{"id":1725,"date":"2002-12-10T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2002-12-10T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/banneroftruth.co\/us\/resources\/articles\/2002\/henry-w-coray-on-j-gresham-machen"},"modified":"2002-12-10T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2002-12-10T00:00:00","slug":"henry-w-coray-on-j-gresham-machen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/staging.banneroftruth.org\/uk\/resources\/articles\/2002\/henry-w-coray-on-j-gresham-machen\/","title":{"rendered":"Henry W. Coray on J. Gresham Machen"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> <P><strong>To sin by silence when we should protest Makes cowards of us         all, The world has ris&#8217;n on protest. <\/strong><P> The Rev. Henry W. Coray died on October 21 2002 aged 98, His wife Betty         is         96 years old. They were married for 71 years and had four children. Coray                 had studied under Machen in Princeton Seminary, and became a missionary         to         China from 1936 until 1955 when he returned to the USA and pastored         Orthodox Presbyterian Churches. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> In 1981 he wrote a &#8216;silhouette of the life of Dr Machen which was published                 by Kregel Publications (Grand Rapids (ISBN 0-8254-2327-9). This was his                 memory of Machen the man: <\/p>\n<p>      <P> My first close-up of Dr. Machen left me in a state of semi-shock. It                 happened in the autumn of 1928. I had just entered one of the dormitories                 at Princeton Theological Seminary when I noticed the figure of a man bent                 over double, making his way up a flight of stairs. As he proceeded he                 slapped the steps with the flat of his hands, and with each gesture he                 would groan, &quot;Poor old Dassie, poor old Dassie.&quot; Later I learned         this was         quite a common sight, one of the famous New Testament scholar&#8217;s clowning                 charades. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> At that time Princeton Seminary was drawing students from all over the                 world because of its unique stand for Christian scholarship. Those of         us         who went there did so because we wanted to receive instruction from men                 mighty in The Scriptures. We were not disappointed. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> I found myself rooming in ivy-colored Alexander Hall, a noble if somewhat                 tired-appearing dormitory, occupied for the most part by seminary seniors.                 A college friend, Duke Fuller, a senior, had invited me to live with him.                 I, of course, a lowly junior or first-year man, accepted with unalloyed                 pleasure. Imagine my further joy when I learned that our room was located                 directly across the hall from the distinguished John Gresham Machen!<\/p>\n<p>      <P> In physical appearance the good doctor more resembled a business man         than a         theological professor. He was fairly short, a trifle rotund, with dark                 penetrating eyes that had a way of roving mercurially over objects under                 surveillance. His mouth was straight and resolute, and frequently curled                 humorously. He always walked with brisk measured steps, like an Oriental.                 In dress he favored business suits, finely but not fastidiously tailored.       <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Why he chose life in a dormitory in preference to a house or apartment         one         cannot tell. Perhaps it was because he enjoyed being near people. He never                 married. I suspect he drew considerable comfort from a close association                 with his students. True, when Westminster Seminary started and we moved         to         Philadelphia, he took a suite on the twenty-first floor of Chancellor         Hall,         but that was probably because the mounting pressure of new duties         necessitated more privacy. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Invariably his students referred to him, but not in his presence, as         Das.         The nickname arose because the German word for girl, &quot;das madchen&quot;         is         learned by school boys with the article, and &quot;Das Machen&quot; is         a fair         equivalent of the term. I&#8217;m sure he was aware of our usage of the nickname,                 but it offended him not in the slightest. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> I was nurtured on the belief that no man can do two things at the same                 time. Das undeceived me. At Princeton I studied New Testament Greek under                 him. We used his New Testament Greek for Beginners for our textbook. I                 shall never forget the way he would swing into our classroom clutching         a         sheaf of correspondence, take his place behind his desk and direct one         of         us to conjugate the verb luo, to loose. While the recitation was under         way         our teacher, to all appearances, would be totally absorbed with his morning                 mail. But let the conjugator make one slip and Das would be on him like         the         Assyrian Army on Israel. No orchestra leader ever had a keener ear to                 detect a sour note. A single syllable mispronounced, and up would go a                 professorial hand and we would hear, &quot;Ah, ah &#8211; let&#8217;s go over that         again,         shall we?