Robert Lusk
Robert Adam Holliday Lusk | |
|---|---|
| Born | March 8, 1781 near Derry, Ireland |
| Died | December 14, 1845 (aged 64) Walnut Ridge, near Salem, Indiana |
| Alma mater | Jefferson College, 1810; Philadelphia Theological Seminary, 1814 |
| Known for | His controversial career in the Reformed Presbyterian Church; co-presbyter in the erection of the Reformed Presbytery, with David Steele, in 1840 |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Theology |
Robert Adam Holliday Lusk (March 8, 1781 – December 14, 1845) was a Reformed Presbyterian or Covenanter minister of the strictest sort, in a century which, according to Presbyterian historian Robert E. Thompson, was marked by increasing relaxation into less stringent manifestations of doctrine and practice amongst all branches of Presbyterianism.: 149 His career crossed paths with many prominent ministers and he was involved in numerous ecclesiastical courts at pivotal moments in the history of the Reformed Presbyterian Church. Amongst Reformed Presbyterians, he was an "Old Light," and amongst "Old Lights," he would lay claim to be an "Original Covenanter." He was descended from a long line of Scotch-Irish, and the Lusks had fled from Scotland to Ireland, escaping religious persecution;: 490 many of them settled in America prior to the American Revolutionary War.