Robert Thomas

Robert Thomas

Role: Conference speaker

Robert L. Thomas has lived in Stanton, California, for fifty-three years, 49 of those years with his now-deceased wife Joan who was promoted to glory in 2008.  He has been a member of the Anaheim Community Church throughout this period.  He has five children, all of whom are married, fifteen grandchildren three of whom are married, and five great-grandchildren. After being reared in Decatur, Georgia, he earned an engineering degree from Georgia Tech in 1949 and received from Dallas Theological Seminary his Th.M. in 1956 and his Th.D. in 1959, after taking work at Moody Bible Institute and Faith Theological Seminary also.

He served as a Professor of New Testament at Talbot School of Theology for 28 years and as Professor of New Testament at The Master’s Seminary for 23 years. At Talbot he was Secretary to the Faculty for approximately twenty-five years. After moving to The Master's Seminary, he was instrumental in starting The Master's Seminary Journal, for which served as Executive Editor for 21 years. His faculty role at The Master’s Seminary ended in 2009 with a commendation from President MacArthur for integrity and a positive impact on the Seminary.

He was National President of the Evangelical Theological Society in 1989-90. He was a translator for the New American Standard Bible during the 1960s and is General Editor of the New American Standard Exhaustive Concordance (Holman, 1981, more recently published in 1998 by Zondervan as The Strongest NASB Exhaustive Concordance) which received the Gold Medallion Book Award from the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association as the outstanding reference work of 1981-82. His publications include "1, 2 Thessalonians" in the Expositor's Bible Commentary (Zondervan, 1978), A Harmony of the Gospels for both the NASB (Harper-Colins, 1978) and the NIV (Harper-Collins, 1988), Revelation 1–7, An Exegetical Commentary (Moody, 1992), Revelation 8–22, An Exegetical Commentary (Moody, 1992), and The Jesus Crisis (Kregel, 1998).  His most recent works are Understanding Spiritual Gifts, A Verse-by-Verse Study of 1 Corinthians 12–14 (revised edition, Kregel, 1999), How to Choose a Bible Version (Mentor Series for Christian Focus Publications, 2000), Charts of the Gospels and the Life of Christ (Zondervan, 2000), Who Am I? Christian Hunger for Self-Identity (Mentor Series for Christian Focus Publications, 2002), and Evangelical Hermeneutics (Kregel, 2002). While currently pursuing other writing projects, he is an active member of Anaheim Community Church in California.

In 2011 he received the John F. Walvoord Lifetime Achievement Award for Excellence in Prophetic Studies from the Pre-Trib Research Center of Dallas, Texas.

Latest sermons by
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Series: 2009 Chafer Theological Seminary Bible Conference
Duration: 1 hr 16 mins 56 secs

Genre Override and Historicity

Craig L.Blomberg

The preunderstanding of most of today’s evangelical scholars who specialize in Gospel study is that the Gospels require special rules of interpretation because they belong to a special literary category. “Genre” is the term they use to speak of such a category. These scholars will usually advocate that theological rather than historical purposes dominated in the writing of the Gospels, and consequently, that a high degree of historical precision in the Gospels is not to be expected. They evaluate the Gospels according to historiographical canons of the day in which they were written and not according to modern standards of historical reliability. Blomberg writes, …

Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Series: 2009 Chafer Theological Seminary Bible Conference
Duration: 1 hr 11 mins 18 secs

Genre Override and Historicity

Craig L.Blomberg

The preunderstanding of most of today’s evangelical scholars who specialize in Gospel study is that the Gospels require special rules of interpretation because they belong to a special literary category. “Genre” is the term they use to speak of such a category. These scholars will usually advocate that theological rather than historical purposes dominated in the writing of the Gospels, and consequently, that a high degree of historical precision in the Gospels is not to be expected. They evaluate the Gospels according to historiographical canons of the day in which they were written and not according to modern standards of historical reliability. Blomberg writes, …

Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Series: 2009 Chafer Theological Seminary Bible Conference
Duration: 1 hr 10 mins 21 secs
In our initial presentation, we emphasized the effects when inserting preunderstanding into the exegetical process at Level 1. Today we need to proceed to a particular principle of literal interpretation, the distortion of which has brought tremendous changes to the way evangelicals interpret the Scriptures. Let’s talk about the principle of single meaning.
Monday, March 09, 2009
Series: 2009 Chafer Theological Seminary Bible Conference
Duration: 1 hr 12 mins 59 secs

How to Remedy the Drifting

2 Tim 2:15 provides the remedy that will halt the doctrinal slippage that was going on in Ephesus. That verse and its context bring out several key elements in remedying the drifting.

(1) The goal. Notice Paul does not tell Timothy to attack the problem directly. He tells him to use indirect means. Don’t limit yourself to confronting these men directly, though that sometimes may be necessary as 2 Tim 4:2b indicates (“reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering”). Rather your goal is to gain the approval of God by making yourself an unashamed workman. Concentrate on the positive side of teaching the Word of truth. You are to be a God-pleaser, not a man-pleaser. You are not to allow yourself to be distracted by mere human considerations. You are to have an eye that is single toward His will and glory. You are looking for His seal of approval. Strive to maintain His standards so that you have nothing to be ashamed of before Him. ...<.p>