
Stephen G. Dempster
Author of Dominion and Dynasty: A Biblical Theology of the Hebrew Bible
About the Author
Stephen G. Dempster is the Stuart E. Murray Professor of Religious Studies at Atlantic Baptist University, New Brunswick, Canada.
Works by Stephen G. Dempster
Dominion and Dynasty: A Biblical Theology of the Hebrew Bible (2003) — Author — 862 copies, 2 reviews
The Return of the Kingdom: A Biblical Theology of God's Reign (Essential Studies in Biblical Theology) (2024) 38 copies, 1 review
The Servant of the Lord 1 copy
Associated Works
The Doctrine on Which the Church Stands or Falls: Justification in Biblical, Theological, Historical, and Pastoral Perspective (2019) 218 copies
The Words of the Wise Are Like Goads: Engaging Qoheleth in the 21st Century (2013) — Contributor — 16 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1952-09-20
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Westminster Theological Seminary (MAR|1977) (MTh|1979)
University of Toronto (MA|1980) (PhD|1985) - Organizations
- Canadian Society of Biblical Studies
Society of Biblical Literature - Nationality
- Canada
- Birthplace
- Simcoe, Ontario, Canada
- Places of residence
- Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada
- Associated Place (for map)
- Canada
Members
Reviews
The Return of the Kingdom: A Biblical Theology of God's Reign (Essential Studies in Biblical Theology) by Stephen G. Dempster
Summary: Traces the themes of kingship and kingdom throughout Scripture from creation to new creation.
How would you summarize the storyline of the Bible in a phrase. Stephen G. Dempster proposes the succinct phrase, “the return of the kingdom” will serve well. He argues that the Bible presents a vision of the creation as a temple over which God is king and human beings his vicegerents and a kingdom of priests. That kingdom was disrupted when human beings rebelled against God’s calling. show more Hence, the rest of the story is how God works to restore that kingdom and humanity to their rightful place.
In this book, Dempster traces the theme of the return of the kingdom through the whole of scripture, as part of a series covering essential theological themes in scripture. Thus, he begins with a chapter setting out the big picture. He does so by looking at how Genesis 1-3, the creation, and Revelation 21-22, new creation, bookend the story of scripture. Specifically, he frames a story of creation, fall, and a greater restoration.
In subsequent chapters, Dempster traces this theme from creation, through a thoughtful exploration of the fall narrative and the spread of sin, resulting in the flood. Dempster moves from patriarchal narratives through the exodus and the establishing of a nation over which God is king. From here, he follows the Hebrew scripture order, showing kingdom growth and decline in the former prophets and the once and future kingdom in the latter prophets. Under the Writings, the Psalms and Wisdom literature teach us kingdom prayer, life, and hope. The Daniel through Chronicles portray the posture of an exiled people awaiting the kingdom.
Turning to the New Testament, Dempster covers this corpus in four chapters, one on Matthew, one on the remaining gospels, one on Acts and all the letters, and one on Revelation. I found the allocation of his attention puzzling. For example, Acts, the Pauline and Catholic epistles are discussed in eleven pages, half of which is devoted to Acts. Likewise, the chapter on Matthew is nearly twice as long as the chapter on Mark, Luke, and John! While his summaries were on the money, this felt like he had to truncate his material to meet page limits. And his material on Revelation, one of the bookends, also included what seemed to be a conclusion of how then do we await a delayed kingdom, all in ten pages.
That said, he helpfully sketches the coming of the king and the particular aspects each gospel writer develops. He traces the kingdom expansion from Israel to the ends of the earth. and the glory of the new Jerusalem and the trees (plural) of life for the healing of the nations.
Overall, this is a valuable work, tracing the theme of God’s rule through scripture. Particularly, showing how the Old Testament develops this theme is valuable. This is so because, for many, the Old Testament is undiscovered territory. I could see this book encouraging people to read the Old Testament. And attending to the reality of God’s reign is great encouragement in our troubled times!
____________________
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review. show less
How would you summarize the storyline of the Bible in a phrase. Stephen G. Dempster proposes the succinct phrase, “the return of the kingdom” will serve well. He argues that the Bible presents a vision of the creation as a temple over which God is king and human beings his vicegerents and a kingdom of priests. That kingdom was disrupted when human beings rebelled against God’s calling. show more Hence, the rest of the story is how God works to restore that kingdom and humanity to their rightful place.
In this book, Dempster traces the theme of the return of the kingdom through the whole of scripture, as part of a series covering essential theological themes in scripture. Thus, he begins with a chapter setting out the big picture. He does so by looking at how Genesis 1-3, the creation, and Revelation 21-22, new creation, bookend the story of scripture. Specifically, he frames a story of creation, fall, and a greater restoration.
In subsequent chapters, Dempster traces this theme from creation, through a thoughtful exploration of the fall narrative and the spread of sin, resulting in the flood. Dempster moves from patriarchal narratives through the exodus and the establishing of a nation over which God is king. From here, he follows the Hebrew scripture order, showing kingdom growth and decline in the former prophets and the once and future kingdom in the latter prophets. Under the Writings, the Psalms and Wisdom literature teach us kingdom prayer, life, and hope. The Daniel through Chronicles portray the posture of an exiled people awaiting the kingdom.
Turning to the New Testament, Dempster covers this corpus in four chapters, one on Matthew, one on the remaining gospels, one on Acts and all the letters, and one on Revelation. I found the allocation of his attention puzzling. For example, Acts, the Pauline and Catholic epistles are discussed in eleven pages, half of which is devoted to Acts. Likewise, the chapter on Matthew is nearly twice as long as the chapter on Mark, Luke, and John! While his summaries were on the money, this felt like he had to truncate his material to meet page limits. And his material on Revelation, one of the bookends, also included what seemed to be a conclusion of how then do we await a delayed kingdom, all in ten pages.
That said, he helpfully sketches the coming of the king and the particular aspects each gospel writer develops. He traces the kingdom expansion from Israel to the ends of the earth. and the glory of the new Jerusalem and the trees (plural) of life for the healing of the nations.
Overall, this is a valuable work, tracing the theme of God’s rule through scripture. Particularly, showing how the Old Testament develops this theme is valuable. This is so because, for many, the Old Testament is undiscovered territory. I could see this book encouraging people to read the Old Testament. And attending to the reality of God’s reign is great encouragement in our troubled times!
____________________
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review. show less
Dominion and Dynasty: A Theology of the Hebrew Bible (New Studies in Biblical Theology) by Stephen G. Dempster
The thesis of this book is that, the Hebrew Bible (the TANAKH), is to be read as one whole book, instead of many unrelated texts. The unity of the TANAKH is made possible due to its canonical nature and narrative framework. Moreover, the author argues for two main uniting themes throughout the storyline of the TANAKH, namely dominion and dynasty or geography and genealogy.
Dominion and Dynasty: A Theology of the Hebrew Bible (New Studies in Biblical Theology) by Stephen G. Dempster
The thesis of this book is that, the Hebrew Bible (the TANAKH), is to be read as one whole book, instead of many unrelated texts. The unity of the TANAKH is made possible due to its canonical nature and narrative framework. Moreover, the author argues for two main uniting themes throughout the storyline of the TANAKH, namely dominion and dynasty or geography and genealogy.
Lists
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 9
- Also by
- 7
- Members
- 950
- Popularity
- #27,087
- Rating
- 4.2
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 8
- Favorited
- 1











