John's Concern for the Church

Cornelius Van Til
1.2K
0:00
0:00
0:00
  • Bio
  • Summary
  • Transcript
  • Download
Cornelius Van Til

Cornelius Van Til (May 3, 1895 – April 17, 1987) was a Dutch-American preacher, theologian, and apologist whose ministry profoundly shaped Reformed theology through his development of presuppositional apologetics. Born in Grootegast, Netherlands, to Ite Van Til, a dairy farmer, and Klazina van der Veen, he was the sixth of eight sons. At age ten, his family immigrated to Highland, Indiana, where he grew up on a farm. Converted in his youth, he pursued higher education at Calvin College (B.A., 1922), Calvin Theological Seminary, and Princeton Theological Seminary (Th.M., 1925), earning a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1927. Ordained in the Christian Reformed Church, he briefly pastored in Spring Lake, Michigan (1927–1928), before dedicating his career to teaching. Van Til’s preaching career intertwined with his academic role as Professor of Apologetics at Westminster Theological Seminary, which he helped found in 1929 with J. Gresham Machen, serving there until his retirement in 1972. His sermons, often delivered in chapel services and local churches, emphasized the self-attesting Christ of Scripture as the foundation for all knowledge, rejecting neutral reasoning in favor of God’s sovereign authority. A prolific writer, he authored over 30 works, including The Defense of the Faith (1955) and Christianity and Barthianism (1962), while also preaching on streets like Wall Street, New York, blending evangelism with apologetics. Married to Rena Klooster in 1925, he had one son, Earl, and remained a minister in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church from 1936 until his death at age 91 in Philadelphia, leaving a legacy of rigorous faith defense and gospel proclamation.