Citizenship German Name Werner Jeanrond Years active 1981–Present | Occupation Theologian | |
![]() | ||
Full Name Werner Gunter Adolf Jeanrond Spouse(s) Betty Claesson Jeanrond Books A Theology of Love, Theological Hermeneutics: Develop, Text and Interpretation as Categ, Call and Response: The Chall, Introduction a l'hermene | ||
Werner Jeanrond interview Lithuanian Television
Werner Günter Adolf Jeanrond is Master of St Benet's Hall at the University of Oxford.
Contents
- Werner Jeanrond interview Lithuanian Television
- Spirituality of Love Four spiritual states and Four types of Loves
- Background
- Education and Academic Career
- Research Interests
- Academic Awards and Honours
- Important Publications
- FestschriftEssays in Honour of Werner G Jeanrond
- References

Spirituality of Love: Four spiritual states and Four types of Loves.
Background
Werner G Jeanrond is a German Roman Catholic theologian. He was born in 1955 in Saarbrücken in the Saar Protectorate, now Saarland, Germany. He is currently Master of St Benet's Hall, a Permanent Private Hall of the University of Oxford, and a member of the Faculty of Theology and Religion. He is the first lay Master in the history of St. Benet's Hall.
Education and Academic Career
Professor Jeanrond studied theology, German language and literature, and educational science at the Universities of Saarbrücken, Regensburg and Chicago. In 1979, he took his master's degree (Staatsexamen) at the University of Saarbrücken. In 1984, he was awarded a PhD at the University of Chicago (under the direction of David Tracy and Paul Ricoeur) where he was a Fullbright scholar. In 1985, he was awarded the degree of MA jure officii at the University of Dublin.
From 1981 to 1994, he was Lecturer and Senior Lecturer in theology at the University of Dublin and Fellow of Trinity College. From 1995 to 2007, he was Professor of Systematic Theology at the University of Lund in Sweden. While in Lund, he supervised the doctoral dissertation of Antje Jackelén who is now the first woman to be Archbishop of Uppsala and Primate of the Church of Sweden.
From 2008-2012, he was Professor of Divinity holding the 1640 Chair of Divinity at the University of Glasgow. After his departure from Glasgow, he was appointed an Honorary Senior Research Fellow thus maintaining a link with that university. In 2012, he became Master of St Benet's Hall. As an Oxford Head of House and also as a holder of the MA from the University of Dublin, he incepted to the degree of MA ad eundem gradum at the University of Oxford.
He has academic administrative experience in a number of roles, including as Head of the School of Biblical and Theological Studies in Trinity College Dublin; as Dean of the Faculty of Theology and Vice-Dean of Humanities at Lund University; as elected member of the Swedish Research Council and the Nordic Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences; as Research Convenor and Deputy Head of the School of Critical Studies in the University of Glasgow; as a longtime member of the Board and Foundation of Concilium and of many other editorial and academic boards and committees.
Research Interests
Systematic theology (Doctrine of God, Christology, ecclesiology, eschatology, soteriology); theological and philosophical hermeneutics; theological method; theology of religions; theology of love; theology of hope; political theology.
Academic Awards and Honours
Professor Jeanrond was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship for his doctoral studies at the University of Chicago (1979–1981), a research fellowship at the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel (1989), a research fellowship at the Danish Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (2002-3), a Robertson Fellowship at the University of Glasgow (2004), and a research fellowship at the Center for Subjectivity Research at the University of Copenhagen (2007).
He has held visiting professorships at the Universities of Uppsala, Chicago, Regensburg, and Riga. He has delivered a number of established lectures, including the Waldenström Lectures (Stockholm), the Wesley Lectures (Gothenburg), the Donellan Lectures (Dublin), the Aquinas Lecture (Glasgow), and the Gonzaga Lecture (Glasgow), and has lectured at many universities and research institutions in Europe, Asia and North America.