Laurie Green

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Laurie Green
ChurchChurch of England
DioceseDiocese of Chelmsford
Installed1993
Term ended28 February 2011
PredecessorDerek Bond
SuccessorJohn Wraw
Orders
Ordination24 May 1970[1]
Consecration23 February 1993[2]
Personal details
Born (1945-12-26) 26 December 1945 (age 78)
NationalityBritish
DenominationAnglican
ResidenceBishop’s House, Horndon-on-the-Hill[1]
SpouseVictoria (1969—)[1]
Children2 daughters[1]
Alma materKing's College London

Laurence Alexander "Laurie" Green (born 26 December 1945) is a retired British Anglican bishop. He was the Bishop of Bradwell from 1993 to 2011.[3]

Early career and ministry

Laurie Green was born in Newham in the East End of London, the son of a bus driver and factory worker. As a young man he worked in a jellied-eel factory and then as a hairdresser. He was educated at East Ham Grammar School and King's College London (BD, AKC) and then at the New York Theological Seminary (STM, DMin).[4] There he studied the dynamics of East Harlem gangs and attained his masters degree in psychology and pastoral studies. After further studies at St Augustine's College, Canterbury, he was ordained in 1970.[5] He was a curacy at St Mark's Kingstanding, Birmingham, after which he was vicar of Erdington, where he set up an ecumenical parish at Spaghetti Junction with local Methodists.

During his time in Birmingham he initiated work in urban theology, worked with Hells Angels and skinheads and had his own BBC Radio programme. He also worked as Assistant Youth Officer for the diocese and as Industrial Chaplain to the British Steel Corporation. At the same time he became an honorary lecturer at the Urban Theology Unit, Sheffield University;[6] For seven years, he was the principal of the Aston Training Scheme for Anglican ordinands, before returning to East London to become, before his ordination to the episcopate, team rector of All Saints, Poplar.[7] Poplar is situated in London’s East End, where his parish had the new financial quarter of Canary Wharf being built at one end, in close proximity to the tower-blocks of abject poverty at the other.

Episcopal ministry

In 1993, Green moved to Essex to become the Bishop of Bradwell, where he served for eighteen years before retiring to Bexhill in Sussex.

Within the Diocese of Chelmsford, Green's Episcopal Area of Bradwell covered such towns as Basildon, Tilbury Docks, Southend, Maldon, Brentwood and Chelmsford as well as the deep rural areas of the Dengie peninsula where a stone chapel was built by St Cedd in 654 AD in Bradwell. Green then lived near to the River Thames, by the Dartford Tunnel & Bridge. He was a member of the Archbishop of Canterbury's Urban Theology Group, served on the Urban Bishops’ Panel of the Church of England and as chair of the Church of England's Urban Strategy Consultative Group. He was instrumental in the setting up of an International Anglican Commission and Network on Global Urbanisation.

Theology

Green has written extensively on the nature of theology, international debt and urban mission. His Let’s Do Theology (revised in 2009) was described by Leonardo Boff{[8][citation needed] as an authentic liberation theology for the English-speaking world, and by Elaine Graham as "a classic text".[9][citation needed] Another two of his books, "Power to the Powerless" and "Urban Ministry and the Kingdom of God", were named by the Church Times among its "Books of the Year", whilst others have been translated into many languages. In 2015 he published Blessed are the Poor? Urban Poverty and the Church which seeks to demonstrate that the incarnation of Christ amongst the poor suggests that it is amongst the poor that we will learn the lessons of God's kingdom.

Family and retirement

A jazz devotee, blues and classical guitar player and lover of folk music,[10] Green continues to give public concerts and produce CDs. He is married with two children.

Green remains founding-chair of the National Estate Churches Network (NECN) and in retirement, works alongside the Church Urban Fund as Chair and Development Officer for the NECN in the support of the church’s work on the poorer housing estates and projects of the UK. He also continues to work as a founding trustee of the charity Friends of the Poor in South India. He is also the bishop visitor to the Anglican Benedictine community of religious sisters at Malling Abbey, Kent.

Styles

  • Laurie Green Esq (26 December 1945 – 24 May 1970)
  • The Revd Laurie Green (24 May 1970 – 1982)
  • The Revd Dr Laurie Green (1982–23 February 1993)
  • The Rt Revd Dr Laurie Green (23 February 1993—present)

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Curriculum Vitae
  2. ^ a b Profile
  3. ^ Anglican Communion
  4. ^ Who's Who 2008: London, A & C Black ISBN 978-0-7136-8555-8
  5. ^ Crockford's Clerical Directory 2008/2009 Lambeth, Church House Publishing ISBN 978-0-7151-1030-0
  6. ^ UTU, Sheffield
  7. ^ Church web site
  8. ^ Green, Laurie. Let's Do Theology (Second ed.). Mowbray. pp. back cover. ISBN 9780826425515.
  9. ^ Green, Laurie (2009). Let's Do Theology (second ed.). Mowbray. pp. Back cover. ISBN 9780826425515.
  10. ^ Debrett's People of Today London, 2008 Debrett's, ISBN 978-1-870520-95-9
Church of England titles
Preceded by Bishop of Bradwell
1993–2011
Succeeded by