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Student Essay Competition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2024

Brian Douglas*
Affiliation:
Editor, Journal of Anglican Studies Email: brian.douglas@mac.com
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Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Journal of Anglican Studies Trust

During 2023, The Journal of Anglican Studies ran a student essay competition with an Australian $1,000 prize for the winning entry. A number of excellent essays were received, and members of the Editorial Board of the Journal seriously considered each essay. The winning entry was written by Lachlan Vines who is completing a Master of Ministry degree at Ridley College, Melbourne, Australia. Lachlan’s essay, entitled ‘Rowan Williams’ Theology of Revelation’, was chosen as the winning entry by all three judges in a blind review. Lachlan’s essay will be published as a research article in The Journal of Anglican Studies. Congratulations Lachlan on a fine academic essay. Thanks also to the other students who submitted excellent essay but were not successful in winning on this occasion.

The Journal of Anglican Studies is running the student essay competition again in 2024. Students in a tertiary-level course are invited to submit an essay related to Anglican studies. The same prize of Australian $1,000 will be awarded for the winning entry. Students who have previously entered are welcome to enter again. Details of the 2024 student essay competition are at the back of this edition of the Journal. The deadline for submissions is 31 December 2024.

Vale Bishop Colin Buchanan

Those interested in Anglican Studies and particularly liturgical studies would know that Bishop Colin Buchanan died recently. Colin was well known to many Anglicans and members of other traditions across the world as an outstanding liturgical scholar. His own work over many years was extraordinary. Colin was well known through his writings, attendance at conferences and through the friendship he offered others. Colin’s work on Anglican liturgical development is a gold mine of material and insight and will serve for many years as a definitive resource. Colin and I were good friends although we came from different traditions in Anglicanism. This never seemed to matter in friendship and in discussion of liturgy. I met him at conferences of Societas Liturgica, and he assisted me with primary resources in one of my recent book publications on the Anglican Eucharist in the Anglican Church of Australia. Colin also wrote a very generous review of this book in JAS. The resources Colin shared were not previously published or in the common domain, and so these were vital and highly prized in relation to liturgical development in the Anglican Church of Australia. Colin shared the first-hand resources freely with plenty of commentary. I always appreciated Colin’s friendship and willingness to share and offer thoughtful responses. Readers of The Journal of Anglican Studies will know that Colin published often in the Journal, both research articles and book reviews, and in fact, one of his last published works is in this edition of the Journal. It is entitled ‘Anglican Confirmation: An Unfinished Business’. The Anglican world owes Colin Buchanan a great debt of gratitude for his life, ministry and academic work. May he rest in peace.