24 December
1903 A.D. Rev. J. Marcellus Kik—The Quiet Influence of a
Canadian Presbyterian
December 24: J. Marcellus Kik
The Quiet
Influence of a Canadian Presbyterian
Quiet workers, in God’s
kingdom, are often found to have an abiding influence.
“Whatever you do, do your
work heartily, as for the Lord rather than for men,” – (Col.
3:23, NASB)
In 1965, the following
obituary (slightly edited here) appeared on the pages of Christianity Today, observing the passing of one of the
founding editors of that magazine:
The Reverend J. Marcellus Kik
was one of the first three members of the editorial staff of Christianity Today, from its inception in
1955. When the magazine was initially planned, advice was sought from
hundreds of men in this country and abroad. None of the replies showed more
depth of understanding and vision for this Christian witness than Mr. Kik’s.
His long experience as a pastor and as editor of a church paper in Canada
enabled him to make a significant and lasting contribution to this magazine,
which he served as associate editor.
About 1960, Mr. Kik assumed
the post of research editor. In that capacity he spent many months in Europe,
particularly in Switzerland and Holland. In Geneva he received permission
to study all minutes’ of the consistory for the period of Calvin’s great
ministry in that city, and also the minutes of the city council during the
same years. Mr. Kik had these minutes microfilmed and then translated
from seventeenth-century French into English. These indefatigable
efforts brought to light the clear distinction Calvin made between his duties
as a Christian citizen and the spiritual role of the corporate church in
society.
During 1927 and 1928 Mr. Kik
attended Princeton Theological Seminary, and he was part of the first class
graduated from Westminster Theological Seminary in the Spring of 1930. For the
next twenty-two years he held pastorates in Canada, where he also conducted a
weekly radio program for thirteen years. He wrote a number of religious
books and served on the Board of Trustees of both Westminster Seminary and
Gordon College and Divinity School.
Mr. Kik continued his Calvin
research up to the week of his death. In 1964, he underwent radical
surgery from which he never fully recovered but which never daunted him in his
work and witness for his Lord. He died in Philadelphia on October 22, in 1965.
Funeral services were held in
the Second Reformed Church of Little Falls, New Jersey, of which he had been
pastor for eleven years before joining the staff of Christianity Today. A testimony to his life echoed through
the hymns sung at the service: “O, for a Thousand Tongues,” “Hallelujah! ‘What
a Saviour!,” and “Great Is Thy Faithfulness.”
Jacob Marcellus Kik was born
in Phillipsland, Netherlands on 24 December 1903. He attended Hope
College, graduating in 1927 and then went on to Princeton Seminary, attending
there from the Fall semester in 1927 through the Spring semester of 1929. He
then transferred to the newly founded Westminster Theological Seminary in the
Fall of 1929 along with other Biblical conservatives. He graduated from
Westminster in May of 1930, was ordained by Miramichi Presbytery on 29 October
1930 and pastored the Bass River and West Branch churches in New Brunswick,
Canada from 1930 to 1933.
Rev. Kik’s influential role
began early on, as noted in this article, speaking of the situation in Canada
in the 1930’s and following:
“A pattern had been
established. Independent Presbyterian journals presented an opportunity for
minorities to present their views and gain an audience. Only a decade after
church union, a new independent journal would appear. Bible Christianity owed much to the fundamentalist-modernist
controversy of the 1920s and 1930s from which Canada was largely spared. The
magazine, supported by W. D. Reid, minister of the well-heeled Stanley Church,
Westmount, Montreal, became known for its outspoken opposition to what it
perceived as liberalism in the continuing church. Bible Christianity was edited by J. Marcellus Kik, a Presbyterian minister who was among
the first graduates of Westminster Seminary after it split from Princeton in
1929. Kik had been minister in New Brunswick but came to Montreal in 1936 and
served there in various capacities (for a time as full-time editor and
religious broadcaster) from 1936 to 1952. [The
later Bible Presbyterian, which was published out of New Glasgow, Nova
Scotia, by dissident Presbyterian minister Malcolm MacKay.]” — Note: Vol. 1, no. 1 of Bible Christianity is now posted
in PDF format.
Another article,
on the early history of the Banner of Truth Trust, notes the influence of Rev.
Kik:
“Among Professor Murray’s
chief concerns was the restoration of true preaching. One who shared this
view was the Rev J Marcellus Kik, a trustee of
Westminster Seminary. This subject was discussed with Mr. Kik
when he was present in London in 1961. As a result he carried back to
Professor Murray in Philadelphia a proposal that a conference should be held
for ministers the following year in the UK, concentrating specifically on the
need for a renewal of preaching.” [Thus the beginnings of the annual Banner of
Truth Pastors’ Conferences.]
Lastly, Rev. Kik’s published
works were another avenue of his influence:
A
Partial Bibliography for Rev. J. Marcellus Kik—
1934
The Narrow and The Broad Way, and other sermons of salvation.
Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Pub. House, 1934. 4 p. l., iii, [13]-106 p.
1955ff.
Associate
editor of Christianity Today (Washington,
D.C.) — [photo of the founding editors, here.]
1956
Voices from Heaven and Hell. Philadelphia:
Presbyterian and Reformed Pub. Co., 1956. 192 p.
Foreword to Calvin and
Augustine, by B.B. Warfield. Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Reformed Pub.
Co., 1980, 1971, ©1956. pp. i-viii of 507p.
1958
Ecumenism
and the Evangelical. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1958,
©1957. v, 152 p.
1960
Matthew
Twenty-Four : An Exposition. Philadelphia, PA: The
Presbyterian and Reformed Pub. Co., 1960 [2nd ed.]. xii, 115 p.
1961
Historic
Reformed Eschatology [S.l. : s.n., 1961), 35 leaves.
1962
Church
and State in the New Testament. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book
House, 1962. 46 p.; 23 cm.
Introduction to Limited Inspiration, by B. B. Warfield.
Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing, 1962. 32 pp.
1963
The
Supreme Court and Prayer in the Public School. Philadelphia,
Presbyterian and Reformed Pub. Co., 1963. 40 p.
1966
Kik, J. Marcellus, Mariano Di Gangi and J. Clyde Henry, Two Confessions: The
Westminster Confession of Faith and the proposed Confession of 1967, compared
and contrasted. Philadelphia, PA: The Presbyterian and Reformed
Publishing Company, 1966. 56pp.
1958-1968?
Reviewing
religious books. S.l.: s.n., 1958-1968? 10 p.
1971
The
Eschatology of Victory. Phillipsbugh, NJ: Presbyterian and
Reformed Pub. Co., 1978, 1971. ix, 268 p.
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