Mark is a former medical doctor who then pioneered work amongst university students with the Navigators in Edinburgh from 1998 to 2004.

In 2021 Mark and his wife Jenny moved from St Andrews where Mark had been senior pastor in a new church (Cornerstone St Andrews). They relocated to the Scottish Highlands where Mark has been teaching at Highland Theological College as well as directing the ongoing work of Chalmers Institute in a variety of theological education and formation initiatives. The heart of life and ministry for Mark and Jenny is the hospitality of an open home as a reflection of the Gospel of grace. 

In 2007 he completed an MA in Exegetical Theology at Covenant Seminary in St Louis, and in 2011 gained a PhD in Biblical Studies from St Andrews University on the topic of discipleship and maturity in Ephesians. In 2023 Mark co-edited a book with Mark Meynell, Not So with You: Power and Leadership for the Church, reflecting a long-held concern for healthy biblical leadership.

He loves the mountains of Scotland and occasionally swinging a golf club. He’s also an enthusiastic cook and occasional scuba diver.

  • PhD in Biblical Studies - University of St Andrews “Transformation and Growth: The Davidic Temple Builder in Ephesians” 2011

  • MA in Exegetical Theology -Covenant Theological Seminary, St Louis, Missouri. 2007 

  • MRCGP (Member of the Royal College of General Practitioners) 1996

  • MBChB, Glasgow University, 1991

Publications

Reviews:

  • On Christian Teaching: Practicing Faith in the Classroom by David Smith. (Scottish Bulletin of Evangelical Theology. 2019; 37/1: 110-111

  • Men and Women in Christ: Fresh Light from the Biblical Texts by Andrew Bartlett. (Scottish Bulletin of Evangelical Theology. 2020; 38/1:94)

  • Preaching Hope in Darkness: Help for Pastors in Addressing Suicide from the Pulpit by Scott M. Gibson & Karen E. Mason: (Scottish Bulletin of Evangelical Theology. 2021; 39/1:81)

  • Can we Trust the Gospels? by Peter J. Williams. (Scottish Bulletin of Evangelical Theology. 2021; 39/2: 175

  • Essay contribution to Henry Center Sapientia Symposium on Jonathan Haidt’s “The Righteous Mind”: Essay title “Towards an Embodied Moral Theology”. https://henrycenter.tiu.edu/2021/04/toward-an-embodied-moral-theology/

  • Leadership & Theology for Ministry & Mission

  • Christian Doctrine and Contemporary Culture - Leadership, Discipleship and Holiness in Contemporary Culture

  • Church Leadership

  • New Testament, especially Pauline studies and specifically Ephesians

  • Biblical theology

  • Worldview and culture

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