Abner Hernández

Abner  Hernández

Abner Hernández

Title: Associate Dean
Assistant Professor of Church History

E-mail: abnerh@andrews.edu
Phone: (269) 471-6280

Education

AA, Seminario Adventista de Cuba
BA, Universidad de Montemorelos, Mexico
MAPT, Inter-American Adventist Theological Seminary
PhD, Andrews University

Biography

Born in Puerto Padre, Cuba, to Cuban parents, Dr. Abner Francisco Hernandez serves as Associate Professor of Church History at the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary at Andrews University. He earned his Ph.D. in Religion with a concentration in Church History and Systematic Theology from Andrews University. His doctoral dissertation, The Doctrine of Prevenient Grace in Jacobus Arminius’ Theology, reflects his ongoing interest in the theological legacy of the Protestant Reformation and its enduring relevance for contemporary Christian thought.
An ordained minister of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Dr. Hernandez previously served as a local pastor in the Cuban Union, where he was actively involved in evangelism, pastoral care, and church leadership. He has also served as a professor of theology at the Cuban Adventist Theological Seminary and at Montemorelos University in Mexico, where he taught courses in historical and systematic theology, Reformation history, and Adventist heritage.
In addition to his teaching and pastoral ministry, Dr. Hernandez has held significant academic leadership positions. He served as Academic Dean of the Cuban Adventist Theological Seminary and later in the Theological Seminary at Montemorelos University, where he provided academic oversight, led curriculum development, supported faculty research, and guided institutional initiatives. His leadership included supervising accreditation processes and ensuring compliance with educational standards, contributing to the strengthening of theological education and institutional quality in both contexts.
His main research interests include the history and theology of the Reformation and post-Reformation periods, with a particular focus on the theological contributions of Jacobus Arminius, anabaptist, and Reformed history and theology. He also researches the development of Adventist theology from within the framework of Seventh-day Adventist thought and the theology of Ellen G. White.
Dr. Hernandez is the author of En búsqueda de la salvación: Vocación y misión de Elena G. White (Boise, ID: Pacific Press, 2022), a work exploring the soteriological and prophetic dimensions of Ellen G. White’s writings. He has also co-edited several volumes, including Enseñanzas bíblicas de la fe Adventista (Miami: IADPA, 2021). In addition, he has published more than twenty-five scholarly and popular articles and book chapters, contributing both to peer-reviewed academic journals and church periodicals.
He is a frequent presenter at academic conferences in the United States and internationally, participating in theological dialogues and advancing the study of Adventist identity within broader Christian history. Dr. Hernandez is currently engaged in several academic and ecclesiastical initiatives aimed at deepening the integration of historical theology with the mission and message of the global Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Current Research or Professional Activities

Dr. Hernandez is currently engaged in three major research projects. First, he is exploring the eschatological thought of Ellen G. White, with particular attention to its theological coherence, historical development, and relevance for contemporary Adventist eschatology. Second, he is investigating the doctrine of salvation in the teachings of Jesus, focusing especially on the presence and function of prevenient grace in the parables. This study seeks to contribute to a broader understanding of soteriology within the context of biblical theology. Third, he is serving as editor for a forthcoming volume in a multi-volume series titled Adventism, Society, and Culture. This scholarly initiative aims to cast a distinctly Adventist vision for society and culture, fostering theological and interdisciplinary reflection on the church’s engagement with the modern world.