Fairbairn graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University with an A.B. in English literature.[1] During his time at Princeton he was awarded the "Class of 1859 Prize" which was awarded to the student in the English department with the highest graduating GPA. He then began an M.Div program at Erskine Theological Seminary in Due West, South Carolina where he was awarded the Kenneth Fitzhugh Morris Award for excellence in Biblical studies. After two years of study at Erskine he transferred to Denver Seminary where he graduated with honors, having been awarded the Scholarship Award for being the M.Div graduate with the highest GPA. In 1999 Fairbairn was awarded the Ph.D. in Patristics from the University of Cambridge, where he completed a dissertation titledGrace and Christology in Cyril of Alexandria and John Cassian under Lionel Wickham.[2]
Teaching career
Despite being nearly completely deaf,[3] Fairbairn has taught at various institutions, including adjunct roles at the Cambridge Summer School of Theology, Denver Seminary, the Greek Biblce Institute, Haddington House, IFES Eurasia, North Caucaus Bible College, the REALIS Institute in Kyiv and Union School of Theology. While still a PhD student at Cambridge he was teaching multiple courses and provided academic leadership at Donetsk Christian University in Donetsk (Ukraine), during the institution's formative years, and he continued there as a visiting professor of theology later on. He also teaches part-time as a professor of Historical Theology at Evangelische Theologische Faculteit in Leuven. He is currently the Robert E. Cooley Professor of Early Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Charlotte, North Carolina (where he also serves as the Academic Dean[4]) and previously taught full-time at Erskine Theological Seminary.[5]
Published works
Books
Fairbairn, Donald (2002). Eastern Orthodoxy Through Western Eyes. Louisville, KY: Westminster, John Knox Press. ISBN978-0-664-22497-4. OCLC50796507.[6]
——— (2006). Grace and Christology in the Early Church. Oxford early Christian studies. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-929710-8. OCLC50774358.[7]
——— (2009). Life in the Trinity: an introduction to theology with the help of the church fathers. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press. ISBN978-0-8308-3873-8. OCLC421949576.[8]
——— (2011). Understanding Language: a guide for beginning students of Greek and Latin. Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press. ISBN978-0-8132-1866-3. OCLC690585354.[9]
——— (2013). Correspondence on Christology and Grace. Fathers of the Church. Vol. 126. Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press. ISBN978-0-8132-0126-9. OCLC818292783.[10]
Journal articles and Chapters
——— (June 1998). "Salvation as Theosis: The Teaching of Eastern Orthodoxy". Themelios. 23 (2): 42–54.
——— (1999). "Orthodox Supremacy in Russia: Is There a Place for Evangelicalism?". In Linzey, Sharon; Kaisch, Ken (eds.). God in Russia: the Challenge of Freedom. Lanham: University Press of America. pp. 288–314. ISBN978-0-7618-1548-8.[11]
——— (2005). "The Puzzle of Theodoret's Christology: A Modest Suggestion". The Journal of Theological Studies. 58 (1): 100–133. doi:10.1093/jts/fll159. ISSN0022-5185.
——— (2006). "Is the Early Church Relevant to the Scottish Reformation?". Haddington House Journal. 8 (Supplemental Issue): 7–28.
——— (2007). "Patristic Exegesis and Theology: the Cart and the Horse". Westminster Theological Journal. 69 (1): 1–19. ISSN0043-4388.[14]
——— (June 2007). "Patristic Soteriology: Three Trajectories". Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society. 50 (2): 289–301. ISSN0360-8808.[15]
——— (2007). "The One Person Who Is Jesus Christ: The Patristic Perspective". In Sanders, Fred; Issler, Klaus (eds.). Jesus in Trinitarian Perspective. B&H Publishing Group. pp. 80–113. ISBN978-0-8054-4422-3.[16]
——— (2009). "Contemporary Millennial/Tribulational Debates: Whose Side Was the Early Church On?". In Blomberg, Craig L.; Sung Wook Chung (eds.). Case for Historic Premillennialism, A: An Alternative to "Left Behind" Eschatology. Grand Rapids: Baker Publishing Group. pp. 105–132. ISBN978-0-8010-3596-8.[17]
——— (2013). "Justification in St. Cyril of Alexandria, with Some Implications for Ecumenical Dialogue". Participatio: Journal of the Thomas F. Torrance Theological Fellowship. 4. T F Torrance Theological Fellowship: 123–146.[18]