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British theologian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Richard J. Coggins (10 June 1929 – 19 November 2017) was a British biblical commentator, notable for his contributions to The Cambridge Bible Commentaries.
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Coggins graduated from Exeter College, Oxford in 1950 and after training for the priesthood in the Church of England at St Stephen's House, Oxford served a curacy in the Diocese of Exeter. He spent five years in Oxford as a tutor and chaplain at St Stephen's House before joining King's College London as a Lecturer in Old Testament studies in 1962. He retired as a senior lecturer in 1994. Among his students during his early years at King's was the future Archbishop Desmond Tutu.[citation needed]
Coggins was public preacher at the Anglican Diocese of Southwark and belonged to St Matthew, Brixton.[1] In his retirement he moved to Lymington in Hampshire.[citation needed]
On 4 March 1994 a day conference was held in honour of Richard Coggins and his colleague Leslie Houlden to mark their retirement from King's College London; the speaker in honour of Coggins was the Old Testament scholar Robert P. Carroll.[citation needed]
A memorial service for Richard Coggins was held in the chapel of King's College London on 22 May 2018; the address was provided by the Old Testament scholar Paul Joyce.[citation needed]
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