James Alison

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James Alison
James Alison (born 1959) is a Roman Catholic theologian and priest. He is noted for his application of René Girard's anthropological theory to Christian systematic theology and for his work on LGBT issues. He identifies as gay.[1][2]

Biography

In Faith Beyond Resentment he describes his family background as "conservative middle-class English evangelical Protestant".[3] His father was the Rt Hon Michael Alison (died 2004), who, after leaving Oxford University, had spent some time studying theology at Ridley Hall and had gone on to become a prominent Conservative Member of Parliament and Second Church Estates Commissioner. Alison left the Church of England at the age of eighteen, to join the Roman Catholic Church.[4] He studied at Blackfriars College at the University of Oxford, and earned his bachelor's degree and doctorate in theology from the Jesuit Theology Faculty in Belo Horizonte, Brazil.

Alison was a member of the Dominican order – his master's degree is a Dominican lectorate – from 1981 to 1995. He has lived and worked in Mexico, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile and the United States. Currently he works as a travelling preacher, lecturer and retreat giver, based in Madrid, Spain.[5]

Alison says that his disagreement with the official Roman Catholic Church teaching on homosexuality is based on official Catholic teaching concerning nature, grace and original sin.[6]

References

  1. Jump up http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/encounter/james-alison-sexuality-certainty-and-salvation/3694924 "James Alison: Sexuality, Certainty and Salvation" 8 January 2012 RadioNational: Encounter".
  2. Jump up http://www.jamesalison.co.uk/texts/eng67.html
  3. Jump up http://jamesalison.co.uk/texts/eng22.html
  4. Jump up http://www.jamesalison.co.uk/texts/eng22.html James Alison, "Introduction to Faith Beyond Resentment".
  5. Jump up http://forgivingvictim.com/about-james-alison/ "About James Alison"
  6. Jump up http://www.jamesalison.co.uk/texts/eng17.html James Alison, "Good-faith learning and the fear of God",