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Pages in category "New Testament scholars" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 349 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Richard Bevan Hays (born May 4, 1948) is an American New Testament scholar and George Washington Ivey Professor Emeritus of New Testament Duke Divinity School in Durham, North Carolina. He is an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church .
William Hendriksen (18 November 1900 – 12 January 1982) was a New Testament scholar and writer of Bible commentaries. He was born in Tiel, Gelderland, but his family moved to Kalamazoo, Michigan in 1911.
Jakob van Bruggen (born 23 September 1936) is a Dutch New Testament scholar. He served as Professor of New Testament at the Theological University of the Reformed Churches in Kampen from 1967 to 2001.
Moessner, D. P. (2020). The problem of the continuity of Acts with Luke, the Church's reception of two separated volumes, and the construction of Luke's theology. In T. Nicklas, K.-W. Niebuhr, & M. Seleznev (Eds.), History and theology in the Gospels: Seventh International East-West Symposium of New Testament Scholars, Moscow, 2016 (pp. 147–167).
He then took a position teaching New Testament at Heidelberg and was called, in 1954, to the University of Zurich, where he was made full professor in 1956. In 1960 he was called to be Professor of New Testament at the University of Göttingen , where he remained until his retirement in 1978.
Many other scholars, such as Bart D. Ehrman and Stephen L. Harris, date some New Testament texts much later than this; [6] [7] [8] Richard Pervo dated Luke–Acts to c. 115 AD, [9] and David Trobisch places Acts in the mid-to-late second century, contemporaneous with the publication of the first New Testament canon. [10]
Daniel Baird Wallace (born June 5, 1952) is an American professor of New Testament Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary.He is also the founder and executive director of the Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts, the purpose of which is digitizing all known Greek manuscripts of the New Testament via digital photographs.