12 April 2015 A.D. Introducing the Rev. Dr. Prof. Ashley Null—Yale MDiv/STM, Cambridge Doctorate, & World-Class Cranmerian Scholar
12 April 2015 A.D. Introducing
the Rev. Dr. Prof. Ashley Null—Yale MDiv/STM, Cambridge Doctorate, &
World-Class Cranmerian Scholar
Greggs, Claudia. “World-reknowned scholar with the
heart of a pastor.” The Diocese of the
Carolinas. 8 Apr 2015. http://dioceseofthecarolinas.com/rev-dr-ashley-null/.
Accessed 12 Apr 2015.
World-renowned
scholar with the heart of a pastor
Grace and
gratitude play a central role in the Rev. Dr. Ashley Null’s life and
work. Ashley is an authority on the English Reformation – particularly
the theology of Thomas Cranmer, who was the author of the first Book of Common
Prayer and the Archbishop of Canterbury during the reigns of King Henry VIII
and Edward VI. Ashley also serves as a senior research fellow for
the Ridley Institute and a theological consultant to the Diocese of the
Carolinas, most recently giving a series of thought-provoking lectures to the
clergy of the diocese. In those lectures, Ashley talked about how
Cranmer’s understanding of God’s grace and mercy shaped the Communion service
he composed for the first English Prayer Books (or the 1552 Book of Common Prayer).
A similar
understanding – of how God’s grace, freely offered in love, sets the stage for
us to acknowledge our sinfulness and repent – has shaped Ashley’s life.
Although born in Birmingham, Alabama, (‘Ashley’ is a family name) he was reared
in Salina, Kansas, and since his father was an Episcopalian, the Null family
attended Christ Episcopal Cathedral, where the bishop of the Diocese of Western
Kansas was in residence. His mother had been raised in the Baptist church
(her great-great-grandfather was the first Secretary of the Southern Baptist
Foreign Missions Board) but with Pentecostal influences– and all of these
Christian traditions – Anglican, Evangelical and Pentecostal – played an
important role in Ashley’s formation as a Christian. The Book of Common Prayer,
with its liturgies and prayers rooted in Scripture, held a special appeal for
him.
While in high
school, Ashley was part of a large group of students involved with the Solid
Rock Fellowship House, a Jesus-Movement-style outreach sponsored by the local
Foursquare Church. The Solid Rock taught him the Bible and deepened his
faith in Jesus as Lord and Savior. After college, he discerned a call to the
ordained ministry and set off for the Yale Divinity School in New Haven,
Connecticut. While at Yale his appreciation for Cranmer’s Reformation
belief in the primacy of Scripture in the life of the church led him to explore
ways in which to help those unfamiliar with, or skeptical about, Anglican
liturgy appreciate its biblical underpinnings. Ashley was unique at Yale
– a prayer book Episcopalian with an obvious love for Jesus. When it came time
for Ashley to be ordained a deacon in Salina, he made sure his Pentecostal
friends played a role in the service. He asked the Foursquare pastor to
preach. After the service, the Cathedral canon turned to Ashley and
remarked with a smile, “Well that’s probably a little more Bible than the
people here are used to, but it won’t hurt them any.”
After two years
serving in parish ministry at Grace Church in New York City, where he ordained
to the priesthood by Bishop Fitz Allison, Ashley returned to Yale to pursue a
Masters in Sacred Theology degree (STM) with a focus on the theology of
repentance from an Anglican perspective. He was particularly interested
in the Anglican Reformers’ notion that God’s alluring grace, offered
unconditionally to fallen men and women, is what leads them to repentance – not
a fear of damnation, which was a tactic used by the medieval church. This
belief in the transformative power of grace was bedrock for Ashley, and it
continues to occupy his thoughts and inspire his writing and teaching to this
day.
Although he
hoped to build upon his work at Yale by pursing an advanced degree, his bishop
had other plans for him. Upon completion of his STM, Ashley was called
back to Kansas to serve as interim rector of a troubled church in a little town
called Liberal. Since pastoral ministry was something Ashley enjoyed
immensely, both he and the church thrived during his tenure as their rector.
After two years, however, he was faced with a difficult decision. His
best chance at paying for a PhD was winning a Fulbright scholarship to England
which in those days required an applicant to be under the age of 30. To
resume his studies would mean leaving far too early a parish he had come to
love. In the end, Ashley left the decision up to the award
committee. When he was notified that he had been selected, he left parish
ministry to study Cranmer at Cambridge University in England.
Since receiving his
PhD from Cambridge, Ashley has authored several publications, including Thomas Cranmer’s Doctrine of
Repentance: Renewing the Power to Love (Oxford 2000). He is
now in the process of editing the private theological notebooks of Thomas
Cranmer, which will be published in a five-volume series by Oxford University
Press. Ashley also holds a research post funded by the German Research
Council at Humboldt University of Berlin, which is preparing for the 500th
anniversary celebration in 2017 of the beginning of the German
Reformation. In addition, he is a visiting fellow of the Divinity Faculty
of Cambridge University and St. John’s College, Durham University. And in
March of this year, Ashley was installed as a Canon Theologian of St. Mark’s Pro-Cathedral
in Alexandria, Egypt.
Much of Ashley’s
time is taken up with writing, research and teaching; yet he also continues to
exercise a pastoral ministry. He has served over the years as a chaplain
in educational institutions as well as in the sports arena. These days,
he ministers to some most outstanding athletes and coaches, sharing the
Reformation’s message of unmerited grace and humble gratitude with men who are
highly performance-driven and widely acclaimed for their skills and
talent. Ashley has also served three times as an Olympic Chaplain, most
recently in London for the 2012 Summer Olympics. In addition, he is the
author of a book for athletes about the power of God’s freely-offered grace
entitled, Real Joy:
Freedom to be Your Best (Haennsler 2004).
We are truly
blessed in the diocese of the Carolinas to be able to benefit from Ashley’s
scholarship and humble reflections about Thomas Cranmer, the Anglican
Reformation and the alluring grace of God. The clergy of the diocese
eagerly await our next opportunity to hear him speak.
Claudia Greggs
is the Clergy Associate for Pastoral Care at Holy Trinity Church in Raleigh,
NC.

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