Clarence Jordan
was a strange phenomenon in the history of North
American Christianity. Hewn from the massive Baptist
denomination, known primarily for its conformity
to culture, Clarence stressed the anti-cultural,
the Christ-transcending and the Christ-transforming,
aspects of the gospel. He was an authentic product
of the Bible Belt, of the rural, agrarian heartland,
of the people's church (he got his college degree
in agriculture, graduating in the same class as
Senator Herman Talmadge at the University of Georgia).
Clarence pursued this tradition to its very end,
ending at the top with a Ph.D. in the Greek New
Testament from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
in Louisville, Kentucky. -G. McLeod Bryan (
more)