9 April 1985 A.D. Mr. (Rev. Dr. Prof.) Gordon Haddon Clark Passes
9
April 1985 A.D. Mr.
(Rev. Dr. Prof.) Gordon Haddon Clark Passes
Gordon Haddon Clark was born
on August 31, 1902, the only son of the Rev. David Scott Clark and Elizabeth
Haddon Clark. Gordon’s father had graduated in 1887 from Princeton Theological
Seminary and after pastoring two other Philadelphia area churches, was now
pastor of Bethel Presbyterian Church at the time of Gordon’s birth. The Rev.
D.S. Clark remained as the pastor of Bethel until the time of his death in 1939
and so Gordon was truly “brought up in the shadow of the Bethel Presbyterian
Church.”
Gordon Clark profited
immensely both from the Christian home in which he was raised and also from the
superior educational system of his day. At home, he was taught the Westminster
Shorter Catechism by his father and he took full advantage of access to his
father’s library, familiarizing himself with the writiings of Calvin, Warfield
and Hodge. At school, though only enrolled in a vocational high school, he was
given an extensive education which included both Latin and French.
He went on to graduate from
the University of Pennsylvania in 1924 with a Bachelor’s degree, and again
graduated from the same institution in 1929 with a Ph.D. in philosophy. In
March of 1929 he married Ruth Schmidt, his wife of 48 years and to this
marriage two children were born, Lois Antoinette and Nancy Elizabeth. Upon
graduation, Dr. Clark took a position as Instructor of Philosophy at the
University of Pennsylvania from 1929 to 1936. Additional study at the Sorbonne
in Paris took place during these same years. From 1936 to 1944 he served as
Professor of Philosophy at Wheaton College in Wheaton, IL.
On August 9, 1944 Dr. Clark
was ordained into the ministry of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church by the
Presbytery of Philadelphia. He served as Stated Supply at the Trinity OPC
Church of Cincinnati, OH while also working as Professor of Philosophy at
Butler University. While remaining in his post at Butler until 1973, he left
the OPC and was received on October 14, 1948 by the Presbytery of Indiana of
the United Presbyterian Church of North America (UPCNA). From 1958 to 1965 he
pastored the First UPCNA Church of Indianapolis, IN, which church soon moved
with him to affiliate with the Reformed Presbyterian Church in North America,
General Synod, Dr. Clark having been received by the Western Presbytery of the
RPCNA, GS on October 29, 1957.
The RPCNA,GS was a very small
denomination, but Dr. Clark was one of several men responsible for significant
growth in the denomination during the 1950′s. He later supported the move to
merge the RPCNA,GS with the Bible Presbyterian Church, Columbus Synod. This
latter group was the larger wing of the 1956 division of the Bible Presbyterian
Church, originally formed in 1937 in division from the Orthodox Presbyterian
Church. In 1961 the Columbus Synod renamed itself the Evangelical Presbyterian
Church, holding this name from 1961 until the 1965 union with the RPCNA,GS. The
resulting denomination was now know as the Reformed Presbyterian Church,
Evangelical Synod (RPCES).
[Later, when the RPCES merged
in 1982 with the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA), Clark choose not to join
the PCA, but instead transferred his ministerial credentials into the
unaffiliated Covenant Presbytery. That transfer occurred on 14 May 1983, and
his ministerial affiliation remained there until his death.]
During all of this
ecclesiastical activity, Dr. Clark continued in his position as Professor of
Philosophy at Butler University, working there until 1973. It was during his
tenure at Butler that some of his best works were written and published. Thales
to Dewey [1957] remains an important college-level introduction to
philosophy. Other titles written during this same period include A
Christian View of Men and Things [1952]; Religion, Reason and
Revelation [1961]; Karl Barth’s Theological Method [1963]; What
Do Presbyterians Believe? [1965] and Biblical Predestination [1969].
In 1974 Dr. Clark finally left
Indianapolis and Butler University, having served there as Chairman of the
Department of Philosophy from 1945 until his retirement in 1973. With the start
of the 1974 academic year, he begin teaching at Covenant College in Lookout Mountain,
GA. He remained there for ten years, while also teaching during the summers at
the Sangre de Cristo Seminary in Westcliffe, CO and intermittently at the
Reformed Episcopal Seminary in Philadelphia, PA.
The Rev. Dr. Gordon Haddon
Clark died on April 9, 1985, after a brief serious illness. Dr.
Clark’s wife, Ruth, had died in 1977, preceding Dr. Clark by some 9 years. At
the time of his death, Dr. Clark was survived by his two daughters and their
husbands, 12 grandchildren and one great grand-daughter. Funeral services for
Dr. Clark were held on April 11, 1985 at the Sangre de Cristo Church in
Westcliffe, CO.
Dr. Clark was the author of
over 33 books and numerous articles and had been a founder of the Evangelical
Theological Society. When discussion began in 1980 towards the union of the
Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod (RPCES) and the Presbyterian
Church in America (PCA), Dr. Clark found himself an opponent of that merger,
perhaps in part because the plan also entailed the simultaneous union of the
Orthodox Presbyterian Church. While the OPC did not come into the merger, the
1982 joining and receiving of the RPCES into the PCA left Dr. Clark with the
decision to be dismissed by the Tennessee Valley Presbytery of the PCA on
September 11, 1982. He was received by the unaffiliated Covenant Presbytery in
May, 1983.
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