Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Andreas J. Köstenberger

American theologian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Andreas Johannes Köstenberger (born November 2, 1957) is an Austrian-American Biblical scholar, who was Research Professor at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.[1][2] Until 2018, he was Senior Research Professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary (SEBTS) in Wake Forest, North Carolina. Kostenberger now teaches in an adjunct position at BJU Seminary in Greenville, SC.[3] His primary research interests are the Gospel of John, biblical theology, and hermeneutics.

Quick facts Born, Nationality ...
Remove ads

Life

Summarize
Perspective

Köstenberger was born on November 2, 1957, in Vienna, Austria, where he was raised in the Roman Catholic Church. As a young man, Köstenberger converted to Evangelicalism.[4]

At the age of twenty-seven, Köstenberger left Austria for the United States to pursue theological studies at Columbia Bible College and Graduate School of Missions. In 1990 Köstenberger began doctoral studies at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School under D. A. Carson, submitting his dissertation on the mission motif in the Gospel of John in 1993.[5]

Köstenberger then taught at Briercrest Bible College for two years, returned to Trinity for a one-year teaching position to cover for D. A. Carson while he was on sabbatical (during which time, in 1996, Köstenberger received an "Award for Scholarly Productivity" from Trinity), and then took a teaching position at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary (SEBTS) in 1996, where he was Senior Research Professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology.[6]

He was for 22 years editor of the Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society[7] and founder of Biblical Foundations, an organization that "exists to strengthen the biblical foundations of the family, the church, and society."[8]

Remove ads

Plagiarism

In 2017, Köstenberger's commentary on John in the Baker Exegetical Commentary was withdrawn from publication when the author reported "a series of inadvertently unattributed references."[9] Several biblical scholars called it plagiarism.[10] Subsequently, Zondervan publishers also retracted their Illustrated Bible Commentary, Volume 2: New Testament series.[11] The unattributed references were from The Gospel According to John, by D. A. Carson, who was Köstenberger's doctoral advisor.[12]

Remove ads

Notes

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads