Peter Ruckman

American pastor and author (1921–2016)
title: "Peter Ruckman" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1921-births", "2016-deaths", "20th-century-american-male-writers", "20th-century-american-non-fiction-writers", "20th-century-baptist-ministers-from-the-united-states", "21st-century-american-male-writers", "21st-century-american-non-fiction-writers", "21st-century-baptist-ministers-from-the-united-states", "american-male-non-fiction-writers", "american-religious-writers", "baptist-writers", "bob-jones-university-alumni", "christian-conspiracy-theorists", "dispensationalism", "founders-of-new-religious-movements", "kansas-state-university-alumni", "king-james-only-movement", "university-of-alabama-alumni", "writers-from-pensacola,-florida", "writers-from-topeka,-kansas", "writers-from-wilmington,-delaware"] description: "American pastor and author (1921–2016)" topic_path: "law" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Ruckman" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary American pastor and author (1921–2016) ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Peter Ruckman |
| image | Peter Ruckman.jpg |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Wilmington, Delaware |
| death_date | |
| death_place | Pensacola, Florida |
| nationality | American |
| occupation | Pastor, teacher |
| :: |
| name = Peter Ruckman | image = Peter Ruckman.jpg | caption = | birth_date = | birth_place = Wilmington, Delaware | death_date = | death_place = Pensacola, Florida | nationality = American | occupation = Pastor, teacher | children =
Personal life
A native of Wilmington, Delaware, Ruckman was a son of Colonel John Hamilton Ruckman (1888–1966) and a grandson of General John Wilson Ruckman (1858–1921). Ruckman was raised in Topeka, Kansas, attended Kansas State University, and earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Alabama.
Ruckman entered the U.S. Army in 1944 as a second lieutenant and volunteered to serve with the occupation forces in Japan. While there, Ruckman studied Zen Buddhism, and spoke of "the experience of nirvana, which the Zen call samadhi, the dislocation of the spirit from the body". Ruckman returned to the United States "uneasy, unsettled, full of demons". He worked as a disc jockey and radio announcer by day and a drummer in various bands by night. After he began to hear voices, he met with a Jesuit priest to explore joining the Roman Catholic Church. On March 14, 1949, Ruckman received Jesus Christ after talking with evangelist Hugh F. Pyle in the studios of WEAR radio in Pensacola. Ruckman attended Bob Jones University, where he received a master's degree and Ph.D. in religion.
Ruckman was the pastor of Bible Baptist Church in Pensacola, and his writings and recorded sermons were published by his Bible Baptist Bookstore. Like his father, Peter Ruckman early demonstrated artistic talent, and he often illustrated his sermons in chalk and pastels while preaching. In 1965, Ruckman founded Pensacola Bible Institute, in part because of disagreements with other institutions with regard to Biblical translations. Ruckman continued teaching a Sunday school class and participating in other church-related activities until April 2015, when he retired at 93.
Ruckman married three times, the first two marriages ending in divorce. He had ten children. His son P.S. Ruckman Jr. was a professor and authority on presidential pardons who apparently killed his two sons and himself in a murder-suicide.
Beliefs
King James Onlyism
Ruckman was a believer in "King James Onlyism". Ruckman said that the King James Version of the Bible, the "Authorized Version" ("KJV" or "A.V."), provided "advanced revelation" beyond that discernible in the underlying Textus Receptus Greek text, believing the KJV represented the final authority in all matters of faith and practice. Ruckman believed that any edition of the Bible not based on the text of the KJV was heretical and could lead one to lose not only their "testimony [and] ministry" but even their life.
Ruckman distinguished between the Textus Receptus of the KJV, and the numerically fewer manuscripts of the Alexandrian text-type underlying most modern New Testament versions. Ruckman characterized those who endorsed the latter as members of the "Alexandrian Cult," people who believe that while the autographs were God-inspired, they have been lost, and that therefore there is "no final, absolute written authority of God anywhere on this earth". Ruckman also wrote that the Septuagint was a hoax perpetrated by the "Alexandrian cult" under the leadership of the Church Father Origen (as part of his Hexapla) in the 3rd century AD in order to subvert belief in the integrity of the Bible.
Ruckman's position on the exclusive authority of the KJV was opposed by many supporters of biblical inerrancy, including signers of the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy who specifically "deny that any essential element of the Christian faith is affected by the absence of the autographs [and] further deny that this absence renders the assertion of Biblical inerrancy invalid or irrelevant". Furthermore, the majority of those who support the King James Only movement reject Ruckman's position that the English KJV is superior to existing Hebrew and Greek manuscripts, and they also criticize Ruckman because "his writings are so acerbic, so offensive and mean-spirited that the entire movement has become identified with his kind of confrontational attitude".