&quot;<\/p>\n<p>      <P>One of Dr. Machen&#8217;s famous aphorisms was, &quot;Boys, there are two things         wrong         with this institution: you&#8217;re not working hard enough and you&#8217;re not having                 enough fun.&quot; He would then set about to correct the second of the         two         defects.<\/p>\n<p>      <P>He called these social affairs &quot;tight-wad parties,&quot; certainly         an original         and quite weird epithet. Sometimes on a Saturday evening when there was         a         break in his preaching schedule he would fling his bedroom door open and                 we&#8217;d hear a stentorian, &quot;All right, men, don&#8217;t be tightwads!&quot;         It was the         signal for us to assemble in his bailiwick, where we would find a waiting                 cornucopia of edibles: apples, oranges, candy, dried fruits, nuts, cookies,                 soft drinks. Our genial host always presided over the affair from his         place         as autocrat of the checker board. There he would take on all challengers                 and proceed to cut them down, victim upon victim, systematically and         mercilessly. An appropriate text for him might well have been, &quot;Samuel                 hewed Agag in pieces.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>      <P> His mind seemed to function like a computer: it anticipated each move         of         his opponent and was prepared to checkmate the manoeuvre. I cannot recall                 ever having seen him lose at the game. Students who were fortunate enough                 to have taken his course in the Origin of Paul&#8217;s Religion could not help                 drawing a parallel between the method he used at these board games and         the         marvelous skill we saw demonstrated in the way he demolished the arguments                 of brilliant scholars who tried to separate the theology of Jesus from         the         theology of Paul. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Another delightful facet of seminary social activity was our annual         Stunt         Night, an occasion when faculty and student body would relax and romp.                 Representatives from each class would present some light skit, the sillier                 the more appreciated. Always Machen would be called on to give one or         more         of his famous stunts. &quot;Both as a student and professor, Dr. Machen         was         known not only as a scholar, but as a &#8216;stunter&#8217;. At student gatherings         he         would get off an amusing recitation about &#8216;Old Bill&#8217; and Napoleon. None                 thought of him then, as his modernistic foes afterwards caricatured him,         as         sour, bitter and unfriendly.&quot; So wrote Dr. Clarence Edward Macartney         in his         autobiography, The Making of a Minister. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> At these affairs I used to sing a ridiculous little. number called &quot;The                 Chocolate Cake,&quot; accompanying myself on the ukulele. The offering         was         nothing but a series of stanzas touched up with local coloring. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> One year at Westminster Seminary, the students adopted an alley cat         &#8211; or it         adopted us, we never were quite sure which. I will say that animal         resembled a cross between a pretzel and a lady&#8217;s muff. We promptly gave         it         the name Papias in honor of one of the early church fathers, and made         it         the seminary mascot. Before long we realized we&#8217;d made a horrible mistake                 in the selection of the name. Papias, it turned out, was a prospective                 mother! <\/p>\n<p>      <P> About a week after our discovery, Stunt Night arrived. Our mascot had                 furnished me with excellent material for a couplet in one of the stanzas.         I         sang: <\/p>\n<p>      <P> &quot;It really is an awful shame         We&#8217;ve had to change poor Papias&#8217; name &#8230;&quot; <\/p>\n<p>      <P> I thought Das was going to pass out. As when things hit him in the         funnybone, he perched precariously on the edge of his chair and rolled         up         and down like a car on a roller coaster, his eyes shut tight and the tears                 flowing down his cheeks in rivulets. He was far more comical than the         skit         and provided a lot of amusement. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> &#8221;Boys,&#8221; he used to say to his students with a twinkle in those bright                 eyes, &quot;you can&#8217;t ever be a good theologian unless you&#8217;re a good stunter.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>      <P> He cherished varied and surprising interests. He was ever a lover of         good         food, of the opera, of poetry, of children. Younger men seemed to converge                 on him, as they did on Paul. He enjoyed giving his books away. He climbed                 towering mountains with the joyful abandon and vigor of a well-trained                 athlete. