Commonly understood as the first theologian of the Christian faith, Paul set forth the categories by which we describe our relationship with Christ.
At Bethlehem College and Seminary, Meyer will gives oversight in the area of New Testament by teaching and writing for the seminary in his areas of specialization: Paul\'s epistles and theology, the Law and the Ne.
Schreiner at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY. in New Testament under Thomas R.
D.
Before this, he served as the pastor of Orville Baptist Church in Orville, KY, while completing his Ph.
Meyer also taught New Testament for the Spring 2010 semester at the Evangelical Theological College in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Prior to coming to Bethlehem, Meyer was the Dean of Chapel and Assistant Professor of New Testament and Greek at Louisiana College in Pineville, LA from 2006-2009.
He has authored a book on the difference in Paul between the old Covenant and the new covenant, entitled The End of the Law: Mosaic Covenant in Pauline Theology (B & H Academic, 2009), contributed the chapter on the prison epistles in The Cradle, the Cross, and the Crown: An Introduction to the New Testament (B & H Academic, 2009), and is presently writing a biblical and practical Theology of preaching (Crossway).
Meyer is an Associate Professor of New Testament at Bethlehem College and Seminary in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
About the Author: Jason C.
Book seven of the New American Commentary Studies in Bible & Theology series, an extension of the long-respected New American Commentary.
Did he understand the new Covenant Jesus announced at the Last Supper primarily as a replacement of the old Mosaic Covenant God made with Israel, or as a renewal and completion of the old? Jason Meyer surveys the various differences that have been argued between the two covenants in The End of the Law, carefully and inductively perfoming a semantic, grammatical, and contextual analysis of all the Pauline texts dealing with Covenant concepts.
Commonly understood as the first theologian of the Christian faith, Paul set forth the categories by which we describe our relationship with Christ