Teaching by example; the Christian way of life. |
Clarence Larkin American Baptist pastor, Bible teacher, and
writer, Clarence Larkin was born
When he was 21
years old, he left the bank and went to college, graduating as a mechanical
engineer. He continued as a professional draftsman for a while, then he became a teacher of the blind. This
last endeavor cultivated his descriptive faculties -- something God would later
use in him to produce a monumental work on dispensational theology. Later,
failing health compelled him to give up his teaching career. After a prolonged
rest, he became a manufacturer.
But he was not
happy. He felt that God wanted him in the Gospel ministry. When he was
converted he had become a member of the Episcopal Church, but in 1882, at the
age of 32, he became a Baptist and was ordained as a Baptist minister two years
later. He went directly from business into the ministry.
His first
charge was at
When World War
I broke out in 1914, he was called on for addresses on The War and Prophecy.
Then God laid it on his heart to prepare a work on Dispensational Truth (or
God's Plan and Purpose in the Ages), containing a number of charts with
descriptive matter. He spent three years of his life designing and drawing the
charts and preparing the text. The favorable reception it has had since it was
first published in 1918 seems to indicate that the world was waiting for such a
book.
Because it had
a large and wide circulation in this and other lands, the first edition was
soon exhausted. It was followed by a second edition, and then, realizing that
the book was of permanent value, Larkin revised it and expanded it, printing it
in its present form. Larkin followed this masterpiece with other books: Rightly Dividing the Word, The Book of Daniel, Spirit World, Second
Coming of Christ, and A Medicine Chest for Christian Practitioners, a handbook
on evangelism.
Larkin, a kind
and gentle man, deplored the tendency of writers to say uncharitable things
about each other, so he earnestly sought to avoid criticisms and to satisfy
himself with simply presenting his understanding of the Scriptures. Though he
did not intend to publish his own works, the Lord led in that direction. During
the last five years of his life, the demand for Larkin's books made it
necessary for him to give up the pastorate and devote his full time to writing.
He went to be with the Lord on
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