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Benjamin L. Gladd
Benjamin L. Gladd is an American New Testament scholar of the late twentieth and early twenty first century, working within the broadly Reformed evangelical tradition.
He has made his primary contribution through careful study of the use of the Old Testament in the New, with particular attention to intertextuality, typology, and the theological logic of apostolic interpretation. Gladd has served the church through teaching and writing that bridges academic research and pastoral formation, and he has played a significant role in shaping contemporary discussion on how Scripture interprets Scripture. His work often combines close textual analysis with a concern for the coherence of biblical theology.
What continues to commend Gladd’s writing is its clarity and disciplined focus. He avoids speculative readings and handles complex exegetical questions with restraint and patience. His commitment to the authority of Scripture, together with his concern for theological synthesis, makes his work especially valuable for pastors who want help understanding how individual texts function within the wider redemptive story.
Notable works include Hidden but Now Revealed, Making All Things New, and his contribution to the Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament on Ephesians.
Theological Perspective: Reformed
Benjamin L. Gladd
Benjamin L. Gladd is an American New Testament scholar of the late twentieth and early twenty first century, working within the broadly Reformed evangelical tradition.
He has made his primary contribution through careful study of the use of the Old Testament in the New, with particular attention to intertextuality, typology, and the theological logic of apostolic interpretation. Gladd has served the church through teaching and writing that bridges academic research and pastoral formation, and he has played a significant role in shaping contemporary discussion on how Scripture interprets Scripture. His work often combines close textual analysis with a concern for the coherence of biblical theology.
What continues to commend Gladd’s writing is its clarity and disciplined focus. He avoids speculative readings and handles complex exegetical questions with restraint and patience. His commitment to the authority of Scripture, together with his concern for theological synthesis, makes his work especially valuable for pastors who want help understanding how individual texts function within the wider redemptive story.
Notable works include Hidden but Now Revealed, Making All Things New, and his contribution to the Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament on Ephesians.
Theological Perspective: Reformed