The 'New Normal'
lessons from a pandemic
Dr Sarah Maxwell
Preacher:
Sarah Maxwell trained as a teacher at Homerton College and, after 3 years teaching at an Essex Primary School, joined the staff of St John鈥檚 College School in 1980, becoming Head of Religious Studies ten years later and the Lay Chaplain in 2010. On her retirement in 2018, the Headmaster invited her to continue her chaplaincy role at the School, an aspect of which led to involvement in the College鈥檚 鈥淰irtual Chapel鈥 services during lockdowns. Sarah鈥檚 doctorate examined the experience of gay clergymen in the Church of England and was subsequently adapted as a book, 鈥淭ranscendent Vocation: Why gay clergy tolerate hypocrisy鈥.

The Rev鈥檇 Dr Ayla Lepine
Preacher:
Ayla was Assistant Curate of St John-at-Hampstead in London. She is Canadian by birth, and was prepared for ordination at Westcott House from 2015-18. She holds a doctorate in the History of Art and has lectured on art and architecture at the Universities of Essex, Yale, and the Courtauld Institute.

Prebendary Marjorie Brown
Preacher:
Marjorie has been Vicar at St Mary the Virgin, Primrose Hill for over ten years and was installed as Prebendary of St Paul鈥檚 Cathedral in 2017 in recognition of her valuable ministry in the Diocese of London.
While at St Mary鈥檚 church in Primrose Hill, under her leadership, the congregation at St Mary鈥檚 has hosted a cold weather shelter, continued to support youth work with vulnerable young people, introduced an informal eucharist for young families, joined London Citizens, begun new initiatives in mental health awareness, and even started a craft brewery.

The Rev鈥檇 Professor Jane Shaw
Preacher:
Professor Shaw is Principal of Harris Manchester College, Professor of the History of Religion and a Pro-Vice-Chancellor in the University of Oxford.
Professor Shaw is an historian whose research and writing cover a number of areas: modern religion; the arts; gender; and the impact of technology on society.
She is the author of several books, including Miracles in Enlightenment England (Yale 2006) and Octavia, Daughter of God: the Story of a Female Messiah and her Followers (Jonathan Cape and Yale, 2011). She has just completed, with three colleagues, an interdisciplinary study of Generation Z (18 鈥 25 year olds), which will be published as Gen Z, Explained: the Art of Living in a Digital Age by University of Chicago Press in November 2021. She is currently writing a book about spirituality and religion in the early twentieth century.
Before coming to Harris Manchester College, she was Professor of Religious Studies and Dean for Religious Life at Stanford University, and before that Dean of Grace Cathedral in San Francisco. Prior to that she taught at the University of Oxford for sixteen years. Professor Shaw read History at Oxford as an undergraduate, has a master鈥檚 degree in religion from Harvard and a PhD in history from the University of California at Berkeley.
Within the University of Oxford, Professor Shaw is a Pro-Vice-Chancellor (without Portfolio) and also serves on a number of boards and committees including the Humanities Divisional Board and as Chair of the Management Board of the Rothermere American Institute. Beyond Oxford, she serves on the Advisory Board of Stanford University Libraries and on the Global Advisory Board of Stanford鈥檚 Distinguished Careers Institute, and as a trustee of Sarum College.

The Rev鈥檇 Dr Erica Longfellow
Preacher:
Erica Longfellow was appointed Dean of Divinity and Chaplain of the college in 2011. Before moving to Oxford, she was Reader in English Literature at Kingston University and a priest in the Diocese of Southwark. She is the author of Women and Religious Writing in Early Modern England (CUP, 2004) and is currently finishing a monograph on Prayer and Privacy and editing a volume of the The Oxford Edition of the Sermons of John Donne. As chaplain Erica leads services in the chapel, co-ordinates pastoral care with the college welfare team, and works with New College School.

The Rev鈥檇 Dr Helen Dawes
Preacher:
Helen is the Principal of Westcott House, having previously been the Team Rector of Shaftesbury and the Dean of Women鈥檚 Ministry in the Diocese of Salisbury.
Helen trained for ministry at Westcott House, serving in parish ministry in the dioceses of Ely and St Albans following ordination before joining the Archbishop of Canterbury鈥檚 staff team at Lambeth Palace. Helen was Deputy Secretary for Public Affairs to Archbishop Rowan Williams and then Social and Public Affairs Adviser to Archbishop Justin Welby.
Helen studied for her PhD at King鈥檚 College London and her academic work focuses on the intersection of theology with economic life and public policy. She has wide-ranging interests in Christian engagement in the public square.
Prior to ordination, Helen worked in strategic and regulatory consulting.

The Rev鈥檇 Ally Barrett
Preacher:
Ally Barrett joined St Catharine's as Chaplain, having spent four years in theological education (as tutor and Director of Pastoral Studies at Westcott House, Cambridge) and eleven years as a parish priest in the Diocese of Ely, as well as some time as a children's minister in the USA. Her research, teaching and publications have focused on reflective practice and theological reflection, and the role of (and experience of) liturgy in life events. Her most recent book is on reflective practice, multisensory learning, and improvisation in preaching. With a background in music and the arts, she is a keen painter and singer, and is also an award-winning hymn-writer, for which she was made an Associate of the Royal School of Church Music.

The Rev鈥檇 Jennifer聽Adams-Massmann
Preacher:
The Rev鈥檇 Jennifer Adams-Massmann was appointed Assistant Chaplain and Welfare Officer at Peterhouse in 2019. Originally from the U.S., Jennifer received a B.A. degree in English & American Literature from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (USA) and a Master of Divinity degree from Duke University before moving overseas in 2002, first to Germany and then England. She has been a priest since 2007, serving in parish ministry, hospital chaplaincy, and college chaplaincy in Cambridge and Princeton. She is currently writing a Ph.D. on Protestant women missionaries in 18th century America based at the University of Heidelberg in Germany, where she formerly taught American religion to undergraduates. She is married and has one son and a fluffy Siberian forest cat named Rory who even has his own Instagram account @rory.siberian for College cat lovers! When not spending time with family, in her free time Jennifer likes running along the Backs, reading, watching documentaries & musicals, dressmaking, singing sea shanties, or playing with her kitty, of course.

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