Education
Born in Birmingham in 1909, Evans attended King Edward"s School, renowned for its track record of producing theologians and Christian leaders, such as Edward Benson, once Archbishop of Canterbury.
Born in Birmingham in 1909, Evans attended King Edward"s School, renowned for its track record of producing theologians and Christian leaders, such as Edward Benson, once Archbishop of Canterbury.
He also served as lecturer in Theology at Corpus Christi College at Oxford University from 1948 to 1958 and was later made an Emeritus Fellow. After gaining a scholarship at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, he became influenced by Sir Edwyn Clement Hoskyns who encouraged emphasis on literary forms used in the Bible, including songs, proverbs and stories. He later spent a year being taught by Michael Ramsey, at Lincoln Theological College before serving four years in parochial ministry in Southampton.
The institute struggled during World World War II, with a reduction of pupil intakes, as well as interference of bombers in the nearby airspace.
After six years at the college, he was offered a role by the Bishop of Lincoln at a teacher-training college in the chaplaincy, a role which he would fill for a term of four years. In 1948, he was elected as both a fellow and tutor of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, where he would soon become renowned for his tutoring in teachings of the New Testament beside the likes of J. R. Porter and Dennis Nineham.
On February 16, 1956, he spoke at the Oxford Socratic Club along with philosopher Basil Mitchell on "Mythology in the New Testament."
After a decade at Corpus, he was appointed to Lightfoot Professorship at Durham, but upon failing to settle in the city, he moved back south in 1962.
Foreign 15 years he taught as professor of New Testament studies at King"s College London before retiring in 1977 to the village of Cuddesdon, Oxfordshire.
Evans returned to the college in Lincoln in 1938 as a member of the teaching staff