Kent Clarke, PhD

Professor of Biblical & Theological Studies; Endowed Chair, New Testament Studies; Brooke Foss Westcott Professorship of New Testament Textual Criticism, Greek Studies, and Hermeneutics

Kent Clarke is the Brooke Foss Westcott Professor of New Testament Textual Criticism, Greek Studies, and Hermeneutics at Trinity Western University. He has been a full-time faculty member of the Religious Studies Department at TWU since 2002. Clarke’s primary research and teaching interests include Jewish and Hellenistic backgrounds to early Christianity, New Testament textual criticism and canon formation, Hellenistic and Koine Greek grammar and syntax, hermeneutics and exegesis, and the development of modern biblical criticism and theology with reference to the eighteenth-century Enlightenment (this latter interest served as the topic of his Ph.D. thesis, completed at Trinity College, University of Bristol, UK in 2002). Clarke has served as both the Chair of the Religious Studies Department and the Coordinator of the Biblical Studies Program at TWU. He is also the Director of the Reuben J. Swanson Biblical Manuscript Image Collection at TWU (the largest collection of its kind in Canada), and he is the Academic Project Leader of the BibleWorks Manuscript Transcription Project. Clarke derives great enjoyment from his profession as a biblical theologian and has a deep passion for intellectual and personal growth—not only for himself, but also for the students he is privileged to teach. To this end, it is one of his greatest desires to integrate, both for himself as well as for his students, the “life of the mind” and the “life of the Spirit.” Clarke has been married to his wonderful wife, Lauren, for thirty-three years; has two incredible sons, Kieran and Jamie, and an amazing daughter-in-law, Eden; and is the proudest “Bumpa” to his grandson, Oliver.

  • PhD Trinity College, University of Bristol, Department of Theology and Religious Studies, Bristol, England; 2002.Thesis Topic: “Enlightenment Reason and Christian Faith: The Eighteenth Century and the Development of the ‘Modern’ Christian Weltanschauung”. Director of Studies: Dr. John Nolland (Professor of New Testament Studies), Trinity College, Bristol, England. Examiners: Professor John Clarke (Professor and Chair of History), University of Buckingham, Buckingham, England; Dr. Robert Forrest (Principal Lecturer of New Testament Studies and Biblical Criticism), Trinity College, Bristol, England.
  • Master’s Degree in Theological Studies (Major in Biblical Studies), First Class Honours, Trinity Western University, Langley, British Columbia, Canada; 1994. Thesis Topic: “An Analysis of the United Bible Societies’ Greek New Testament with Reference to the Evaluation of Evidence Letter-Ratings” (Published by Sheffield Academic Press, 1997). Supervisor: Dr. Larry Perkins (Professor of New Testament and Inter-Testamental Literature). Examiners: Dr. Craig A. Evans (Payzant Distinguished Professor of New Testament); Dr. Philip Schafran (Senior Lecturer in Theology).
  • Bachelor’s Degree in Theology (Double Major in Theology and Outdoor Recreation), First Class Honours, summa cum laude, Okanagan Bible College, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada; 1992.

Expertise

Ancient Research Languages: Classical & Koine Greek, Latin, Hebrew, and Aramaic.

Modern Research Languages: English, French, and German.

Awards & Honors

  • “Science, Faith, and Human Flourishing: Conversations in Community” Grant, Science, Theology, and Religion Office, Fuller Seminary, 2018-2019 ($25,000 USD); Co-Principal Investigators: M. Penner, J. Palmer-Hague, and A. Sikkema; Co-Investigators: H. Meyerhoff, A. Perrin, R. Rhea, and K. Clarke.
  • The Trinity Western University Rooted & Reaching Award, Trinity Western University, 2017-2018 Academic Year (Awarded annually to one faculty member in recognition of their Christian character, their integration of faith into their academic discipline, their advancement of the legacy and purposes of students, and their significant contribution to Trinity Western University).
  • The Davis Distinguished Teaching Award, Trinity Western University, 2013-2014 Academic Year (Awarded annually to one faculty member in recognition of a high level of teaching excellence and significant contribution to the pedagogical life of Trinity Western University).
  • Brooke Foss Westcott Funded Research Professorship, Trinity Western University, 2007-Present.
  • Overseas Research Students Award (O.R.S.), Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals, London, England, 1994-1997.
  • Nelson Lumber Foundation Bursary, Northwest Baptist Theological College, 1993.
  • Student Leadership Award, Okanagan Bible College, 1992.
  • Member of Honours Society of Canadian Bible Colleges, 1992.
  • Esso Resources Scholarship, 1990-1991.
  • Roland Financial Scholarship, Okanagan Bible College, 1988-1991.
  • Academic Dean’s List, Okanagan Bible College, 1988-1991.

