Divinity of Christ in the New Testament

  • Year 1916
  • Type Book
  • Genre apologetics
  • Tradition Reformed
  • Original language English

A. T. Robertson's study emerged from the theological controversies of the early twentieth century, when liberal Protestant scholarship increasingly questioned traditional Christological claims. Writing as one of the foremost New Testament scholars of his generation and a professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Robertson sought to defend orthodox belief in Christ's divinity through rigorous exegetical analysis rather than merely systematic or dogmatic assertion.

Robertson methodically examines the New Testament evidence for Christ's divine nature, drawing on his expertise in Greek grammar and textual criticism to analyze key passages across the Gospels, Paul's letters, Hebrews, and other apostolic writings. He demonstrates how the earliest Christian communities understood and expressed Christ's divinity through titles like "Son of God" and "Lord," through descriptions of divine attributes and prerogatives, and through worship practices that placed Jesus alongside the Father. Robertson argues that the New Testament consistently presents Christ not as a merely human teacher later divinized by the church, but as one who possessed divine nature from the beginning of his earthly ministry. His linguistic expertise allows him to address scholarly objections about ambiguous Greek constructions and to show how grammatical analysis supports traditional interpretations.

The work has endured as a model of conservative biblical scholarship that engages seriously with critical methodology while defending orthodox conclusions. Robertson's combination of technical expertise and clear exposition has made this study valuable for pastors, theological students, and apologists seeking to ground Christological convictions in careful exegesis rather than tradition alone. Seminary students studying Christology will find Robertson's grammatical insights particularly helpful, though readers without some knowledge of New Testament Greek may struggle with his more technical discussions.

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