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Another of his hobbies was to ride trains. When the schedule of the                 Broadway Limited eventually recovered from the slowdown of World War I                 under government control and was restored to sixteen hours from New York         to         Chicago, Das was really excited. He took a ride to Chicago and back just         to         see how that crack train ran at its new high speed. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> One evening in the winter of 1932, I drove him to a railroad station         in         Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, where he was to board a night train for         Philadelphia. I expressed my sympathy because of the rough trip ahead.       <\/p>\n<p>      <P> &quot;Listen, don&#8217;t feel sorry for me,&quot; he said. &quot;I love to         curl up in a berth         and fall off to sleep.&quot;         &quot;How in the world do you manage it?&quot; I said. &quot;I can never         sleep on trains.         They&#8217;re too noisy.&quot;                 &quot;Not to me they aren&#8217;t,&quot; Das said. &quot;The good old sound         of wheels rumbling         over tracks &#8211; that&#8217;s a lullaby in my ears.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Now to the more serious side of his nature. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Those who were close to him will always remember J. Gresham Machen as         a         courtly gentleman, the product of Southern aristocracy, with a profound                 appreciation for classical learning. This, combined with a full exposure         to         historic Calvinism, endowed him with a fine balance. Ironically, it was         at         this precise point that his enemies attacked. When, for instance, the         Board         of Directors of Princeton Seminary reported to the General Assembly of         the         Presbyterian Church in the USA (now the United Presbyterian Church in         the         USA) that it had elected him to the professorship of Apologetics at the                 seminary, and asked for the customary confirmation, the opposition came         out         swinging. Machen, his critics charged, was unfit for the post because         of         &quot;temperamental idiosyncrasies.&quot; Exactly what the idiosyncrasies         were         remained vague, but the stratagem worked. The Assembly failed to approve                 the recommendation. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Paul reminded the Corinthians that he carried on his ministry &quot;by         honor and         dishonor, by evil report and good report.&quot; An American politician         once said         of the candidate he was nominating, &quot;We love him for the enemies         he has         made.&quot; Not a few of us may say the same of Machen. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Some enemies stooped very low in their attacks on Das. &quot;His preaching         was         bitter, schismatic and unscriptural,&quot; Dr. Henry van Dyke said in         a burst of         generosity. &quot;A dismal bilious travesty of the gospel.&quot; I have         heard him         referred to again and again as the &quot;beer baron.&quot; His family,         it was         whispered, received its revenue from liquor interests. All manner of         vicious calumny was poured on his head. The tactics are comparable to         those         of the clever attorney who, when the defense of his client breaks down,                 resorts to the method of destroying the integrity of the witnesses for         the         prosecution. I will have to say for Das that he never descended to this                 miserable practice. He was the quintessence of fairness, keeping         controversy always on a high objective level and avoiding personal assault.                 You notice this in his writings. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Ned Stonehouse in his Biographical Memoir has ably answered the criticisms                 of his character. Dr. Machen never tried to. It is an established fact         that         Machen never received, to his knowledge, nor did his father, one penny                 revenue from the alcoholic liquor industry. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> An example of the verbal shadow boxing he became involved in is found         in         connection with the Pearl Buck dispute. Mrs. Buck was a Presbyterian         missionary to China prior to 1934. When she began to spell out openly         her         radical views of the person of Jesus Christ, Machen rose up and demanded                 some kind of action from the Board of Foreign Missions, under whose         direction Mrs. Buck was laboring. I recall his giving an account of the                 cross-correspondence. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> &quot;I wrote to the Board,&quot; said Das, &quot;and asked what the         Board intended to do         about Mrs. Buck. The Board answered, saying, &#8216;Dr. Speer (one of its         secretaries) is a very fine man. &#8216;I answered,&#8217; I agree that Dr. Speer         is a         fine man, but I would like to know what you are going to do about Mrs.                 