Dr. Jeffrey J. Niehaus

Dr. Jeffrey J. Niehaus is Senior Professor of Old Testament at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in South Hamilton, Massachusetts.

Dr. Niehaus attended Yale University where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and graduated magna cum laude with the Bachelor of Arts degree. He subsequently attended Harvard University on a full graduate fellowship and received the A.M. and Ph.D. degrees. In the course of his doctoral studies at Harvard, Dr. Niehaus came to a saving faith in Jesus Christ. Receiving a clear call to further study for ministry, he attended Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary where he earned the Master of Divinity degree.

Before teaching at Gordon-Conwell in 1982, Dr. Niehaus conducted research at the University of Liverpool in England in the area of Old Testament and the ancient Near East.

Dr. Niehaus has published commentaries on Obadiah and Amos for the Baker Book House three-volume commentary on the minor prophets, as well as a volume in the area of biblical theology, God at Sinai (Zondervan).

Dr. Niehaus is an ordained independent Baptist minister. He and his wife Maggi reside in Danvers, Massachusetts, with their two sons, Paul and John.

0 Video results for: Jeffrey Niehaus
0 Article results for: Jeffrey Niehaus
5 Q&A results for: Jeffrey Niehaus

Display Q&A results only Displaying page 1 of 2
Display results per page

Go to page

The Ethics of Holy War

How should Christians interpret Old Testament passages describing God's commands for Israel to engage in holy war?

Topics: Historical BooksEthics

Conditionality in Divine Covenants

Are divine covenants conditional, with requirements for loyalty?

Topics: ProphetsPentateuch

New Covenant and OT Covenants

How is the new covenant similar to and different from the covenants of the Old Testament?

Topics: Prophets

0 Audio results for: Jeffrey Niehaus

Advanced Search

Search Term Type
any of these words
all of these words
exact phrase
Resource types
video
articles
Q&A
audio
Results should display:
full details
author names only

Search Tips

Attach an asterisk (*) to the end of a word as a wildcard.

Attach a tilde (~) to the front of a word to omit results containing that word.

More search tips