Jonathan Leonard Drury (born November 16, 1978) is an ordained minister in The Wesleyan Church of North America and an American theologian known for his contribution to Christology, Wesleyan Theology, Barthianism, Holiness Theology, and Protestant Theology. He is currently the Professor of New Testament and Spiritual Formation at Indiana Wesleyan University following his time as the Discipleship Pastor in their Spiritual Formation Office. He was also an Associate Professor of Theology and Christian Ministry at Wesley Seminary.

John L. Drury
BornNovember 16, 1978
SpouseAmanda Hontz Drury
Academic background
Alma materIndiana Wesleyan University
Princeton Theological Seminary
Academic work
InstitutionsIndiana Wesleyan University Indiana Wesleyan University
Notable worksThe Resurrected God: Karl Barth's Trinitarian Theology of Easter

Biography edit

Early life edit

John was born to Keith Drury and Sharon Bailey Drury, both pastors in the Pilgrim Holiness Church and later the Wesleyan Church after its merger with The Wesleyan Methodist Church in 1968. John is the youngest of two sons.

Life and career edit

Drury earned his B.A. at Indiana Wesleyan University, majoring in Religion, Philosophy, and Biblical Literature, and graduated summa cum laude in 2001. While at Indiana Wesleyan, he met and later married Amanda Hontz of Holland, MI.

He went on to earn both his M.Div. in 2004 and his Ph.D. in Systematic Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary in Princeton, NJ. He was awarded the A. A. Hodge Prize in Systematic Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary[1] and earned the rank of magna cum laude for his doctoral dissertation titled, "The Resurrected God: Karl Barth’s Trinitarian Theology of Easter.[2]" in 2011.

Drury went on to become the inaugural Professor of Theology and Spiritual Formation at Wesley Seminary in Marion, IN where he served from 2010-2021. In 2021 he accepted the position of Spiritual Formation Coordinator in the chapel office at Indiana Wesleyan University.

Honors and awards edit

A. A. Hodge Prize in Systematic Theology

At the 57th Annual meeting of The Wesleyan Theological Society at Duke Divinity School in March of 2022, Drury was called "one of the two greatest young minds in the Wesleyan tradition" (along with Jason Vickers) by Dr. Cheryl Bridges Johns, during informal comments after her plenary address.

Dissertation edit

Drury's landmark work on the theme of Resurrection in Karl Barth's fourth volume of Church Dogmatics was among the most influential English-language Christian theological dissertations of that year and earned him the rank of magna cum laude from Princeton Theological Seminary. It has since become a central text in numerous published works including Mark Edwards "The Divine Moment,"[3] Nixon De Vera's "The Suffering of God in the Eternal Decree: A Critical Study of Karl Barth on Election,"[4] Adriani Milli Rodrigues' "Toward a Priestly Christology: A Hermeneutical Study of Christ's Priesthood,"[5] and JP Haley's book "The Humanity of Christ: The Significance of the Anhypostasis and Enhypostasis in Karl Barth's Christology."[6]

Works edit

Books edit

  • The Resurrected God: Karl Barth's Trinitarian Theology of Easter. Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2014 ISBN 9781451482805
  • Karl Barth and the Future of Evangelical Theology. Pickwick Publications. 2017 ISBN 9780227176658
  • 19th and 20th Centuries, in A Canon of Christian Theology: The Methodist Tradition. London T&T Clark Publishers, 2014.
  • Judgment. Methodist Doctrine, Vol. 10. Atlanta Cascade, 2016.

Articles edit

  • “Promise and Command: Wesley and Barth on Matthew 5:48,” in Karl Barth in Conversation, ed. W. Travis McMaken and David Congdon (Cascade Press, forthcoming).
  • “Barth and Testimony,” in Karl Barth and the Future of Evangelical Theology, ed. Christian T. Collins Winn and John L. Drury (Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications, forthcoming).
  • “The Paradox of the Evangelical Ecumenist: Reflections on Oberlin II,” Ecumenical Trends (June 2008).
  • “Hell and Hope in Balthasar: The Substitutionary Character of Christ’s Descent into Hell and its Implications for the Extent of the Atonement,” Koinonia Journal 17 (2005) pp. 93-104.
  • “The Sending of the Church: Toward an Emergent Ecclesiology,” Princeton Theological Review 11:3 (Autumn 2005) pp. 13-18.
  • “Gregory of Nyssa’s Dialogue with Macrina: The Compatibility of Resurrection and Immortality,” Theology Today 62:2 (Jul 2005) pp. 210-222.
  • “Luther and Wesley on Union and Impartation: Reopening the Dialogue in Light of Recent Finnish Luther Research,” Wesleyan Theological Journal 40:1 (Spring 2005) pp. 58-68.
  • "Light in Darkness: Hans Urs von Balthasar and the Catholic Doctrine of Christ's Descent into Hell – By Alyssa Lyra Pitstick," Reviews in Religion & Theology (August 2008).
  • "From the Margins: A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W. Dayton – By Christian T. Collins Winn," Reviews in Religion & Theology (July 2008).
  • "Karl Barth's Trinitarian Theology: A Study in Karl Barth's Analogical Use of the Trinitarian Relation – By Peter S. Oh," Reviews in Religion & Theology (December 2007).
  • "Charles Wesley: A Biography ? By Gary M. Best," Reviews in Religion & Theology (September 2007)

References edit

  1. ^ "Awards and Prizes". Princeton Seminary Wiki. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
  2. ^ Drury, John (2014). The Resurrected God: Karl Barth’s Trinitarian Theology of Easter (1st ed.). Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press. p. 194. ISBN 9781451482805. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
  3. ^ Edwards, Mark James (2013). The Divine Moment: Eternity, Time, and Triune Temporality in Karl Barth's “Church Dogmatics”. Ann Arbor, MI: Princeton Seminary Press.
  4. ^ De Vera, Nixon (2020). The Suffering of God in the Eternal Decree: A Critical Study of Karl Barth on Election. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 9781725264175.
  5. ^ Rodrigues, Adriani Milli (2017). oward a Priestly Christology: A Hermeneutical Study of Christ's Priesthood. Lanham: Fortress Academic. ISBN 9781978700871.
  6. ^ Haley, James P. (2017). The Humanity of Christ: The Significance of the Anhypostasis and Enhypostasis in Karl Barth's Christology. Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock. ISBN 9781532614163.