Buck?&#8217; The Board&#8217;s reply was, &#8216;Dr. Machen, why are you so bitter?&#8217;&quot;       <\/p>\n<p>      <P> The key to his vigorous and often fiery stand for the Gospel lies in         the         fact that from the depths of his heart to the core of his brain he was         a         Protestant. Tragically, huge segments of modern Protestantism have ceased                 to be protestant. We have in reality spawned a school of Major O&#8217;Dowds.         Of         that placid Army officer Thackeray says, &quot;O&#8217;Dowd passed through life                 agreeing with everyone he met on every conceivable subject. He was not         a         man, really; he was a piece of spaghetti.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>      <P> Today we are witnessing a professing church in which it is considered         an         almost unpardonable sin to engage in doctrinal controversy. Lefferts A.                 Loetscher, in his book The Broadening Church, (The University of         Pennsylvania Press, 1954) points out that virtually no discussion of         theological issues has disturbed the United Presbyterian Church since         1936.         It was the year that Dr. Machen and others were ejected from that         organization. Men have forgotten that.<\/p>\n<p>      <P> To sin by silence when we should protest Makes cowards of us all, The         world         has ris&#8217;n on protest. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> I suspect that in those dark hours when he was being tested in the         crucible, Dr. Machen was a lonely man. In his gripping story, Alone,         Admiral Richard Byrd makes his readers feel the raw pain he endured during                 the terrible months he spent in solitude at the Antarctic. Robinson Crusoe,                 cast upon a desert island, so longed for the sound of a human voice that         he         would station himself opposite a mountain and shout out words so that         he         could take in the echo. The great Apostle must have known a measure of         the         sufferings of the Savior when he wrote Timothy, &quot;At my first defense,         no         man stood with me.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>      <P> I am certain that Dr. Machen tasted bitterness to the full as he saw         friend         after old friend part company with him when the going was hardest. Some         of         them were stout men and true, church leaders who held Machen&#8217;s lofty view                 of The Scriptures and its noble redemptive doctrines, and yet could not         see         eye to eye with him on certain vital issues. That very fact made the agony                 of separation all the more poignant. &quot;What Beza said at the end of         his         brief, but most admirable, biography of John Calvin, can truly be said         of         Dr. Machen,&quot; wrote Dr. Macartney, who eventually broke with Das.         &quot;An         example which it is as easy to slander as it is difficult to imitate.&quot;       <\/p>\n<p>      <P> I cannot leave the subject of &quot;Machen the Man&quot; without a reference         to his         public prayers. Who of his students has not been edified as they listened                 to the renowned Christian scholar standing with bowed head in chapel or         in         the classroom at the opening of the period, acknowledging in the simplest                 language the multitude of divine mercies channelled through the infinite                 merit of the Son of God? Always there was in his supplication a quality         of         child-like wonder, a tenderness, a naked honesty and humility as he poured                 out his soul like water before the face of his Heavenly Father. When some                 of the important lessons we learned from him in the classroom have faded                 from the cabinets of the mind, the recollection of his prayers will linger,                 like the scent of rare perfume, beyond the limits of the intellect. <\/p>\n<p>      <P> It is understandable why some of us still thank God upon every remembrance         of him. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>To sin by silence when we should protest Makes cowards of us all, The world has ris&#8217;n on protest. The Rev. Henry W. Coray died on October 21 2002 aged 98, His wife Betty is 96 years old. They were married for 71 years and had four children. Coray had studied under Machen in Princeton [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[15],"tags":[],"resource-author":[725],"topic":[],"class_list":["post-1725","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-articles","resource-author-coray-henry-w"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.3 (Yoast SEO v27.3) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Henry W. Coray on J. Gresham Machen - Banner of Truth UK<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"noindex, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_GB\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Henry W. Coray on J. 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