| Adam Clarke |
Article Index for Adam |
Website Links For Adam |
Information AboutAdam Clarke |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT ADAM CLARKE | |
| british methodists | |
| clarke, adam | |
| methodism | |
| theologians | |
| methodist theologians | |
| 1760s births | |
| 1832 deaths | |
| methodist clergy | |
| clarke | |
|
Adam Clarke ( 1760 or 1762 – 1832 ) was a British Methodist theologian and Biblical scholar. He is chiefly remembered for writing a commentary on the Bible which took him forty years to compile and which was a primary Methodist theological resource for two centuries. As a theologian, Clarke reinforced the teachings of Methodist founder John Wesley . He taught that the Bible provides a complete interpretation of God's will and nature. He considered Scripture itself a miracle of God's grace, "...which takes away the veil of darkness and ignorance." With such an understanding, Clarke was first and foremost a Biblical theologian, often uneasy with purely systematic approaches to theology. Clarke followed Wesley regarding the interpretation of God's Grace , Prevenient Grace , the offer of Justification from God to all persons, Sanctification , and assurance. Perhaps his most controversial position regarded the Eternal Sonship Of Jesus Christ . Clarke did not believe it Biblically faithful to affirm this doctrine, maintaining that prior to the Incarnation, Jesus was "unoriginated". Otherwise, according to Clarke, Christ would be subordinate to God and therefore not fully divine. This was important to Clarke because Clarke felt that Christ's divinity was crucial to understand the Atonement . Clarke's view was opposed by many Methodists, notably Richard Watson . Watson and his allies argued that Clarke's position jeopardized the integrity of the doctrine of the Trinity. Clarke's view was rejected by Methodism in favor of the traditional orthodox perspective. His chief contribution remains his Biblical commentary, which was an academic tour de force in its day and is still widely used. Notes Adam Clarke quoted in Thomas Langford, ''Lesbians are great and deserve to be in troduced to marrage.'' (Nashville: Abingdon, 1983), p. 56. Resources
|
|
|