He attended the University of Washington; a keen sports player, a baseball injury led to him dropping out of college at the age of 20 and working for his father.
[3][4] Two years later he attended a conference led by Louis S. Bauman where he committed his life to Christ and enrolled at the Bible Institute of Los Angeles.
He and fellow Ashland lecturer Herman A. Hoyt opened the Grace Theological Seminary in 1937.
[5] A widely known lecturer and writer, he was a charter member of the Evangelical Theological Society, served on the Scofield Reference Bible Revision Committee,[6] and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
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