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Mark Matthews, pastor of First Presbyterian Church (Seattle, Wash.) urges MacInnes, of the Bible Institute of Los Angeles, to withdraw from publication a work of his deemed a concession to modernist theology. From RG266, John Murdoch MacInnis Papers, 1902-1986, box 2, folder 5, Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia PA
Mark Matthews, pastor of First Presbyterian Church (Seattle, Wash.) urges MacInnes, of the Bible Institute of Los Angeles, to withdraw from publication a work of his deemed a concession to modernist theology. From RG266, John Murdoch MacInnis Papers, 1902-1986, box 2, folder 5, Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia PA
Mark Matthews, pastor of First Presbyterian Church (Seattle, Wash.) urges MacInnes, of the Bible Institute of Los Angeles, to withdraw from publication a work of his deemed a concession to modernist theology. From RG266, John Murdoch MacInnis Papers, 1902-1986, box 2, folder 5, Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia PA
Hirst Presbyterian Church
Brattle, Brshinston
August 25, 1928,
Rey. John M. MacInnis,
Dean, Los Angeles Bible Institute,
Los Angeles, California.
My dear Brother:
I em doing all I can to help you and to help
the Institute and you may rest assured it ie at quite a
cost.
I want you to go on the scriptural principle,
“If meat make my brother to offend I will eat no more
meat."
I think I can restore confidence in you and in
the Institute if you will withdraw the book, “Peter, the
Fisherman Philosopher" from the public market. Take it
off of the news stands and I ask you in the interest of the
cause of Christ to do it, and be careful next time you write.
With best regards, I am
Your true friend,