Further Interaction with Bruce Waltke: Introduction Part 3

This is the third of several posts continuing the exchange between Bruce Waltke and me, posted earlier on this site, that first appeared in the Westminster Theological Journal. Posted here is Waltke’s follow-up to that exchange (PDF), which has already appeared in the latest issue of WTJ (and is also posted here with permission.)
Read Part [...]

Further Interaction with Bruce Waltke: Introduction Part 2

This is the second of several posts continuing the exchange between Bruce Waltke and me, posted earlier on this site, that first appeared in the Westminster Theological Journal. Posted here is Waltke’s follow-up to that exchange (PDF), which has already appeared in the latest issue of WTJ (and is also posted here with permission.)
Read Part [...]

Further Interaction with Bruce Waltke: Introduction Part 1

In this and several subsequent posts, I intend to continue the exchange between Bruce Waltke and me, posted earlier on this site, that first appeared in the Westminster Theological Journal. Posted here is Waltke’s follow-up to that exchange (PDF), which has already appeared in the latest issue of WTJ (and is also posted here with [...]

Bruce Waltke and Peter Enns on Inspiration and Incarnation

Here is an exchange between Bruce Waltke and me that appeared in the most recent issue of the Westminster Theological Journal. The exchange is reproduced here with permission of the editor. In WTJ there is also a surrejoinder by Waltke (a response to my response). It is not included here, in part to respect the [...]

Interview with Ken Schenck: Part 4

I respond to Ken Schenck’s review of Inspiration and Incarnation.

Harvie Conn and Reformed Theology

As I look back on my student years at Westminster Theological Seminary (1985-89), especially as the years pass, I am beginning to count it more and more of a privilege to have been at Westminster and under Harvie Conn’s influence. Truth be told, I left Westminster for Harvard more or less focused on learning as [...]

Some Reflections on I&I and the Reformed Tradition – Part Two

The second part of my “Reflections on I&I” (see intro in post immediately below) is now posted.
It and all the future installments of this essay will be linked from the I&I page on this site, or click the title below to go directly to part:
The Authority of Scripture is a Function of Its Divine Origin, [...]

Some Reflections on I&I and the Reformed Tradition

As some, perhaps many, of you are aware, I was asked by the faculty of Westminster Theological Seminary to produce a document clarifying some of my thinking in Inspiration and Incarnation: Evangelicals and the Problem of the Old Testament (I&I). This request was made as part of a motion, eventually passed by the faculty, in [...]

Reflections on Al Groves III

I promised three reflections, one personal, another on Al as a biblical scholar, and now a third on Al as a Biblical Theologian.
I am finding that these three categories simply cannot be held apart for long. It was Al the person and biblical scholar that drove him to Biblical Theological reflections and on the nature [...]

Reflections on Al Groves II

A few days ago I offered some personal reflections on Al, and now I’d like to offer some further reflections on the academic side of things.
One thing worth mentioning is that it is very artificial for me to separate the two, because so many of our interactions involved some type of academic issue, whether [...]