Metadata
Title
Fergus King
Category
general
UUID
d2957e1ee5e343329a6fd89ef777dd08
Source URL
https://www.trinity.unimelb.edu.au/fergus-king
Parent URL
https://www.trinity.unimelb.edu.au/theological-school/faculty-and-staff
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T06:34:12+00:00
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Fergus King

Source: https://www.trinity.unimelb.edu.au/fergus-king Parent: https://www.trinity.unimelb.edu.au/theological-school/faculty-and-staff

0001-01-01

The Revd Associate Professor Fergus King

MA(Hons) St Andrews, BD(Hons) Edinburgh, DTheol UNISA\ Farnham Maynard Lecturer in Ministry Education \ Director of the Ministry Education Centre

E: fergusk@trinity.edu.au

Fergus has a particular interest in the missiological implications of the New Testament. In his doctorate, awarded by the University of South Africa, he explored how the phenomenon of inculturation or contextualisation was used by the gospel writers to explain the phenomenon of Jesus’ life and death, and the church’s response to those events. All this is founded on Martin Hengel’s judgment that the NT is missiological in nature.

In his more recent work, he has researched how the NT writings resonate with the religious, philosophical and literary traditions of the ancient world to present the Christian faith in ways understood by their first audiences. This work recognises the porous boundaries which exist between Judaism, Graeco-Romanitas and emerging Christianity.

This research is then complemented by a hermeneutics of correspondence (Clodovis Boff) or resonance (Fidon Mwombeki) to suggest appropriate missiological theory and practice for our very different circumstances.

Fergus has also been influenced strongly by a lived experience and study of Christian faith in Africa and holds the view that African theological thinking and discourse must not be relegated to the sidelines of contemporary theology, or made to conform to the agendas of the North and West. Indeed, that there needs to be, as an act of justice and historical integrity, an increased recognition of the contribution made historically by African thinkers to Christianity, particularly in antiquity.

Current Research Areas

Areas for Supervision

Publications

Community Engagement

Web Materials including seminars, sermons, lectures, non-refereed publications and presentations:

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Trinity College is a college of the University of Divinity.

University of Divinity CRICOS Code: 01037A

University of Divinity TEQSA Provider ID: PRV12135