During the 1990s she collaborated with Roman Catholic author and theologian Margaret Hebblethwaite, and they co-authored a book exploring Christian feminism from two different traditions.
[6] Storkey was also a close colleague of the biblical scholar Catherine Clark Kroeger, whose obituary she wrote in July 2011.
[7] After many years teaching and writing with the Open University and presenting radio and television documentaries on gender, race, and ethnicity with colleague Stuart Hall,[8] Storkey succeeded John Stott as Executive Director of the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity (LICC)[9] in 1991, a post she held until 1999.
Storkey has served on many other boards and councils, including the Crown Nominations Commission, the environmental agency A Rocha, the global advocacy group Micah Challenge, and as Vice President of the University of Gloucestershire.
From February 2009 to September 2012 she was Director of Education and Training for Church of England evangelists, [17] in conjunction with York St John University.
[30] Storkey has lectured across the world, including in Haiti, India, Nepal, Turkey and Ethiopia, and is a prominent feminist evangelical.
She has visited many African countries and been involved in advocacy, with strong links to Heal Africa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
[34] The second edition, published by IVP Academic in the US in 2018, won the Christianity Today Book of the Year Award 2019, for Politics and Public Life.
[13] In April 2016 she received the Abraham Kuyper Prize from Princeton Theological Seminary, in recognition of her work as a scholar, writer and journalist.
Amos James m. Helen Shelley 1994, Matthew Emmanuel Milton (1974) m. Annie Watson 1999, Caleb Alexander Titus (1977).