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Walter Matthews (priest)

Walter Robert Matthews CH KCVO[2] (22 September 1881 – 4 December 1973) was an Anglican priest, theologian, and philosopher.[3]


Walter Matthews

1934–1967

1967

Dean of Exeter (1931–1934)

1907

Walter Robert Matthews

(1881-09-22)22 September 1881
London, England

4 December 1973(1973-12-04) (aged 92)

British

Margaret Bryan
(m. 1911; died 1961)
[1]

Early life and education[edit]

Born on 22 September 1881 in Camberwell, London, to parents Philip Walter Matthews, a banker, and Sophia Alice Self, he was educated at Wilson's School[4] and trained for the priesthood at King's College London.

Ordained ministry[edit]

He was ordained deacon in 1907 and priest in 1908[5] and was a curate at St Mary Abbots' Kensington and St Peter's Regent Square. After that he was a lecturer in and then a professor of theology at King's College London.[6][7] From 1918 he was also Dean of the college.[6][8] In 1931 he became an Honorary Chaplain to the King[9] and Dean of Exeter.[6][10] Then in 1934 he became Dean of St Paul's,[6][11] a post he held for 33 years. At the time of his appointment, he was president-elect of the Modern Churchmen's Union.[12] He was described by his predecessor, William Ralph Inge, as something of an "Orthodox Modernist".[12]


On 2 June 1940 the term "miracle of Dunkirk" was used for the first time by Matthews in a speech. He was praising the rescue of thousands of British soldiers and their allies from being encircled by the German Army in France.


He died on 4 December 1973.[13][14]

. Editor. By Joseph Butler. London: G. Bell and Sons. 1914.

Three Sermons on Human Nature and a Dissertation upon the Nature of Virtue

. Editor. By J. F. Bethune-Baker; A. Caldecott; Hastings Rashdall; Wm. Brown; H. Maurice Relton. London: University of London Press. 1920.

King's College Lectures on Immortality

. London: Macmillan and Co. 1921.

Studies in Christian Philosophy: Being the Boyle Lectures, 1920

God and Evolution. London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1926.

The Purpose of God. London: Nisbet. 1935.

. New York: Macmillan Company. 1939.

Christ

The Foundations of Peace. Eyre and Spottiswoode. 1942.

Some Christian Words. John Allen and Unwin. 1956.

Memories and Meanings. London: Hodder and Stoughton. 1969.

The Year Through Christian Eyes. London: Epworth Press. 1970.

Matthews was an author. Among his works:

at Internet Archive

Works by or about Walter Matthews

at the National Portrait Gallery, London

Portraits of Walter Robert Matthews