Fenton was born on 5 June 1921 in Liverpool, England,[2] to Cornelius O'Connor Fenton and his wife Agnes Claudina Fenton (née Ingoldby).[1] His father was a vicar.[3] He was educated at St Edward's School, then an all-boys private boarding school in Oxford.[4]
Fenton's ecclesiastical career was mainly focused on teaching and working within the Church of England's theological colleges. However, he also served in parish ministry, and wrote a substantial number of books for academic and general audiences.[4]
Fenton was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 1944 and as a priest in 1945.[6] He served his curacy at All Saints Church, Hindley in the Diocese of Liverpool from 1944 to 1947.[5] He then returned to Lincoln Theological College, where he had trained for ordination, having been appointed its chaplain in 1947 and promoted to sub-warden in 1951.[6] At the college, he taught mainly on the New Testament.[4] He returned to parish ministry, and was Vicar of Wentworth in the Diocese of Sheffield between 1954 and 1958.[5]
In 1958, Fenton began his career as a senior member of the church hierarchy, having been appointed Principal of Lincoln Theological College.[6] Lincoln was a community of both young more mature ordinands: in addition to teaching them the New Testament, he saw it as his duty to challenge their faith.[4] In 1965, he left Lincoln for the last time having been appointed Principal of St Chad's College, Durham, which was both a theological college and a college of the university.[1] During his time in charge of St Chad's, the college ceased its formal training of ordinands for the Church of England, and he led its integration into the wider university with students reading for all degrees offered by Durham University.[2][4]
Fenton's final appointment was as a canon residentiary of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford in 1978: Christ Church Cathedral has a dual role as cathedral of the Diocese of Oxford and the college chapel of Christ Church, a college of the University of Oxford.[5] As sub-dean, he was tasked with leading the daily cycle of worship at the cathedral and also its administration; the dean was then free to run the university college.[2] In addition to his clergy role, he taught the New Testament to the university's students,[1] taking "as many as 30 tutorials a week".[2] Fenton retired from full-time ministry in 1991 and was made a student emeritus of Christ Church ("student" is the college's name for its fellows).[2][5]
Views
Fenton's Christianity was originally a form of "extreme Anglo-Catholicism". This changed during his university studies where he was introduced to modern biblical criticism.[3]
A scholar of the New Testament, he did not superscribe to Biblical literalism: "he understood the Gospels to consist largely of the teaching material of the earliest Christian communities, rather than historical or biographical fact".[2] He believed that layers of later hands had to be stripped back from the Bible, and that the first-century context of Christ's teaching had to be recognised to truly understand them.[2]
Personal life
In 1945, Fenton married Mary (née Ingoldby). Together they had four children: two boys and two girls.[6] One of their sons is the poet James Fenton.[2] Mary died in 1960.[6] In 1963, he married Linda Brandham. Together they had three children: one daughter and two sons.[3][6]
Works
Books
Fenton, John C. (1958). Preaching the Cross: the Passion and Resurrection according to St. Mark. London: S.P.C.K. OCLC222910506.
——— (1961). The Passion According to John: with introduction, notes, and meditations. London: S.P.C.K. OCLC6129903.
——— (1970). The Gospel According to John in the Revised Standard Version. New Clarendon Bible, New Testament. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN9780198369080. OCLC120302.
——— (1971). What was Jesus' Message?. Studies in creative criticism. Vol. 2. London: S.P.C.K. ISBN9780281026210. OCLC1236115.