Arthur Pink
1886-1952
Arthur Pink is often described as an
eccentric. He didn't really fit in anywhere. Converted to Christ out of a
theosophical background (the New Age movement of his day), he became a
student of Puritan thought. But his efforts at pastoring churches and
evangelization were not successful. Nor did his books sell. A monthly
magazine that he edited called Studies in the Scriptures, never
topped a circulation of 1,000. The last sixteen years of his life, he spent
on the Isle of Lewis, Scotland, in virtual isolation, having no formal
association with any church.
Explaining his hermit-like
existence, he quoted Jesus as saying, "If the world hate you, ye know that
it hated me before it hated you." He went on to ask, "What world hated
Christ and hounded him to death? The religious world, those who pretended to
be most zealous for God's glory." He seemed to take pride in his
"persecution," although some of the men he disagreed with were among the
greatest Christians of the century.
Nonetheless, Arthur came to have a
significant influence. Upholding Calvinism, he countered a growing trend
toward acceptance of Arminian views, even in churches like the Baptists that
had traditionally been Calvinist. (In simplified terms, Arminians emphasize
man's free choice in salvation; Calvinists insist on God's complete
sovereignty.)
From his remote hideaway, Arthur
issued his scripture studies. He also hand-wrote letters in response to many
questions that came his way, sometimes more than forty letters a week. His
scripture studies and the Bible studies sparkled with quotable gems.
For example,
on this day, March 14, 1937 he wrote in a letter, "Neither the
nearness nor the remoteness of Christ's return is a rule to regulate us in
the ordering of our temporal affairs. Spiritual preparedness is the great
matter."
After his death in 1953, Arthur's
Bible studies began to be reprinted. Today there are dozens of these on the
market, with sales in the hundreds of thousands. Many of them appear on the
web. Their many thoughtful sayings make them memorable:
"The trend of modern theology--if
theology it can be called--is ever toward the deification of the creature
rather than the glorification of the Creator."
"We do not ask, Is Christ your
'Savior,' but is He, really and truly, your Lord? If He be not your Lord,
then most certainly He is not your 'Savior.' "
"Nothing is too great and nothing is
too small to commit into the hands of the Lord."
Through his writings, Arthur Pink
had more success after his death than in his life.
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