Frederick
W. Evans, Jr. Papers
Manuscript Collection # 45
Box# es 550 - 555
Content Summary: Correspondence, sermons [both print and audio formats], articles, subject files, dissertation and related notes of the Rev. Dr. Frederick W. Evans, Jr.
Span Dates: 1919 - 1992
Size: 5.5 cu. ft.
Access Restrictions: {None}
Collection Citation: Evans, Frederick W., Jr., Papers, Box __, File__: item description, PCA Historical Center, St. Louis, MO.
Frederick W. Evans, Jr. was born on April 9, 1924 in New York City to the Rev. Frederick W. Evans, Sr. and his wife Grace. He was educated at the College of Wooster, graduating with a B.A. in Classical Languages; honors from that institution included Phi Beta Kappa. Princeton Theological Seminary conferred the degree of Bachelor of Divinity in 1947 and he was ordained to the gospel ministry on 9 April, 1947 by the PC(USA) Presbytery of Troy (later incorporated into the Presbytery of Albany). One of his Princeton professors, the Rev. Joseph L. Hromadka, brought the sermon at the service of ordination.
Rev. Evans was installed in his first pastorate, Christ's Presbyterian Church, in Catskill, NY on 10 February, 1948. He served there just over three years before accepting a call to the Bedford-Central Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn, NY, serving in this pulpit from 1951 to 1953. His last pastoral position within the PCUSA was at the Third Presbyterian Church of Chester, PA (1954 - 1955).
It was at the outset of this pastorate that he married Irene Payne, with the marriage taking place in Brooklyn on 15 May 1954. Rev. Evans and his wife have four children: William, now a professor at Erskine College and adjunct professor at Erskine Theological Seminary; John, an ordained pastor in the PCA and a missionary in Africa; and daughters Mary E. and Martha J.
The years at Third Presbyterian marked the culmination of his convictions regarding the theological decline of the PC(USA) and forced him to transfer his credentials. He had been a member of the Albany, Brooklyn-Nassau and Philadelphia Presbyteries of the PC(USA) from 1948 to 1955. In 1955 he requested the erasure of his name from the rolls of Philadelphia Presbytery.
His first three pastorates were within the Presbyterian Church (USA). His last three pastorates were in independent churches. Leaving the PC(USA), he first accepted a call to the Westover Church of Greensboro, NC, where he served from 1955 until 1964. From this post, he next moved to Indianapolis and the pulpit of Faith Missionary Church, serving there from 1965 - 1971. It was during his last pastorate, at the Walnut Grove Chapel of Indianapolis (19971 - 1990), that he began also working toward a doctorate, first receiving an MA in 1974 from Butler Univerisity and an S.T.M. in 1978 from Christian Theological Seminary, both of these institutions being located in Indianapolis. Westminster Theological Seminary then conferred the degree of Doctor of Ministry in May of 1984. Of special note was the graduation of father and son together at the same occasion, with son William receiving the M.A.R. degree.
In 1989, the Rev. Dr. Evans was received by the Great Lakes Presbytery of the PCA, and in July 1990 he retired from his pulpit at the independent Walnut Grove Chapel. In his petition for reception into the Great Lakes Presbytery, he noted:
|
Of note here is the sacrificial character of a true pastor, who put consideration
for his congregation first ahead of his own needs. He would not take the
least action that might be misunderstood.
Upon his death on 12 May 1992, the PCA Messenger commented on
the Rev. Dr. Evans' keen interest in church history. He authored four
books during his lifetime. Two twelve-week study courses were entitled
They Kept the Faith [a study bringing together faith and history]
and They Sought a City! [a survey of American Church history].
Also published were Christ in the Psalms and The God Who
Is [a study on the character of God, employing the pattern found in
the Westminster Shorter Catechism, question 4].
- Contemporaries in Contrast: A Brief Comparison of the Backgrounds, Theologies and Preaching of Harry Emerson Fosdick and Clarence Edward Macartney [outline]
- Rev. Evans' final sermon, from the book of Job, written in the midst of his own suffering.
Finding Aid is normally located in folder number 1 of each box.
The Rev. Dr. Frederick W. Evans, Jr.
1924-1992
[Picture is from 1951]