John W. Robbins, editor Trade paperback, 150 pages, 1989
Gordon Clark has been called the dean of American Christian
philosophers; he penned more than 40 books; he taught thousands of students
at six colleges, universities, and seminaries; yet few people today seem to
know much about him. This collection of 20 essays is written by those who knew
him best – his children, friends, colleagues, and students.
Contents: The Witness, Edmund P. Clowney; The Early Butler
Years, Mary Crumpacker; Life with Father, Part 1, Elizabeth Clark George; Memories
of a Father-in-law, Wyatt George; The Man I Remember, Sharon Ritchey Gingrich;
The Cold, Hard Facts, Ruth Bell Graham; Gordon Clark at the Vatican, Janet Glenn
Gray; The Early Years, Anna Marie Hafer; A Wide and Deep Swath, Carl F. H. Henry;
A Colleague and Player of Chess, J. C. Keister; Gordon Clark, A Teacher, Deborah
Pattison Kozlowski; A Theological Giant, Harold Lindsell; Clark and Contemporary
Thought, Ronald Nash; Valiant-for-Truth, Joseph Pattison; How You Can Meet Gordon
Clark, John W. Robbins; A Truly Great and Brilliant Friend, Robert K. Rudolph;
A Sense of the Holiness of God, John W. Sanderson; The Proper Use of the Mind,
Roland G. Usher, Jr.; Absolute Truth, William Young; “Cordially, G H C,”
Dwight Zeller; Life with Father, Part 2, Lois Clark Zeller; Logic and Chocolate
Ice Cream, Samuel Zinaich; Index
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