Recent Publications

Books & Monographs:

  • Dogmatic Slumber: Reawakening Faith After the Age of Enlightenment Reason, Postmodern Pluralism, and Beyond (Manuscript in Final Preparation).
  • Codex Vaticanus: A New Transcription and Critical Assessment Incorporating Corrections to Tischendorf’s Editio Princeps (Norfolk, VA: BibleWorks LLC; 2011).
  • Textual Optimism: An Analysis of the United Bible Society’s Greek New Testament and Its Evaluation of Evidence Letter-Ratings (JSNTSup 138; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1997). For reviews of this work, see W.L. Richards in Review of Biblical Literature 05/26/2000; P. Ellingworth in NovT 40 (1998), pp. 382-84; J.N. Rhodes in CBQ 60 (1998), pp. 759-60; D.A. Black in Filologia Neotestamentaria 10 (1997), pp. 157-58; M.C. Parsons in The Bible Translator, 50 (1999), pp. 346-50; J.K. Elliott in ExpTim 108 (1997), pp. 341-42; idem in JTS 49 (1998), pp. 293-97; and more extensively, C. Zamagni, “Un Art De L’«Optimisme Textuel» Néotestamentaire? Étude Critique D’après un Travail De K.D. Clarke”, Rivista Biblica 50 (2002), pp. 421-43.

Chapters & Articles:

  • Charles Lang Freer: His Legacy and Its Impact Upon American Paleography”, in Mario Capasso (ed.), Hermae: Scholars and Scholarship in Papyrology Volume V (Biblioteca degli “Studi di egittologia e di papirologia”; Pisa-Rome: Fabrizio Serra editore, 2023), pp. 29-46.
  • “Paleography and Philanthropy: Charles Lang Freer and His Acquisition of the ‘Freer Biblical Manuscripts’”, in Larry W. Hurtado (ed.), The Freer Biblical Manuscripts: Fresh Studies of an American Treasure Trove (SBL Text Critical Studies 6; Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2006), pp. 17-73.
  • “A Rebuttal to William L. Petersen’s Review of Studies in the Early Texts of the Gospels and Acts”, TC: A Journal of Biblical Textual Criticism 8 (2003), par. 1-5. 
  • “Textual Certainty in the United Bible Societies’ Greek New Testament”, Novum Testamentum 44 (2002), pp. 105-33.
  • “The Problem of Pseudonymity in Biblical Literature and Its Implications for Canon Formation”, in L.M. McDonald and J.A. Sanders (eds.), The Canon Debate (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2002), pp. 440-68.
  • “Pseudo-Phocylides”, in C.A. Evans and S.E. Porter (eds.), Dictionary of New Testament Background (Downers Grove: Inter Varsity Press, 2000), pp. 868-69.
  • “The Construction of Biblical Certainty: Textual Optimism and the United Bible Society’s Greek New Testament”, co-authored with Kevin Bales in D.G.K. Taylor (ed.), Studies in the Early Text of the Gospels and Acts (Texts and Studies, 3rd Series, 1; Birmingham, UK: University of Birmingham Press, 1999), pp. 86-93.
  • “Original Text or Canonical Text? Questioning the Shape of the New Testament Text We Translate”, in S.E. Porter and R. Hess (eds.), Translating the Bible: Problems and Prospects (JSNTSup 173; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1999), pp. 281-322.
  • “What is Exegesis? An Analysis of Various Definitions”, co-authored with S.E. Porter in S.E. Porter (ed.), Handbook to Exegesis of the New Testament (NTTS 25; Leiden: Brill, 1997), pp. 3-21.
  • “A Canonical Critical Perspective and the Relationship of Colossians and Ephesians”, co-authored with S.E. Porter; Biblica 78/1 (1997), pp. 57-86.
  • “Canonical Criticism: An Integrated Reading of Biblical Texts for the Community of Faith”, in S.E. Porter and D. Tombs (eds.), Approaches to New Testament Study (JSNTSup 120; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1995), pp. 170-221.

