Werner Kümmel Explained

Werner Georg Kümmel
Birth Date:16 May 1905
Birth Place:Heidelberg
Death Place:Mainz
Nationality:German
Occupation:New Testament scholar and professor
Education:Heidelberg, Berlin and Marburg
Thesis Title:Römer 7 und die Bekehrung des Paulus
Thesis Year:1928
Workplaces:University of Marburg
Notable Works:Introduction to the New Testament

Werner Georg Kümmel (Heidelberg 16 May 1905 - Mainz 9 July 1995) was a German New Testament scholar and professor at the University of Marburg.[1]

Biography

Kümmel was the son of the Heidelberg doctor Werner Kümmel and his first wife Marie (a daughter of the historian Heinrich Ulmann). He was a grandson of the civil engineer Werner Kümmel and a nephew of the art historian Otto Kümmel, as well as a great-grandson of the physician Jacob Henle through his mother. From 1923 to 1928 he studied Protestant theology in Heidelberg, Berlin and Marburg, graduating in Heidelberg. He wrote his dissertation on Romans 7 in 1928, under the supervision of Martin Dibelius. He then worked at universities in England, followed by Marburg (1930–1932), where he was assistant to Hans von Soden, Zurich (1932–1950), Mainz (1951/1952) and Marburg again (1952–1973). At Marburg he succeeded Rudolf Bultmann, and worked until his retirement in 1973 as a New Testament scholar.

Kümmel undertook the editing of Jewish writings from Hellenistic-Roman times. His Einleitung in das Neue Testament (Introduction to the New Testament) was influential, and competed with the conservatism of Wilhelm Michaelis and the Catholic perspective of Alfred Wikenhauser in their works of the same title.

The Bonn New Testament scholar Erich Gräßer was a student of Kümmel's.

Works

Thesis

Books

Chapters

Notes and References

    • Otto Böcher: Zum Gedenken an Werner Georg Kümmel. In: Theologische Literaturzeitung (ThLZ) 120, 1995,, Sp. 945