25 April 2008 A.D. (Presbyterian) Rev. Dr. Prof. R. Laird Harris Passes
25 April 2008 A.D. (Presbyterian) Rev. Dr. Prof. R. Laird
Harris Passes
Archivist. “April 25: Death of R. Laird
Harris.” This Day in Presbyterian
History. 25 Apr 2015. http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2015/04/april-25-death-of-r-laird-harris/.
Accessed 25 Apr 2015.
April 25: Death of R. Laird Harris
There was a good deal of serious
scholarship which arose from among the early leaders of the Orthodox
Presbyterian Church and the Bible Presbyterian Synod. And of the many who
accomplished so much in their study and defense of the Scriptures, the Rev. Dr.
R. Laird Harris was easily among the most notable of these scholars.
Robert
Laird Harris was born on 10 March 1911 in Brownsburg, Pennsylvania. He received
a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Delaware in 1931, a Th.B.
from Westminster Theological Seminary in 1935 and a Th.M. from Westminster in
1937. He was licensed in 1935 by the New Castle Presbytery of the Presbyterian
Church in the U.S.A. (PCUSA), and ordained in June 1936 in the Presbyterian
Church of America [the original name of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church (OPC)]
at that denomination’s first General Assembly.
He
left the OPC late in 1937 to join the newly formed Bible Presbyterian Church.
Harris then received an A.M. degree from the University of Pennsylvania in
1941, and was later part-time instructor in Hebrew there from 1946 to 1947. He
obtained his Ph.D. from Dropsie in 1947. Biblical exegesis was Dr. Harris’s
field and he taught this for twenty years at Faith Theological Seminary, first
as instructor (1937 – 1943), then as assistant professor (1943 – 1947) and
finally as professor (1947 – 1956).
Dr.
Harris served as moderator of the Bible Presbyterian Synod in 1956, the year in
which the denomination divided. Harris defended the validity of
church-controlled agencies against those who insisted on independent agencies,
and he was one of many faculty members to resign from Faith Seminary that year.
He became at that time one of the founding faculty members of Covenant
Theological Seminary. He was professor there and chairman of the Old Testament
department from 1956 until he retired from full-time teaching in 1981. He
remained an occasional lecturer at Covenant, and was also a lecturer in Japan,
Korea, and Taiwan and a visiting professor in India, Hong Kong and Germany
following his retirement, while also working on further revisions to the New
International Version translation of the Bible.
He
remained active in church leadership, serving as chairman of the fraternal
relations committee of the Bible Presbyterian Church, Columbus Synod during the
late 1950s, when discussion began concerning union between the BPC, Columbus
Synod and the Reformed Presbyterian Church in North America, General Synod. He
remained on that committee through 1965, seeing the effort through to the
culmination of ecclesiastical union with the creation of the Reformed
Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod (RPCES). In 1982, the RPCES joined the
Presbyterian Church in America and Dr. Harris was elected moderator that year
for the 10th General Assembly of the PCA.
Harris
was not only a teacher and church leader, but a prolific author as well. He
published an Introductory Hebrew Grammar, the prize-winningInspiration and Canonicity of the Bible, and additional
works such as Your Bible and Man–God’s Eternal Creation. He was editor
of The Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament and a
contributing editor to the Zondervan
Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, and wrote articles for
the Wycliffe Bible Commentary and Expositor’s Bible. Also, as noted above, Dr. Harris served
as chairman of the Committee on Bible Translation that produced the New International Version of the Bible.
Dr.
Harris’ first wife, Elizabeth K. Nelson, died in 1980. He later married Anne P.
Krauss and they resided for some time in Wilmington, Delaware before declining
health prompted a move to the Quarryville Retirement Home in Quarryville, PA.
Dr. Robert Laird Harris entered glory on 25 April 2008. The
funeral service for Dr. Harris was conducted on 1 May 2008 at the Faith
Reformed Presbyterian Church, Quarryville, PA, and internment was on 2 May 2008
in the historic cemetery adjacent to the Thompson Memorial Presbyterian Church,
New Hope, Pennsylvania.
Words to Live By:
For those who enter upon the study of the Scriptures, especially at the academic level, there is a hidden pitfall. It is a deadly danger which ultimately springs from pride and the imposition of human intellect upon the very Word of God. By God’s grace, Dr. Harris avoided this pitfall and to his dying day, his heart remained humble before the Lord his God. The Puritan theologian John Owen, in his Biblical Theology, gives an excellent summary of both the problem and the proper, necessary approach that any scholar must maintain in the study of the Scriptures:
For those who enter upon the study of the Scriptures, especially at the academic level, there is a hidden pitfall. It is a deadly danger which ultimately springs from pride and the imposition of human intellect upon the very Word of God. By God’s grace, Dr. Harris avoided this pitfall and to his dying day, his heart remained humble before the Lord his God. The Puritan theologian John Owen, in his Biblical Theology, gives an excellent summary of both the problem and the proper, necessary approach that any scholar must maintain in the study of the Scriptures:
“Wherever fear and caution have
not infused the student’s heart, God is despised. His pleasure is only to dwell
in hearts which tremble at His Word. Light or frivolous perusal of the
Scriptures is a sickness of soul which leads on to the death of atheism. He who
would properly undertake the study of the Bible must keep fixed in his memory,
fastened as it were with nails, that stern warning of the Apostle inHebrews 12:28-29, ‘Let us have grace, whereby we
may serve God acceptably with reverence and Godly fear; for our God is a
consuming fire.’ Truly, ‘the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.’ If
this fear is not experienced in the study of the Word, it will not display
itself in any other facet of life.’
— Biblical Theology, by John Owen (Soli Deo Gloria, 1996), pp. 699-700
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