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Born in Rendham, Massachusetts on March 13, 1918, Thomas G. Cross was educated at Hampton Sydney College and went on to prepare for the ministry at Faith Theological Seminary. In a ministerial career that spanned fifty years, the Rev. Thomas G. Cross was instrumental in establishing forty churches across the United States. He was ordained by the Bible Presbyterian denomination in 1943 and from 1948 to 1953, served as General Secretary for the National Presbyterian Missions agency. Among his published works is a concise history of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod.
The last years of his life were devoted to developing a pleasant and affordable retirement center primarily for the widows of Calvary and Palmetto Presbyteries. Bailey Manor, as it was named, in Clinton, South Carolina, was created from a former hospital. The Rev. Thomas G. Cross passed away on May 12, 1994.
Dr. Cross was survived by his widow, four sons and a large extended family including three brothers, David, Howard, and Walter G., Jr., all of whom also became PCA teaching elders. David, the youngest of the Cross brothers, has graciously supplied us today with his own recollections of his brother Thomas:—
Rev. Dr. Thomas G. Cross – March 13, 1918 – May 12, 1994
by his youngest brother, David Cross.
Tom was almost 24 years old and had been married to Jane for almost 2 years when I was born, so my earliest recollections of Tom are of his visits to our parents’ home in Scranton, PA. We sat around the kitchen table as he told stories about driving the length and breadth of the United States and even into Canada to help small groups of people who wanted to form a Bible Presbyterian Church. Many of those churches are now part of the Presbyterian Church in America. The skills in business affairs that he learned from our father were valuable assets in the things he did for those churches.
Tom was the General Secretary (Chief Operating Officer) of National Missions, the church planting agency of the denomination. As the ministry grew, Tom moved it to St Louis, where Covenant College and Seminary were starting and at the time was the center of the country based on population.
Soon after that move increasing tinnitus exacerbated by air travel and the needs of a family of four boys, motivated him to accept a call to the Bible Presbyterian Church in Greenville, SC. But his interest in church planting never dimmed. He became the founding pastor of Mitchell Road PCA as well as encouraging the planting of several other churches in that part of the state.
When he retired from Mitchell Road he moved to Columbia, SC to start yet another church. Then returned to Greenville where he helped a struggling church to get moving.
For years he, and some like-minded men had been working on the idea of having a retirement home for people of average means. The right location seemed to elude them until a redundant hospital building became available in Clinton, SC. Tom and Jane sold their lovely home and moved into one of the first available apartments converted from old hospital rooms in Bailey Manor, which at the time was still a building site.
My last recollection of Tom was his visit to England in 1993. I was serving there with Mission To the World. He came for the 350th anniversary celebration of the formation of the Westminster Assembly. He preached in the tiny church we were planting in Chelmsford and he wanted to know about things, even the small businesses that operated from trailers and sold tea and sandwiches alongside the highways.
Tom never lost his enthusiasm for the spread of the gospel, nor his interest in the people who surrounded him. His example has been a challenge to me for my whole life.
Words to Live By:
Tom Cross never lost his enthusiasm for the spread of the gospel. Do you, as a reader of this post, have an enthusiasm for the spread of the gospel? After all, that is what the Great Commission is all about, starting in your home town (your Jerusalem), going to your county or state (your Judea), including parts of your living area which may be on the adverse side of life (your Samaria), and going through support of foreign missionaries, or going yourself to the other parts of the world. May we all have Tom Cross’ testimony, that of being on fire for the spread of the gospel.
A Plea for Ministers and Money
by Rev. David T. Myers
Most of us can remember Paul’s vision which he experienced on his second missionary journey of a man who called out to the apostle, saying, “Come over to Macedonia and help us.” (NIV – Acts 16:9) Well, we don’t have any record of any visionary request for help, but early Presbyterians in this blessed land did correspond with Presbyterians in the mother country just two years after the organization of the Presbytery of Philadelphia in 1707. There is a letter written on May 11, 1709 to Presbyterians in London, England from the Presbyterian ministers in the Philadelphia Presbytery appealing for more men and money to help the infant Presbyterian Church get off the ground. Listen to the pathos in their words:
“Unto whom can we apply ourselves more fitly than unto our fathers, who have been extolled in the reformed churches for their large bounty and benevolence in their necessities! We doubt not, but if the sum of about two hundred pounds per annum, were raised for the encouragement of ministers in these parts, it would enable ministers and people to erect eight congregations, and ourselves put in better circumstances than hitherto we have been. We are at present seven ministers, most of whose outward affairs are so straightened as to crave relief, unto which, if two or three more were added, it would greatly strengthen our interest, which does miserably suffer, as things are at present are among us.
