Neo-orthodoxy by Gordon H. Clark

Encyclopedia 45. Neo-Orthodoxy (typed) [1975. In Wycliffe Bible Encyclopedia. Howard Vos, Charles Pfeiffer and John Rea, eds. Chicago: Moody Press.] NEOORTHODOXY. Neoorthodoxy, Barthianism, dialectical theology, or the theology of the Word came into existence because...

Liberalism by Gordon H. Clark

Encyclopedia 44. Liberalism (typed) [1975. In Wycliffe Bible Encyclopedia. Howard Vos, Charles Pfeiffer and John Rea, eds. Chicago: Moody Press.] LIBERALISM. Liberalism or, as it is more popularly called, modernism is a system of religion which, rejecting the Bible as...

Immutability by Gordon H. Clark

Encyclopedia 43. Immutability (typed) [1975. In Wycliffe Bible Encyclopedia. Howard Vos, Charles Pfeiffer and John Rea, eds. Chicago: Moody Press.] IMMUTABILITY. The term appears in the KJV in Heb. 6:17-18: “Wherein God, willing more abundantly to show unto the heirs...

Diogenes by Gordon H. Clark

Encyclopedia 42. Diogenes (typed) [1950. In Collier’s Encyclopedia. New York: P.F. Collier and Son.] DIOGENES (c. 412-323 B.C.), Greek philosopher, was born in Sinope. Exiled from his native state for counterfeiting, he came to Athens about 350 B.C. As the most...

Stoicism by Gordon H. Clark

Encyclopedia 41. Stoicism (typed) [1949. In Collier’s Encyclopedia. New York: P.F. Collier and Son.] STOICISM. Founded by Zeno of Citium a little before 300 B.C. in Athens, Stoicism, along with Epicureanism, ushered in the new Hellenistic age in philosophy, and...