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David Penman : ウィキペディア英語版
David Penman
David John Penman (1936–1989) was the 10th Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne.
Born on 8 August 1936, Penman received his secondary education at Hutt Valley High School, and studied Physical Education as part of teacher training at Wellington Teachers College〔Alan Nichols, ''David Penman: Bridge-builder, Peacemaker, Fighter for Social Justice'' (Melbourne: Albatross, 1991)〕 (now a part of the Victoria University of Wellington Faculty of Education). He was accepted as a candidate for ordination by Archbishop Reginald Herbert Owen, and entered theological training at College House (University of Canterbury),〔(incorrectly): Alan Nichols, ''David Penman'', 25.〕 the University of New Zealand and the University of Karachi. He was ordained deacon in 1961 and priest in 1962.〔"Year-Book of the Diocese of Melbourne 1988"〕 His first post was as a curate at Wanganui from 1961 to 1964, followed by a decade of missionary work in Pakistan and the Middle East. In 1975 he was appointed Principal of St Andrew's Hall a Church Mission Society missionary training college in Melbourne. He returned to New Zealand in 1979, where he was Vicar of All Saints' Church in Palmerston North. In 1982 he became a bishop coadjutor in the Diocese of Melbourne before becoming the archbishop two years later.〔''The Times'', 12 January 1984; p. 22., "A New Bishop of Melbourne"〕 Though remaining strongly Evangelical, he was passionately committed to dialogue between religious traditions. He was a member of the first Australian Palliative Care Council, President of the Australian Council of Churches, Patron of the National AIDS Trust and a member of the Australian National Council on AIDS. On his way to Britain for the 1988 Lambeth Conference he undertook a highly secretive detour to Iran in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to secure the release of Terry Waite, the personal envoy of the Archbishop of Canterbury, and several other western hostages. On 24 July 1989, after returning home from the Tokyo World Conference on Religion and Peace and the Lausanne Evangelical Congress in Manila, where he delivered a series of Bible studies, he suffered a severe heart attack. He was kept on life-support in Melbourne's St Vincent's hospital, but although he regained consciousness, he died on 1 October 1989. He was 53. His state funeral service was held at St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne on 6 October 1989.〔(Funeral details )〕
==References==





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