Significant & Ongoing Research:

  • BibleWorks Biblical Manuscript Transcription and Collation Project; General Editor and Academic Project Leader (Fall 2007-Present) of the BibleWorks Manuscript Transcription Project, which seeks to provide over an on-going period scholarly-produced transcriptions of New Testament papyri, uncial, and minuscule manuscripts. These new transcriptions, which are based upon high quality digital images of the actual manuscripts or of their facsimiles, serve as the foundation for the production and ongoing development of a New Testament textual criticism software application. This project has (1) developed a module that incorporates new technology and processes that more accurately and effectively allow for manuscript transcription and collation; (2) provided extremely accurate representations of the manuscripts being transcribed; (3) made the raw transcription data available without charge for personal or academic use; (4) effectively enabled program users to immediately compare, contrast, and fully collate any desired selection—either partial or full text—of these manuscripts; (5) allowed for a broad range of detailed statistical queries relating but not limited to such issues as textual affiliation and congruity of the New Testament manuscript tradition; (6) linked directly to the manuscript transcriptions their corresponding high resolution digital images where publication permissions have been granted; (7) been “open-ended” in that on-going transcription and imaging work, as well as the recording of relevant extra-textual features such as sociological and codicological details, can be seamlessly incorporated into the software; and (8) served as the groundwork for traditionally published volumes containing full transcriptions of each manuscript, as well as complete collations for each book of the New Testament.
  • New Testament Greek Manuscripts Image Collection at Trinity Western University; Director of the largest collection of New Testament Greek manuscript images in Canada (including published facsimiles, microfilm, and digital images). The goal of this project has been to catalogue and to establish a collection of ancient biblical manuscript images that will aid in the on-going work of New Testament textual criticism. The growing collection, which is temporarily housed at Trinity Western University and is accessible to both academic and public alike, is formally named in honour of the late Professor Reuben J. Swanson and his life’s work and commitment to New Testament textual criticism. Newly added to this collection are one hundred and seventy-five fragments of recently discovered and as yet unpublished ancient Egyptian papyri (formally named the Trinity Western University-Wikene Papyri Collection).

Academic Conference Papers & Presentations:

