Frank Leslie CrossFBA (22 January 1900 – 30 December 1968), usually cited as F. L. Cross, was an English patristics scholar and Anglican priest. He was the founder of the Oxford International Conference on Patristic Studies and editor (with Elizabeth Livingstone) of The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (first edition, 1957).[3] He was Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity at the University of Oxford from 1944 to 1968.
Post-war he organised international conferences, initially to re-establish relations with Christians in Germany. He organized the First International Conference on Patristic Studies in 1951, the second in 1955 and served as editor of the first 11 volumes of Studia Patristica, the official publication of the conference.[7] Additionally, he also organized New Testament congresses. As well as their academic importance, the conferences were an early expression of ecumenism.
^Cross, Frank Leslie (1930). The Philosophy of Edmund Husserl and His School, with Especial Reference to Its Bearing on the Philosophy of Religion (doctoral thesis). Oxford: University of Oxford. OCLC1065325209.
^Johnston, William M. (1998). Recent Reference Books in Religion: A Guide for Students, Scholars, Researchers, Buyers & Readers (2nd ed.). Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. p. 73. ISBN978-1-57958-035-3.
^University of Aberdeen; Aberdeen University Alumnus Association (1960). Aberdeen University Review. Vol. 38. Aberdeen University Press. p. 173. Retrieved 16 October 2018.