Daniel H Fletcher
I am associate professor of New Testament in the Turner School of Theology at Amridge University where I teach both undergraduate and graduate courses in NT text, Critical Intro to the NT, Research Methods of NT Criticism, Biblical Interpretation, Hermeneutics, and Intertestamental History. I have also taught at Lipscomb University, Eastern University, and Westminster Theological Seminary.
I earned my PhD at Westminster Theological Seminary in Biblical Hermeneutics and Interpretation. I attended Lipscomb University where I earned a BA (Bible), MA (Bible), and MDiv. I also have an AS in Respiratory Therapy from Florida Community College of Jacksonville (now Florida State College at Jacksonville). I live near Philadelphia, PA with my wife and three children.
Phone: 484.494.1275
I earned my PhD at Westminster Theological Seminary in Biblical Hermeneutics and Interpretation. I attended Lipscomb University where I earned a BA (Bible), MA (Bible), and MDiv. I also have an AS in Respiratory Therapy from Florida Community College of Jacksonville (now Florida State College at Jacksonville). I live near Philadelphia, PA with my wife and three children.
Phone: 484.494.1275
less
InterestsView All (6)
Uploads
Publications
“messianic,” anticipating God’s promised Messiah, the issue is how
Christians should understand the other 135 psalms of the Hebrew Psalter.
Psalms of Christ applies the New Testament conviction that the whole book of Psalms speaks prophetically about Christ to select “non-messianic” psalms. Following the New Testament as the guide for how to read the Old in light of the gospel, Psalms of Christ proposes fresh readings of so-called non-messianic psalms by illustrating their christological character, and exploring how they testify to the gospel by evoking Jesus’s person, purpose, and passion.
In Hebrew and Beyond: Essays in Honor of Dr. Rodney E. Cloud. Edited by David Musgrave. Montgomery, AL: Amridge University Press, 2017.
Unpublished Works
Drafts
“messianic,” anticipating God’s promised Messiah, the issue is how
Christians should understand the other 135 psalms of the Hebrew Psalter.
Psalms of Christ applies the New Testament conviction that the whole book of Psalms speaks prophetically about Christ to select “non-messianic” psalms. Following the New Testament as the guide for how to read the Old in light of the gospel, Psalms of Christ proposes fresh readings of so-called non-messianic psalms by illustrating their christological character, and exploring how they testify to the gospel by evoking Jesus’s person, purpose, and passion.
In Hebrew and Beyond: Essays in Honor of Dr. Rodney E. Cloud. Edited by David Musgrave. Montgomery, AL: Amridge University Press, 2017.