Everything about John Murray Theologian totally explained
John Murray (
October 14,
1898 –
May 8,
1975) was a
Scottish-born
Reformed theologian who taught at
Princeton Seminary and then left to help found
Westminster Theological Seminary, where he taught for many years.
Life
Murray was born in the croft of Badbea, near
Bonar Bridge, in
Sutherland county,
Scotland. Following service in the British Army in the
First World War (during which he lost an eye) he studied at the
University of Glasgow. Following his acceptance as a theological student of the
Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland he pursued further studies at Princeton Seminary under
J. Gresham Machen and
Geerhardus Vos. He taught at Princeton for a year and then lectured in
systematic theology at Westminster Theological Seminary to generations of students from
1930 to
1966, and was an early trustee of the
Banner of Truth Trust. Besides the material in the four-volume
Collected Writings, his primary published works are a commentary on the
Epistle to the Romans (previously included in the
New International Commentary on the New Testament series but now superseded by
Douglas J. Moo's commentary),
Redemption Accomplished and Applied,
Principles of Conduct,
The Imputation of Adam's Sin,
Baptism, and
Divorce.
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