.
gollark: A significant amount of the political conversations I've seen just have people throwing random "gotchas" at each other.
gollark: Yes, but that's not what people actually do.

References



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