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Ralph Philip Martin (4 August 1925 – 25 February 2013 [1]) was a British New Testament scholar. Martin was born in Anfield , Liverpool, England and was educated at the Liverpool Collegiate School , the University of Manchester and King's College London . [ 2 ]
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]
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 ...
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
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Joel B. Green (born May 7, 1956) is an American New Testament scholar, theologian, author, Associate Dean of the Center for Advanced Theological Study, and Professor of New Testament Interpretation at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California. Green is a prolific author who has written on a diverse range of topics related to both New ...
George Raymond Beasley-Murray (October 10, 1916 – 23 February 2000) was an evangelical Christian and prominent Baptist scholar, Principal of Spurgeon's College, London, and later Professor of New Testament Interpretation at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.
F.F. Bruce was born in Elgin, Moray, Scotland, in 1910.His father, Peter Fyvie Bruce, was an itinerant evangelist for the Plymouth Brethren. [5] He encouraged his son to think for himself and accept as a biblical doctrine only what he could see for himself in the Bible.