  • “Fragmented History: Charles Lang Freer and the Ongoing Puzzlements Surrounding the Discovery of His Washington Manuscripts”. The University of Birmingham Colloquium on the Textual Criticism of the New Testament, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK, February 4, 2021.
  • “A Theological Response to Covid-19”. TWU Virtual Co-hosted Café (Nursing, Religious Studies, and Philosophy): “Setting a Different Tone: A Conversation about Our Vulnerabilities During COVID-19”, Trinity Western University, October 27, 2020.
  • “Hospitality Working Group Report Panel”. TWU Faculty Retreat: “Hospitality as Imperative and Blessing”, Trinity Western University, August 21, 2018. Co-presented with S. Reimer-Kirkham, E. Stringham-Durovic, R. Healey, B. Wood, and E. Phillips.
  • “Inclusivity in the Classroom”. TWU Faculty Professional Development Seminar, Trinity Western University, January 25, 2018. Co-presented with S. Reimer-Kirkham and E. Stringham-Durovic.
  • “Expressions of Doubt and Notions of Certainty: What Enlightenment Skepticism can Teach Us about Christian Faith”. Full Professor Inaugural Lecture, Trinity Western University, March 7, 2018.
  • “The Ancient New Testament’s Transmission, Translation, and Interpretation: Questions of Reliability”. Public Lecture, Metzger Collection/Columbia Bible College, Abbotsford, BC, September 20, 2017.
  • “Nourishing the Self through Holistic Leisure and Spirituality: Addressing the ‘Modern Dualism’ between Body and Spirit in the Pursuit of Human Flourishing”. TWU Faculty Retreat, Trinity Western University, August 24, 2016. Co-presented with J. Reimer.
  • “Holistic Perspectives on Health Promotion and Personal Wellness: Developing a Phenomenology and Theology of the Body that Embraces Spiritual Flourishing”. Annual Meeting of the Christian Society of Kinesiology and Leisure Studies (CSKLS), Westmont College, Santa Barbara, CA, June 9, 2016. Co-presented with J. Reimer.
  • “Biblical Faith, Enlightenment Reason, and the Problem of Hermeneutics”. Faith and Reason Taskforce, Trinity Western University, February 21, 2013.
  • “The BibleWorks Biblical Manuscript Transcription and Collation Project: New Technology in the Aid of New Testament Textual Criticism”. The Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, November 23, 2008 (presented in the Computer Assisted Research Program Unit).
  • “The Trinity Western University-Wikene Papyri ‘Rediscovery’”. The Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, November 22, 2008 (presented in the Palaeographical Studies in the Ancient Near East Program Unit).
  • “Paleography and Philanthropy: Charles Lang Freer and His Acquisition of the Freer Biblical Manuscripts”. The Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, November 18-21, 2006 (presented at the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery).
  • The Construction of Biblical Certainty: Textual Optimism and the United Bible Society’s Greek New Testament”. The University of Birmingham Colloquium on the Textual Criticism of the New Testament, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK, April 14-17, 1997.
  • “Original Text or Canonical Text?: Questioning the Basis of New Testament Translation and Exegesis”. Theology and Religious Studies Research Cluster, Roehampton Institute London, London, England, April 1997.
  • “The Use of Scripture in Canonical Criticism: Prolegomena for Biblical Exegesis”. Theology and Religious Studies Research Cluster, Roehampton Institute London, London, England, March 1996.
  • “The Use of the Bible in Canonical Criticism: Hermeneutical Outlook or Exegetical Method?”. Society for the Study of Theology Annual Conference (Biblical Theology Session), The University of Cambridge, Selwyn College, Cambridge, England, April 8-11, 1996.
  • “A Canonical Critical Perspective and the Relationship of Colossians and Ephesians”. Tyndale Fellowship New Testament Study Group, Tyndale House, Cambridge, England, June 26-28, 1995. Co-presented with S.E. Porter.
  • “A Canonical Critical Perspective and the Relationship of Colossians and Ephesians”. Theology and Religious Studies Research Cluster, Roehampton Institute London, London, England, February 1995.
  • “Defining Canonical Criticism”. Theology and Religious Studies Research Cluster, Roehampton Institute London, London, England, December 1995.

Courses Regularly Taught (Undergraduate)

  • FNDN 102 Foundations II Human Flourishing
  • GREE 235/236/329 Elementary Greek
  • GREE 331/332 Readings in the Greek New Testament
  • IDIS 400/RELS 480 Interdisciplinary Studies: Developing a Christian Worldview
  • RELS 102 Introduction to New Testament Studies and Discussion Groups
  • RELS 224 New Testament Theology
  • RELS 250 New Testament Book Study—Romans
  • RELS 300 Principles of Biblical Interpretation
  • RELS 340 Current Issues in Biblical Theology
  • RELS 350 Introduction to Biblical Archaeology
  • RELS 351 Life and Teachings of Jesus
  • RELS 352 Life and Letters of the Apostle Paul
  • RELS 453 The Synoptic Gospels and Acts
  • TRVL 025 Israel, Egypt, and Jordan Travel Study
  • TRVL 025 Turkey, Greece, and Rome Travel Study

Courses Regularly Taught (Graduate)

  • BIE 691 Introduction to Biblical Archaeology
  • RELS 300/500 Principles of Biblical Interpretation
  • RELS 340 Current Issues in Biblical Theology
  • RELS 501/528/529 Elementary Greek
  • RELS 531 Advanced Greek Readings
  • RELS 531/532/535 Readings in the Greek New Testament
  • RELS 621 Advanced New Testament Exegesis
  • RELS 622 New Testament Seminar
  • RELS 648 Advanced Greek Studies
  • TRVL 025 Israel, Egypt, and Jordan Travel Study
  • TRVL 025 Turkey, Greece, and Rome Travel Study

Other Occasional Courses Taught

  • RELS 101 Introduction to Old Testament Studies and Discussion Groups
  • RELS 112 God and Human Beings in the Old Testament
  • Christian Tradition Past and Present
  • Introduction to Philosophy
  • The Religious Experience of the Psalms