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St Stephen's House, Oxford





College Information

  Primary Colour black
  Name St Stephen's House
  Picture <!--For fair use rationale see image page-->
  Named For St Stephen
  Established 1876
  Head Name Principal
  Head The Revd Dr Robin Ward
  Undergraduates 30
  Graduates 15
  Location 16 Marston Street
  Homepage St Stephen's House Webpage
  Boat Club University Prospectus Page


St Stephen’s House, Oxford (popularly known as 'Staggers'), is an Anglican Theological College and a Hall of the University Of Oxford , England. The House offers Formation , education, and training for a variety of qualifications and ministries.


History

St Stephen's House was founded in 1876 by members of the Tractarian Movement and has stood ever since in the Anglo-Catholic tradition of the Church Of England .The principal founder of the House was the later Bishop of Lincoln, Edward King . For most of its life the House’s central role has been to train candidates for Ordination in the Church of England and other provinces of the Anglican Communion . Indeed by the 1950s it was a seminary on a very Catholic model, training very professional priests in the use of the confessional and the practice of Ignatian meditation. Life was quasi-monastic with periods of greater and lesser silence, and prescribed times for prayer. Presiding over it was Father Couratin, described by some as "a Roman Catholic who uses the Prayer Book" and by others as "Noel Coward in a clerical collar". His relaxed drawl and quick wit concealed a formidable intellect and with him as Principal the House maintained high standards of liturgy, scholarship and morality. The conferral of Permanent Private Hall status by the University of Oxford in 2003, along with recent developments in the Church, have meant that the House now sees its remit more widely as providing formation, education and training for the whole people of God. Within this overall understanding, the formation of candidates for the diaconate and the priesthood continues to have a prominent role.

The House was located originally on the site which is now the New Bodleian Library in a house opposite the King's Arms public House. It was soon to move into buildings in Norham Gardens, in North Oxford. These buildings were developed, a chapel being built to the side of one of the houses and, in later years, accommodation being provided for married students. The buildings, whilst the college's home for many, were never ideal. In 1980 the Society Of St. John The Evangelist decided to move from its mother house, Cowley St John. These monastic buildings were the ideal setting for a theological college. It was decided to buy the site and move the college to East Oxford. The current buildings contain the church of St John, Iffley Road, by G F Bodley , a masterpiece of his work, cloisters, the main buildings, the House Chapel and the old mission house. The house chapel, extended by Ninian Comper , is the old monastic chapel and is used for Morning and Evening Prayer . The daily Mass is celebrated in St John's Church. Accommodation in flats and houses on the site is provided for married students.


Culture

The house has aways been located in the Anglo-Catholic tradition of the Church Of England . As such great emphasis has always been placed on the formation of the person in their journey toward priesthood. At the heart of the House is prayer with Morning and Evening prayer forming the 'bookends' of the day. Ordinands are expected to attend both. The daily Mass also provides a critical point of spiritual nourishment. Theological training appropriate to the person is provided, as is time for ministerial preparation. Ordinands are expected to take an active part in the life and work of the house, serving at dinner, keeping up the gardens, and cleaning the church and chapels. Sports are often popular and teams are fielded for a variety of university games, although it does somewhat depend on the enthusiasm of the students.

Many former students, in the tradition of the House, go on to minister in urban priority areas and parishes which continue to suffer poverty and deprivation.

The college has, at times, had a reputation for being quite is an alumnus. A.N. Wilson writes that in his time there students were given opposite-sex "names in religion". {Link without Title}


Notable former students




ACADEMICS/TEACHERS

  • The Revd Canon Dr Robin Ward {Link without Title}

  • The Revd Edward Dowler {Link without Title}

  • The Revd Dr Andrew Davison

  • The Revd Elaine Bardwell

  • The Revd Canon Vincent Strudwick

  • The Revd Canon Beaumont Stevenson

  • The Revd Dr Simon Jones

  • Sister Benedicta Ward SLG

  • Mr Ian Boxall

  • Dr John Jarrick



External links