Canon David Banting and Mrs Catherine Banting
write:
THE Revd Keith Aitken Astley Weston, who died on 5 February,
aged 86, was an international Bible expositor, who will be
remembered for his pivotal 21 years as Rector of St Ebbe's, Oxford,
in a long and influential ministry lasting very nearly 60
years.
Keith came to a personal faith while at Merchant Taylors' School
in Northwood. His undying love and commitment was to preach Christ
and the gospel of grace. He was warmly at ease with all ages,
children, students, parishioners, and, through the Keswick
Convention, with people of many nationalities, all of whom valued
his careful and lively Bible teaching.
His ministry was far-reaching and distinguished: assistant
curate in Weston-super-Mare and Cheltenham, incumbent in Clevedon
(1959-64) and Norwich (1985-1991); trustee of the Universities and
Colleges Christian Fellowship, and chairman in its diamond-jubilee
year of 1988; on the council of the Keswick Convention, and its
chairman (1994-97); Rural Dean of Oxford (1971-76); member of the
General Synod for ten years, and one of its panel of chairs in the
1980s; and Director of Ordinands and Post-Ordination Training for
Norwich diocese 1985-91 (under his old friend Bishop Maurice Wood).
But it was St Ebbe's that was the focus of his influence.
Bishop Tom Wright was nurtured as a student and OICCU president
by Keith, who trusted him, while still an ordinand at Wycliffe
Hall, to take a parish weekend. Bishop Keith Sinclair was a lay
assistant with Keith for a year after graduation, and remembers
learning much around the legendary kitchen table at the
Rectory.
At a thanksgiving service on 22 February in Thame Parish Church,
Dr Wright preached on Romans 8 at Keith's request; Bishop Sinclair
testified to his early grounding in faith and ministry under
Keith's leadership; and the Bishop of Dorchester, Colin Fletcher, a
student at St Ebbe's in the Weston days, led the prayers.
Bob Key, former director of CPAS, and now Dean of Jersey, spoke
for the succession of curates whom Keith trained. He described
Keith as "one of the greatest Bible expositors of his generation,
generously sharing insights and opportunities with his
trainees".
The veteran evangelist Michael Green, former Vicar of St
Aldate's, Oxford, ran joint courses with Keith for the numerous
potential ordinands from their churches at opposite ends of
Pembroke Street. He recalls Keith as "a towering figure in Oxford
life". Philip Hacking, a fellow-member of the Keswick Council,
acknowledged that Keith embraced interdenominational evangelicalism
very happily, but brought "his own distinctive Anglican flavour to
it".
Canon Keith Weston embodied Evangelical Anglicanism at its best.
He believed that "unvarnished Anglicanism is Evangelical
Anglicanism"; but there was no partisanship in that quiet
conviction.
He was deeply committed to the Church of England, as a
pastor-teacher of the highest order. He loved his parish and his
people, and was at pains not to miss a Sunday at his beloved St
Ebbe's. The scriptures were authoritative and central, and the
liturgy was honoured, not for its own sake but as the vehicle for
public worship that was reverent and real. His pastoral letters
were meticulous and memorable for their care, and his flowing
handwriting.
Keith married Margaret Reed in 1954, and together they forged an
extraordinary partnership in love, hospitality, and ministry. It
was always Keith-and-Margaret, and everyone remembers the good
fellowship and counsel round that kitchen table. Their home and
family life, with four children, gave ample scope for his impish
sense of humour, and his love of music, sport, and the outdoors.
Margaret survives him.
He was last seen by many of his Oxford friends in October 2012,
at the installation of his son-in-law as executive leader of the
Church Mission Society.
Humble to the end, Keith left instructions for any thanksgiving
service to be "less of Keith, more of Christ".