Oliver Crisp
Oliver Crisp completed a foundation diploma in fine art at Wimbledon School of Art (1990-1991) before going to the University of Aberdeen for his BD in Systematic Theology and Church History. He went on to read for an MTh at Aberdeen (1998), and a PhD at King's College, University of London, on the philosophical theology of Jonathan Edwards (2002). Crisp taught theology at the University of St. Andrews from 2002-2004. He was the Frederick J. Crosson Research Fellow at the Center for Philosophy of Religion, University of Notre Dame, USA (2004-2005) and the William H. Scheide Fellow in Theology at the Center of Theological Inquiry, Princeton (2008-2009), where he remains a Member. He has also been a visiting lecturer at Regent College, Vancouver, BC (2005, 2007-2009) and was the Secretary to the Society for the Study of Theology from 2007-2010. He is currently on the Committee of the British Society for the Philosophy of Religion. His research covers philosophical theology, systematic theology and some historical theology and ethics. Current research interests include analytic theology; eighteenth and nineteenth century American Reformed theology, particularly Jonathan Edwards, the New Divinity, William Shedd, John Williamson Nevin; modern Anglo-American systematic theology; and the Incarnation and Atonement. Crisp is the author of many articles and books including (Ashgate, 2005), , (Paternoster Press/ Wipf and Stock, 2007) and (T & T Clark, 2009).