History for a Pilgrim People

Why History Matters for a Pilgrim People

1 h 2 min · 13 de ene de 2026
Portada del episodio Why History Matters for a Pilgrim People

Descripción

In this inaugural episode of History for a Pilgrim People, OPC historian Camden Bucey and Danny Olinger introduce the vision of the series and explain why the Orthodox Presbyterian Church treats history as a living inheritance rather than a merely academic exercise.

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6 episodios

episode The Division of 1937, Part 2 artwork

The Division of 1937, Part 2

In the sixth episode of History for a Pilgrim People, Camden Bucey and Danny Olinger continue their discussion of the earliest years of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, returning to the events surrounding the division of 1937. The conversation begins with a brief return to the previous episode’s discussion of the tensions already present in the young Presbyterian Church of America. Camden and Danny then consider the death of J. Gresham Machen on January 1, 1937, and the profound sense of loss felt by the church. With Machen gone, long-developing disputes over dispensationalism, premillennialism, total abstinence, the Independent Board for Presbyterian Foreign Missions, and the meaning of Reformed Presbyterian identity came into sharper focus. They also discuss the roles of figures such as Carl McIntire, J. Oliver Buswell, R. B. Kuiper, Ned B. Stonehouse, Cornelius Van Til, and others in the controversy. The episode traces how the Third General Assembly responded to these questions, why the separation became unavoidable, and how the Bible Presbyterian Synod emerged from the conflict. Along the way, Camden and Danny reflect on the broader patterns of American Presbyterian history, the recurring echoes of old school and new school tensions, and the significance of Christian liberty, confessional integrity, and visible unity in the life of the church. Watch on YouTube [https://youtu.be/i6AtzBDRh-8] CHAPTERS * 0:00 Introduction * 1:01 Picking up the division of 1937 * 3:06 Ordinations, covenant children, and Richard Gaffin’s 90th birthday * 6:16 R. B. Kuiper’s report and the Scofield Bible controversy * 10:02 Dutch influence, Stonehouse, Murray, and the Guardian * 11:42 Premillennialism, dispensationalism, and Carl McIntire’s response * 14:34 Power struggles and the Independent Board * 17:26 Machen’s final trip and death in North Dakota * 20:38 Stonehouse’s eulogy: “We have become orphans” * 23:47 Three issues before the Third General Assembly * 24:08 Property, the 1903 revisions, and the Westminster Standards * 29:19 Total abstinence and Christian liberty * 34:10 Dispensationalism and the Independent Board for Presbyterian Foreign Missions * 38:22 The Third General Assembly of 1937 * 42:08 The split and the formation of the Bible Presbyterian Synod * 43:48 Old School and New School echoes in Presbyterian history * 48:56 Stonehouse, McIntire, and later ecumenical efforts * 51:24 Looking ahead to 1938 and the naming of the OPC * 53:03 Closing remarks History for a Pilgrim People is a podcast of the Committee for the Historian of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.

Ayer54 min