“Sir, if we shall be supplied with ministers from you, which we earnestly desire; with your benevolence to the value above, you may be assured of our fidelity and Christian care in distributing it to the best ends and purposes we can, so as we hope we shall be able to give a just and fair account for every part of it to yourself and others, by our letters to you.
“That our evangelical affairs may be the better managed, we have formed ourselves into a Presbytery, annually convened. It is a sore distress and trouble unto us, that we are not able to comply with the desires of sundry places, crying unto us for ministers. Therefore we earnestly beseech you to intercede with the ministers of London, to extend their charity to us, otherwise many people will remain in a perishing condition as to spiritual things.”
It is obvious that the seven ministers of the Presbytery of Philadelphia certainly saw that the fields of America were ripe unto harvest. They also sadly realized that the laborers were few so as to reap that spiritual harvest. And so they, in a spirit of prayer, asked for both ministers and money to take advantage of the opportunities for a wide and effective service in the American colonies.
It would be at a later date in the history of the American church, indeed several decades from this date, that the question of where you were trained educationally became an issue in the visible church. But at this early date in American Presbyterian history, they were at a critical crossroads, as the letter above proves. They needed more pastors and more money to support those who were present in ministering to the masses.
Words to Live By: Such a prayer and plea as this is never outdated, even in current America. We might add the adjective “faithful” before the men who are needed in our conservative Presbyterian and Reformed church bodies, but the need is the same. Will you be a prayer warrior before our Sovereign God and heavenly Father for Him to thrust out faithful laborers into the harvest fields?
THE SCHOOL & FAMILY CATECHIST
by Rev. William Smith (1934)
The Westminster Shorter Catechism, Questions 98 & 99.
Q. 98. What is prayer?
A. Prayer is an offering up of our desires unto God, for things agreeable to his will, in the name of Christ, with confession of our sins, and thankful acknowledgment of his mercies.
EXPLICATION.
An offering up of our desires. –Prayer is so called, because the words of our mouths, without the earnest desires of our hearts accompanying them, are but empty unmeaning sounds in God’s ears, the prayer of the wicked, which he himself has declared to be an abomination unto him.
Agreeable to his will. –To desire any thing agreeable to God’s will, is to ask only what he has, in his Word, promised to give, –that is, temporal mercies, as far as we really stand in need of them, –and spiritual blessings; but the latter ought always to occupy the chief place in our desires.
In the name of Christ. –We are to pray to God in the name of Christ, or for Christ’s sake, because our distance from God, by reason of the sinfulness of our natures, is so great, that we cannot come before him, or into his presence, without the help of a Mediator, or one to plead our cause with him. This also signifies, that we hope to obtain mercy, or the pardon of our sins, from God, for the sake of Christ.
Confession of our sins. –Owning sincerely before God, that we are exceedingly guilty in his sight, and being grieved on account of our sins.
With thankful acknowledgement of his mercies. –Returning thanks to God for the favors and the blessings, both to our bodies and to our souls, which, through Christ, he has bestowed upon us.
ANALYSIS.
The information here received, respecting the nature of prayer, may be divided into five particulars.
1. That prayer is an offering up of our desires unto God. –Psal. lxii. 8. Trust in him at all times, ye people; pour out your heart before him: God is a refuge for us.
2. That it must only be for things agreeable to God’s will. –1 John v. 14. If we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us.
3. That we ought always to pray in the name of Christ. –John xvi. 23. Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father, in my name, he will give it to you.
4. That our petitions, or requests, should be accompanied with the confession of our sins. –Dan. ix. 4. I prayed unto the Lord my God, and made my confession.
5. That we should always, in our prayers, also acknowledge God’s mercies with thankfulness. –Phil. iv. 6. Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God.
Q. 99. What rule hath God given for our direction in prayer?
A. The whole Word of God is of use to direct us in prayer, but the special rule of direction is that form of prayer, which Christ taught his disciples, commonly called the Lord’s prayer.
EXPLICATION.
The special rule of direction. –The principal guide, or most complete pattern for us to imitate.
The Lord’s prayer. –This form of prayer is thus named, because Christ himself taught it to his disciples at their request, not however as a form which they were always to follow without alteration, but as a pattern to direct them in the performance of this duty.
ANALYSIS.
The information here received is threefold :
1. That we need a rule to direct us, how to proceed, in the duty of prayer. –Rom. viii. 26. We know not what we should pray for as we ought.
2. That the whole Word of God is useful for this purpose. –John v. 14. If we ask any thing according to his will, (that is God’s Word, in which his will is revealed,) he heareth us.
3. That the Lord’s prayer, or that form which Christ taught his disciples, is a special rule of direction in this duty. –Matt. vi. 9-13. After this manner, therefore, pray ye: Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, &c.
by Rev. William Smith (1934)
The Westminster Shorter Catechism, Questions 98 & 99.
