Marshall's work has been celebrated among Protestant and Catholic theologians, resulting in a
festschrift entitled
Love Become Incarnate (2023).
Stanley Hauerwas described Marshall "a scholar's scholar, a theologian's theologian." Khaled Anatolios has remarked that "Bruce Marshall surely stands in the front rank of contemporary Catholic theology. The profundity, rigor, range, and clarity of his theological work, inspired by a governing vision of the absolute primacy of Christ, constitute a legacy that will inspire and engage serious theologians for many years to come." Boyd Taylor Coolman has similarly expressed, "Bruce Marshall is a theologian of the highest caliber, of remarkable depth and breadth, of historical sources and of systematic coherence, of scientific rigor and sapiential insight, of Scripture and philosophy, of Israel and Church, of faith and reason, of love and knowledge." The late
Geoffrey Wainwright called Marshall's
Trinity and Truth "remarkable," and
Paul J. Griffiths proclaimed it "a splendid example of how Christians should think about philosophical questions." The journal
Modern Theology published an entire symposium based on Marshall's book
Trinity and Truth. Similarly, the journal
Pro Ecclesia published a symposium in which Marshall's assessment of the theology of
Karl Barth anchored the conversation. In recognition of his contributions to Catholic theology, Marshall was awarded the Vertias Medal from the Aquinas Center for Theological Renewal at
Ave Maria University in 2020. Marshall is a member of the Academy of Catholic Theology and served as its president in 2008-2009. He serves on the editorial board of
Nova et Vetera (English edition) and
Pro Ecclesia, is a frequently requested speaker of the Thomistic Institute, and is both a
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow and Pew Evangelical Scholars Fellow. ==Select bibliography==