Michael Barrett (theologian)

Michael Paul Vernon Barrett (born September 18, 1949) is Academic Dean and Professor of Old Testament at Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary and was formerly president of Geneva Reformed Seminary and an associate minister of Faith Free Presbyterian Church, Greenville, South Carolina, a congregation of the Free Presbyterian Church of North America.

Michael Barrett, 2012

Converted to Christianity as a child, Barrett was called to the Christian ministry early in his college career at Bob Jones University. He earned his doctorate in Old Testament Text at BJU with a special focus on Semitic languages.[1] For almost thirty years, he was professor of Ancient Languages and Old Testament Theology and Interpretation at BJU.[2]

Barrett assumed the presidency of Geneva Reformed Seminar in the fall of 2000. In the 2009 GRS bulletin, he emphasized his conviction that the seminary connect "head and heart—the intellect and devotion" and that it have an "unapologetic and uncompromising commitment to a Reformed theology that is Christ-centered, biblical, evangelistic, and separatist."[3]

Formerly a member of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod, Barrett helped to establish the Free Presbyterian Church in the United States during the late 1970s and 1980s and served for many years under the Rev. Dr. Alan Cairns in the Greenville assembly.[4] He is a member of the Evangelical Theological Society and the author of a half dozen books and numerous articles in both professional and popular religious journals.

In 2002, the conservative Baptist Bulletin recommended Barrett's Beginning at Moses to counter what it believed to be a common ignorance of Christ's presence in the Old Testament.[5] Of Barrett's Love Divine and Unfailing, Joel Beeke of Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary has written that it "is a clear, honest, panoramic treatment of the book of Hosea....a masterpiece in expounding God’s loving and gracious covenant [and] a sheer delight to read."[6] In 2009 R. Albert Mohler, Jr. listed the book as "one of the ten books every preacher should read this year."[7]

Barrett and his wife, Sandra, have two sons and five grandchildren. He is an avid hunter.[8]

Sources

  1. His dissertation concerned the translation techniques and philosophies of the Septuagint.
  2. Puritan Reformed Seminary website Archived 2014-10-22 at the Wayback Machine. On April 8, 2012, Barrett presented the reasons for his acceptance of his current post in a sermon available on SermonAudio.com, links to which are blocked by Wikipedia.
  3. GRS bulletin Archived 2009-07-31 at the Wayback Machine. "Knowledge without zeal is always dangerous; zeal without knowledge is potentially destructive."
  4. History of Faith Free Presbyterian Church.
  5. Baptist Bulletin (December 2002)
  6. Beeke review Archived 2011-07-15 at the Wayback Machine
  7. R. Albert Mohler, Jr., "The 2009 Preaching Survey of the Year's Best Books for Preachers," Preaching (March-April 2009), 14ff.
  8. Puritan Reformed Seminary website Archived 2014-10-22 at the Wayback Machine.

Books

  • Beginning at Moses: A Guide to Finding Christ in the Old Testament (Ambassador-Emerald International, 1999)
  • Complete in Him: A Guide to Understanding and Enjoying the Gospel (Ambassador-Emerald International, 2000)
  • God’s Unfailing Purpose: The Message of Daniel (Ambassador-Emerald International (2003)
  • The Beauty of Holiness: A Guide to Biblical Worship (Ambassador-Emerald International, 2006)
  • Love Divine and Unfailing: The Gospel According to Hosea (P & R Publishing, 2008)
  • The Hebrew Handbook (BJU Press, 4th ed., 1994)
gollark: Possibly somewhat.
gollark: In what time?
gollark: You said, yes.
gollark: Your knowledge of modern computer things isn't too useful unless you are in a time with microcomputers. You can't make those without large scale integration of semiconductors, which I'm pretty sure you know very little about.
gollark: You need to teach everyone everything, you need to know a lot of earlier stuff you probably *don't* about how your shiny new knowledge of electromagnetism and whatever were derived, and you need to make people actually able to use it, which is really hard.
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