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Martin wrote commentaries on Mark, Romans, Philippians, and James. In 1992, a Festschrift was published in his honour, Worship, Theology and Ministry in the Early Church: Essays in Honor of Ralph P. Martin, which included contributions from James Dunn, E. Earle Ellis, Donald Guthrie, I. Howard Marshall, and Leon Morris.
Ralph P. Martin (1925–2013), English academic and New Testament scholar; David Ralph Martin (1935–2007), English television and film writer; Rafe Martin (born 1946), American writer of children's literature for North Atlantic Books; Ralph C. Martin (born 1942), American Catholic academic and writer since 1960s
Martin was raised Catholic, but having fallen away from religion as a youth, he was reconverted to Catholicism by a Cursillo retreat he attended as a college student. [1] [2] Martin and Stephen B. Clark, who would also become a leader in the charismatic renewal, worked for the National Secretariat of the Cursillo from 1965 to 1970. [3]
B. Joyce Baldwin; Shimon Bar-Efrat; Albert Barnes (theologian) Paul Barnett (bishop) C. K. Barrett; Jouette Bassler; George Beasley-Murray; Judah Behak; Aaron ben Isaac of Rechnitz
Ralph Martin and Stephen Clark were formerly involved in the Cursillo movement office in Lansing, Michigan, and Jim Cavnar and Gerry Rauch were involved in Charismatic renewal work at the University of Notre Dame [1]: p.80 and had come to carry out evangelism in Ann Arbor, Michigan, after their encounter with the Catholic Charismatic movement ...
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Ralph Martin writing in the Dictionary of Paul and his Letters, suggests reconciliation is at the center of Pauline theology. [4] Stanley Porter writing in the same volume suggests a conceptual link between the reconciliation Greek word group katallage (or katallasso) and the Hebrew word shalom (שָׁלוֹם), generally translated as 'peace.' [5]
Its faculty has included New Testament scholars Donald Guthrie, R. T. France, Ralph P. Martin [9] and Max Turner as well as Derek Tidball, a practical theologian and sociologist of religion. LST also had strong connections with the Anglican theologian John Stott, an important supporter and former council member of the college. [10]