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A Pentecostal Commentary on the Pastoral Epistles
Pentecostal Old Testament and New Testament Commentaries
by William K. Kay and John R. L. Moxon
Imprint: Wipf and Stock
William K. Kay was founding director of the Centre for Pentecostal Studies at Bangor University, UK, and is the author of Pentecostalism: A Very Short Introduction (2011) and George Jeffreys: Pentecostal Apostle and Revivalist (2017), as well as numerous academic papers. He is an ordained minister with British Assemblies of God and honorary fellow at the Institute for Pentecostal Theology.
John R. L. Moxon is head of religion, theology, culture, and philosophy at the University of Roehampton, and a former director of studies at the UK Assemblies of God training college. He is the author of Peterʼs Halakhic Nightmare: The “Animal” Vision of Acts 10:9 in Jewish and Graeco–Roman Perspective (2017) and reviews regularly for the Journal of New Testament Studies.
“Kay and Moxon bring a unique combination of skills and experience to this commentary on the Pastoral Epistles—a biblical scholar and a Pentecostal historian, each with lived ministry experience. The result is . . . a concise yet accessible exploration of Paul’s pastoral literature that equally doesn’t avoid the sometimes complex and controversial historical and theological aspects of these letters.”
—David S. Harvey, University of Manchester
“In this volume, Kay and Moxon join the ranks of other Pentecostal scholars in producing a commentary on the Pastoral Epistles. Whilst aware of and informed by the scholarly developments and debates surrounding 1–2 Timothy and Titus, the authors constantly read the biblical text with one eye on the Pentecostal and charismatic readers for whom they write. The appearance of their commentary is a welcome addition to Pentecostal commentaries on this portion of Scripture.”
—John Christopher Thomas, Pentecostal Theological Seminary