
The Centre for Theology, Law, & Culture

An overview.
About
The Centre for Theology, Law, and Culture is an academic institute dedicated to enriching contemporary intellectual and cultural life by a rigorous engagement with Theology and related academic disciplines.
Based at Pusey House, the Centre draws upon Oxford’s longstanding and exceptional scholarship in Law and the Humanities, and in particular upon the Catholic tradition as received in the Church of England. The Centre hosts colloquia, lectures, and seminars, and supports scholars and scholarship in the pursuit of truth within the academy, and for the renewal of the Church within a pluralistic civic society.
The work of the Centre has recently been much extended by the generous donation of Mr Marek Matraszek.
Donations can be made online here.
The Centre's Director is Dr Jonathan Price, the Matraszek Fellow of Pusey House & St Cross College, University of Oxford.
Please see the 'Lectures' and 'Conferences' tabs on this website's banner to see the full range of our upcoming events, or consult our termcard.

Events
The Centre works within Pusey House to help organise academic events which bring together academics, students, clergy, public servants, and the general public.
Upcoming events
Natural Law & War
Thursday, 18 June 2026
In The Law of War and Peace (1625), Hugo Grotius revives two ancient questions: ‘What is war? What is law?’
The Dutch theologian-jurist thereby commences modern European discussions about just war and just peace, both of which were now meant to be conducted according to ‘law’.
Four hundred years later, war is still with us and peace seems just as difficult to make as it ever was. Law remains a contested domain, especially between jurisdictions and nations. It is unclear whether war is being waged or peace is being made according to any law. The questions are still with us. But we also enjoy the benefit of a welldeveloped tradition of natural law.
What can doctrines of natural law tell us about waging war and about peace-making? Are ancient sources that may have been unknown to Grotius’s age helpful in answering the questions? Do the ‘laws of nature’ that science has since uncovered help us? Can the theology, which undergirded both Grotius’s writings and the modern natural rights and human rights doctrines, help in answering these questions?
Join the Centre for Theology, Law, and Culture in Oxford for a two-day international conference, held in partnership with the Chase Center at Ohio State University, the School of Civic Leadership at the University of Texas at Austin, and the Canterbury Institute, Oxford.
More details available on the conference page.
Past events
Receiving Nicaea
12 November 2025
On the 12th and 13th November, Pusey House will host 'Receiving Nicaea', a theological conference marking the 1700th anniversary of the Church Catholic's First Œcumenical Council. Click the link below for more information, and to book your ticket while places remain!
The Meaning of Money
5 November 2025
In Michaelmas 2025, we are looking forward to hosting a conference on the 5th and 6th November considering 'The Meaning of Money'. We will explore what money might be, and what it might mean, from a variety of Christian, philosophical and ethical perspectives.
Follow this link to learn more about our exciting line-up of speakers, as well as to book tickets to attend and participate.
Liberty and Natural Law
15 May 2024
in cooperation with the Revue de Philosophie du Droit.
This was a one-day Colloquium aimed at graduate students and researchers in Law, Philosophy and Theology, considering the principle of liberty from the perspective of natural law theory. Papers were subsequently published in the Revue de Philosophie du Droit (n° 2/2024). The colloquium was hosted by the Centre for Theology, Law and Culture at Pusey House, and co-sponsored by the Oxford Faculty of Law and the Canterbury Institute.
Speakers included: Clemente Recabarren (St John’s), Sébastien Neuville (Toulouse), Henri Torrione (Fribourg), Jonathan Price (Pusey House & St Cross), Nathan Helms (Oriel), Dominic Burbidge (Regent’s Park), Arnaud de Solminihac (Paris II Panthéon-Assas), Conor Casey (Surrey).
For information about Recollection lectures accompanying the colloquia, click here.
Lectures
The Centre works with the Principal and Chapter to co-ordinate the House's flagship the Recollection Lecture series: recalling the major themes and thinkers of Christian history.
Recollection lectures take place in the Ursell Room at Pusey House at 4pm generally (unless noted otherwise). Tea and coffee is served in the Hood Room between 3.15 and 3.45pm.
You can see our lectures, given by scholars including John Finnis and Wim Decock, on our YouTube channel. Follow us to see upcoming series on early modern theology and law, the soul, and moral and political theology, as well as the co-organised Theological Conference on the theme of the work of the Holy Spirit.
Support and Contact
Please consider sponsoring one of our scholars or an upcoming colloquium or lecture series or book discussion group. It is only through the generous support of donors like you that the next generation of Oxford students, as well as interested scholars and policy-makers, might receive ancient wisdom in a setting of Christian life and worship. Donations can be made here.
Alternatively, donations can made by bank transfer with the following details:
Pusey House Chapel
Barclays Bank
Sort code: 20-65-18
Account no.: 10748455
Reference: Pusey Centre
For enquiries about the Centre, please contact Dr Jonathan Price at: jonathan.price@stx.ox.ac.uk
Pusey House, St Giles', Oxford, OX1 3LZ

Who we are
The centre's current scholars.

Dr Jonathan Price
Research:
Theological origins of modernity; philosophical anthropology; virtue ethics; philosophy of Private Law.

Dr Ryan Blank
Research:
Modern British History, Ecclesiastical History, History of Intimacies, History of Masculinities.

Dr Clinton Collister
Research:
Theology and Literature; Moral Theology; Systematic Theology.

Miss Isabelle Heinemann
Research:
Intellectual History; the high middle ages; Dante Alighieri.

Mr Phillip Quinn
Research:
philosophical theology (especially in connection with moral theology); analytic theology; late antique philosophy and theology, patristic philosophy

Dr William Simpson
Research:
Philosophy of nature, metaphysics of physics, history and philosophy of science.

The Revd Professor Nigel Biggar CBE
Research:
Please follow this link to Prof Biggar's university profile.

Dr Mehmet Ciftci
Research:
Political theology; the intersection of liturgy and ethics; constitutionalism in the Commonwealth realms.

Dr Euan Grant
Research:
Contemporary interpretation of scholastic theology; the theology of human nature.

Prof Agnieszka Nogal
Research:
Human rights; natural rights; the organic metaphor of "political body"; biopolitics.

Dr John Ritzema
Research:
Visionary experience and cult in the Hebrew Bible; the Bible and Humanities; Christian theology and the British Constitution.

Miss Matti Veldhuis
Research:
Plato and the will, Platonic metaphysics, Persianate Neoplatonism.