Q. 98. What is prayer?
A. Prayer is an offering up of our desires unto God, for things agreeable to his will, in the name of Christ, with confession of our sins, and thankful acknowledgment of his mercies.
EXPLICATION.
An offering up of our desires. –Prayer is so called, because the words of our mouths, without the earnest desires of our hearts accompanying them, are but empty unmeaning sounds in God’s ears, the prayer of the wicked, which he himself has declared to be an abomination unto him.
Agreeable to his will. –To desire any thing agreeable to God’s will, is to ask only what he has, in his Word, promised to give, –that is, temporal mercies, as far as we really stand in need of them, –and spiritual blessings; but the latter ought always to occupy the chief place in our desires.
In the name of Christ. –We are to pray to God in the name of Christ, or for Christ’s sake, because our distance from God, by reason of the sinfulness of our natures, is so great, that we cannot come before him, or into his presence, without the help of a Mediator, or one to plead our cause with him. This also signifies, that we hope to obtain mercy, or the pardon of our sins, from God, for the sake of Christ.
Confession of our sins. –Owning sincerely before God, that we are exceedingly guilty in his sight, and being grieved on account of our sins.
With thankful acknowledgement of his mercies. –Returning thanks to God for the favors and the blessings, both to our bodies and to our souls, which, through Christ, he has bestowed upon us.
ANALYSIS.
The information here received, respecting the nature of prayer, may be divided into five particulars.
1. That prayer is an offering up of our desires unto God. –Psal. lxii. 8. Trust in him at all times, ye people; pour out your heart before him: God is a refuge for us.
2. That it must only be for things agreeable to God’s will. –1 John v. 14. If we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us.
3. That we ought always to pray in the name of Christ. –John xvi. 23. Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father, in my name, he will give it to you.
4. That our petitions, or requests, should be accompanied with the confession of our sins. –Dan. ix. 4. I prayed unto the Lord my God, and made my confession.
5. That we should always, in our prayers, also acknowledge God’s mercies with thankfulness. –Phil. iv. 6. Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God.
Q. 99. What rule hath God given for our direction in prayer?
A. The whole Word of God is of use to direct us in prayer, but the special rule of direction is that form of prayer, which Christ taught his disciples, commonly called the Lord’s prayer.
EXPLICATION.
The special rule of direction. –The principal guide, or most complete pattern for us to imitate.
The Lord’s prayer. –This form of prayer is thus named, because Christ himself taught it to his disciples at their request, not however as a form which they were always to follow without alteration, but as a pattern to direct them in the performance of this duty.
ANALYSIS.
The information here received is threefold :
1. That we need a rule to direct us, how to proceed, in the duty of prayer. –Rom. viii. 26. We know not what we should pray for as we ought.
2. That the whole Word of God is useful for this purpose. –John v. 14. If we ask any thing according to his will, (that is God’s Word, in which his will is revealed,) he heareth us.
3. That the Lord’s prayer, or that form which Christ taught his disciples, is a special rule of direction in this duty. –Matt. vi. 9-13. After this manner, therefore, pray ye: Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, &c.
It was at the momentous Syracuse, N.Y. meeting of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. where Dr. J. Gresham Machen was officially defrocked from the ministry of that denomination. That action in turn then prompted the founding of what was to become the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. Also in attendance at that General Assembly in Syracuse was one of Machen’s many adversaries, Dr. Charles R. Erdman, a man who was by all accounts staunchly evangelical. Yet he found himself in opposition to the course taken by Dr. Machen— he found himself siding with those very men who took a decidedly modernist and unbelieving approach to the Scriptures.
The Syracuse Herald gave some coverage of Dr. Erdman’s visit to his birthplace in Fayetteville, NY that year, noting:
“Dr. Erdman was born in Fayetteville [7/20/1866], where his father was a Presbyterian minister, but when he was three weeks old, his parents moved to another charge.
“In spite of the short time Dr. Erdman was a resident of the Onandaga County village, however, he has frequently visited his birthplace and this week, before the adjournment of the General Assembly which he is attending, he will again visit his birthplace, he said Saturday.
“Dr. Erdman’s father, the Rev. William Jacob Erdman, preached in the same church, and lived in the same manse as did the father of Grover Cleveland, former President of the United States. His youngest daughter is the wife of Francis Grover Cleveland, son of the late former President.
“The greater part of Dr. Erdman’s boyhood was passed in Jamestown. He also lived in Chicago where his father was pastor of Dwight L. Moody’s church. He was graduated from Princeton University in 1886 and from Princeton Seminary in 1891. He holds [honorary] doctor’s degrees from Wooster College, Princeton University and Davidson College.
“For six years following his ordination in 1891 he was pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Overbook, Pa. Then he became pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Germantown, Pa., where he remained until 1906 when he became a Princeton professor.
