J. I. Packer

Birthday July 22, 1926

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Twyning, England

DEATH DATE 2020-7-17, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (93 years old)

Nationality Oman

#57187 Most Popular

1926

James Innell Packer (22 July 192617 July 2020) was an English-born Canadian evangelical theologian, cleric and writer in the low-church Anglican and Calvinist traditions.

Packer was born on 22 July 1926 in Twyning, Gloucestershire, England to James and Dorothy Packer.

1929

His sister, Margaret, was born in 1929.

His father was a clerk for the Great Western Railway and his lower-middle-class family was only nominally Anglican, attending the local St. Catherine's Church.

When he was seven, Packer suffered a severe head injury in a collision with a bread van, which precluded him from playing sports, so he became interested in reading and writing.

At 11 years of age, Packer was gifted with an old Oliver typewriter.

He went on to Cherish typewriters for the rest of his life.

1937

In 1937, Packer went to The Crypt School, where he specialized in the classics.

At age 14 he was confirmed at St. Catherine's church.

1944

In a 1944 meeting of the Oxford Inter-Collegiate Christian Union (OICCU), Packer committed his life to Christian service.

It was during this time that Packer became exposed to the Puritans through OICCU's library, which were an influence he carried for the rest of his life.

He also first heard lectures from C. S. Lewis at Oxford, whose teachings would (though he never knew Lewis personally) become a major influence in his life.

After college, he spent a brief time teaching Greek and Latin at Oak Hill College in London.

1948

He won a scholarship to the University of Oxford, where he was educated at Corpus Christi College, obtaining his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1948.

1949

During this 1949–1950 school year, he sat under the teaching of Martyn Lloyd-Jones at Westminster Chapel, who also would have a great influence on his thinking, and who he would know and interact with later.

In 1949, Packer went back to Wycliffe Hall, Oxford in 1949 to study theology.

1952

He was ordained a deacon in 1952 and priest in 1953 in the Church of England, within which he was associated with the evangelical movement.

He served as assistant curate of Harborne Heath in Birmingham from 1952 to 1954.

1954

He obtained his Master of Arts degree in 1954, and Doctor of Philosophy in 1954.

He wrote his dissertation under Geoffrey Nuttall on the soteriology of the Puritan theologian Richard Baxter.

In 1954, Packer married Kit Mullet, and they had three children, Ruth, Naomi, and Martin.

1955

In 1955, his family moved to Bristol and Packer taught at Tyndale Hall, Bristol, from 1955 to 1961.

He wrote an article denouncing Keswick theology as Pelagian in the Evangelical Quarterly.

According to biographer Alister McGrath, it is widely agreed that his critique "marked the end of the dominance of the Keswick approach among younger evangelicals".

1958

It was also during this time that he published his first book, Fundamentalism and the Word of God (1958), a defense of the authority of the Bible, which sold 20,000 copies in that year and has been in print since.

1961

Packer moved back to Oxford in 1961, where he served as librarian of Latimer House in Oxford from 1961 to 1962 and warden from 1962 to 1969, an evangelical research centre he founded with John Stott.

1970

In 1970, he became principal of Tyndale Hall, Bristol, and from 1971 until 1979 he was associate principal of the newly formed Trinity College, Bristol, which had been formed from the amalgamation of Tyndale Hall with Clifton College and Dalton House-St Michael's. He became editor of the Evangelical Quarterly in the 1960s, and eventually published a series of articles he wrote in the journal into a book, Knowing God.

1973

He was considered one of the most influential evangelicals in North America, known for his best-selling book Knowing God, written in 1973, as well as his work as an editor for the English Standard Version of the Bible.

The book, published by Hodder & Stoughton in Britain and InterVarsity Press in the United States in 1973, became a bestseller of international fame and sold over 1.5 million copies.

1977

In 1977, he signed the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy.

1978

He was one of the high-profile signers on the 1978 Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy, a member on the advisory board of the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, and also was involved in the ecumenical book Evangelicals and Catholics Together in 1994.

1979

In 1979, one of Packer's Oxford friends persuaded him to teach at Regent College in Vancouver, eventually being named the first Sangwoo Youtong Chee Professor of Theology, a title he held until he was named a Regent College Board of Governors' Professor of Theology in 1996.

At Regent he taught many classes, including systematic theology and the Puritans.

He was a prolific writer and frequent lecturer, and a frequent contributor to and an executive editor of Christianity Today.

Packer served as general editor of the English Standard Version (ESV), an evangelical translation based upon the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, and theological editor of the ESV Study Bible.

1996

His last teaching position was as the board of governors' Professor of Theology at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia, in which he served from 1996 until his retirement in 2016 due to failing eyesight.

2008

Packer was associated with St. John's Shaughnessy Anglican Church, which in February 2008 voted to schism from the Anglican Church of Canada over the issue of same-sex blessings.

The departing church, St. John's Vancouver, joined the Anglican Network in Canada (ANiC).

Packer, on 23 April, handed in his licence from the Bishop of New Westminster.

2009

(ANiC eventually co-founded and joined the Anglican Church in North America in 2009.) In December 2008, Packer was appointed an honorary clerical canon of St Andrew's Cathedral in Sydney in recognition of his long and distinguished ministry as a faithful teacher of biblical theology.