Samuel T. Logan, Jr.

Professor of Church History, Emeritus

[Audio][Articles]

B.A., Princeton University, 1965; M.Div., Westminster Theological Seminary, 1968; Ph.D., Emory University, 1972; Teaching Assistant, Emory University, 1969; Instructor in History, DeKalb Junior College, 1970; Director, Department of American Studies, Barrington College, 1970–1979; Assistant Professor of American Studies, 1970–1978; Professor of American Studies, 1978–1979; Visiting Fellow, Christ’s College, Cambridge, 1988; Westminster, 1979– .

Contributor:The Preacher and Preaching: Reviving the Art in the Twentieth Century  (editor); Pressing Toward the Mark; Dictionary of Christianity in America; Theonomy: A Reformed Critique; Inerrancy: A Tradition, A Challenge, A Debate; To Glorify and Enjoy God: A Commemoration of the Westminster Assembly, Sermons that Shaped America: Reformed Preaching from 1630 to 2001 (co-editor).

Representative Articles: “Academic Freedom at Christian Institutions,” Christian Scholar’s Review, Volume XXI:2; “Shoulders to Stand On,” Decision, February 1993; “Theological Decline in Christian Institutions and the Value of Van Til’s Epistemology,” Westminster Theological Journal, Spring 1995.