“He became a member of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions in 1906 and in 1926 was elected as president, an office he still holds. He was elected moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly in 1925. In the same year he was moderator of the New Brunswick Presbytery. In 1910 he was a delegate tot he World Missionary Conference in Edinburgh and in 1922 to the National Christian Council in Shanghai.
“He is the author of many books, including The Ruling Elder, Sunday Afternoon with a Railroad Man, Coming to the Communion, Within the Gates of the Far East, The Return of Christ, The Lord We Love, The Spirit of Christ, The Life of D.L. Moody, and expositions of most of the books of the New Testament.
“Dr. Erdman’s wife was Miss Estelle Pardee of Germantown, daugher of a widely-known coal operator. His son, the Rev. Calvin Pardee Erdman, also a Presbyterian minister, has preached in Hawaii and California….
“The Erdmans have a summer home at Saranac Lake.”
Embedded in that newspaper account are a few clues for the observant reader as to why Dr. Erdman found himself an opponent of Machen. Erdman had become attached to the denominational board of foreign missions, and Machen had been critical of that Board for fielding missionaries who held low views of Scripture. Moreover, Erdman’s personal and family connection to D.L. Moody might indicate a faith and a theology that was more generally evangelical and less confessional or Reformed in nature. Politics may also have had a part. By familial connection with Grover Cleveland, Dr. Erdman may have been a Democrat, whereas J. Gresham Machen was decidedly libertarian in his views and more of a political free-thinker.
Charles Rosenbury Erdman died in 1960, though we are still working to determine the exact date of his death. Surprisingly, even the Princeton Theological Seminary archives collection under Erdman’s name only provides the year of his death. We have found some indication that he died on this day, May 8th, in 1960, but that conclusion is still unconfirmed. Even his gravestone only provides the year of his death.
Words to Live By: Why some men make the decisions they do is often a puzzle beyond our understanding. In pondering this point, we realize how much we must seek to live humbly in the fear of the Lord, for there are times when it takes a clear head and a resolute faith if we are to stand fast on the sure counsel of God’s Word. Too many of us are shaped by our associations, much more so than we realize. Seek instead to be shaped by the Word of God. Live each day as honestly as possible, confessing your sin, repenting and seeking the Lord’s mercy and grace.
We Thank God on Every Remembrance of You
When Professor John Murray retired from Westminster to return to his beloved land of Scotland, he attended for the last time the General Assembly of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church in 1966. The delegates there gave a memorial to him which captured the man and his ministry perfectly when it simply quoted the Pauline expression, “We thank God on every remembrance of you.” That said it all to their fellow minister.
Fast forward in your mind nine years to the Free Church of Creich in Scotland and its cemetery where the remains of John Murray were being buried in 1975. Five hundred people from all over the world had gathered to hear the memorial messages. A prince of Israel had indeed fallen on May 8, 1975.
Between these two events, John Murray had served his country in World War I, where he had fought with the famous Black Watch regiment. The loss of his eye came from that time of military service.
Education included the M.A. degree from Glasglow University in 1923. Then his ministerial degree (the older ThB) and Th.M. came from Princeton Theological Seminary in the United States. Returning to Scotland at New College at Edinburgh University, he returned to Princeton Seminary at a pivotal year, namely, 1929. That year, Princeton’s Board of Trustees was reorganized and Westminster Theological Seminary was begun. John Murray joined the faculty of Westminster Seminary.
From that time until his retirement in 1966, hundreds of students sat under this “saintly scholar.” He really equipped the student saints to go forth and minister the Word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ on a sound foundation of Biblical truth. John Murray also capsulized that same Biblical truth in several books he wrote. It might be interesting to sum up those books, which this contributor used all during his pastoral ministry.
Church officers in our Reformed churches would do well to have a firm understanding of both Christian Baptism, and Divorce. Both of course would be profitable to the Christian in the pew as well. All those with the gift of evangelism, as well as Evangelism teams going out weekly, must have an understanding of the book Redemption Accomplish and Applied. In fact, all Christians should read this book. Then Principles of Conduct are a reminder of the Christian life. If any book of the Bible is a “must” book to consider the themes of sin, salvation, sanctification, sovereign election, and service, the book of Romans fills those themes perfectly. And Murray’s commentary on The Epistle to the Romans is just what is needed to comprehend the great apostle’s words and thoughts.
After John Murray retired in 1966, after having lived 68 years as a bachelor, he took a wife, Miss Valerie Knowlton on December 7, 1967. To the surprise of some, she was not Scottish, but rather was a New Englander, born and raised in the State of Maine. Two children would be born to the union.
Words to Live By: John Murray had many “children of the faith” in his years in teaching in this Reformed school of the prophets. Let them remember him in their current ministries as they pass on what they have heard to others also who will be able to teach still others in the history of the church.