The website of Ruckman's press notes that although some have called his writings "mean spirited", "we refer to them as 'truth with an attitude'". According to Beacham and Bauder, "Ruckman is without any doubt the most caustic and abusive among King James-Only partisans". James R. White states in his book The King James Only Controversy that to call Ruckman "outspoken is to engage in an exercise in understatement. Caustic is too mild a term; bombastic is a little more accurate. ... There is no doubt that Peter S. Ruckman is brilliant, in a strange sort of way. His mental powers are plainly demonstrated in his books, though most people do not bother to read far enough to recognize this due to the constant stream of invective that is to be found on nearly every page. And yet his cocky confidence attracts many people to his viewpoint." In Ruckman's words:
Triadology
Peter Ruckman argued that the Trinity is typified in creation and within human nature itself. As a trichotomist, he believed Man was composed of body, soul, and spirit, which reflected the Trinity because he was made in the image of God. Ruckman argued that the soul typified the Father, the body the Son, and the Holy Spirit the spirit. Ruckman also argued that the Trinity was typified by nature itself, for instance as water that can exist as ice, steam, or liquid, yet remain one substance. Nevertheless, he conceded that nothing in nature could totally explain the Trinity, and thus such types do not perfectly represent the trinity.
Ruckman rejected the language of begetting, such as in Psalm 2:7, to mean the eternal origin of the Son of God; he rather interpreted it to mean the incarnation of Jesus Christ.
Dispensationalism
Peter Ruckman was a proponent of dispensationalism, however he developed a distinctive approach to understanding salvation across different biblical eras. He taught that the Bible presents multiple dispensations, each with its own system of salvation. According to Ruckman, in the Old Testament, salvation was obtained through a combination of faith and works, whereas in the Church Age, salvation is through faith alone. He further argued that during the future tribulation period, the system would revert to a works based framework as in the Old Testament. Despite teaching dispensational salvation, Ruckman nevertheless strongly rejected Mid-Acts dispensationalism, which he referred to as hyperdispensationalism, believing that such views distorted the proper interpretation of Scripture.
Other beliefs
Ruckman defended the doctrine of eternal security and believed that even if a believer apostatized, he would be saved, though he would lose his rewards. He has held a number of unique doctrines such as angels being about 30 year old men, that women will receive male bodies in the rapture and that there were two global floods.
Ruckman once said that he would have joined the Ku Klux Klan had they not been anti-Semitic, because he agreed with "everything else they say".
Selected works
-
- (translation)
- (Ruckman's autobiography)
References
References
- Walker, David E.. (2018-01-10). "Rightly Dividing the Bible". HarperCollins Christian Publishing.
- "It was at this point, on the verge of suicide, that Ruckman began to hear a series of voices. He himself interprets the voices as being the voice of God, for the most part. He thinks that he learned to distinguish the voice of God from the voice of demons through yoga." [http://www.despatch.cth.com.au/Books_V/RuckamnHymers2.htm#3 ''The Ruckman Conspiracy''] (Collingswood, NJ: The Bible for Today, 1989), 3.
- Peter Ruckman, ''Dr. Ruckman's Testimony'' (audiotape), Bible Baptist Bookstore, n.d., quoted in [[R. L. Hymers, Jr.]], [http://www.despatch.cth.com.au/Books_V/RuckamnHymers2.htm#3 ''The Ruckman Conspiracy''] (Collingswood, NJ: The Bible for Today, 1989), 3-4, 19.
- "Bible Baptist Bookstore".
- "John Hamilton Ruckman".
- (February 8, 2015). "Dr. Ruckman's Announcement".
- By his own admission, Ruckman's earlier family life was turbulent: "I have had two wives desert me after fifteen years of marriage… I have been in court custody cases where seven children's futures were held in the balance; in situations where Gospel articles were being torn out of typewriters, Biblical artwork torn off the easels, women trying to throw themselves out of cars at fifty m.p.h., mailing wedding rings back in the middle of revival services, cutting their wrists, threatening to leave if I did not give my church to their kinfolk; deacons threatening to burn down my house and beat me up; children in split custody between two domiciles two hundred miles apart, and knock-down, drag-out arguments in the home sometimes running as long as three days." Peter Ruckman, ''The Last Grenade'' (Pensacola: Bible Baptist Bookstore, 1990), 339.
- (7 March 2018). "Son, grandkids of controversial Pensacola pastor Peter Ruckman dead in murder-suicide". [[Pensacola News Journal]].
- (7 March 2018). "Rockford professor — expert on presidential pardons — emailed life's work to others before apparent murder-suicide". Chicago Tribune.
- David G. Burke, ed., ''Translation That Openeth the Window: Reflections on the History and Legacy of the King James Bible'' (Society of Biblical Literature, 2009), 201.
- (2013). "Heaven, hell, and the afterlife : eternity in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam".
- [http://av1611.com/forums/showthread.php?t=856 The "Creed of the Alexandrian Cult"].
- Ruckman, Peter S.. (1996). "The Mythological Septuagint". BB Bookstore.
- James White, ''The King James Only Controversy: Can You Trust the Modern Translations?'' (Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1995), 1-4. White is an opponent of the KJV-Only position, but he cites such KJV-Only proponents as David Cloud. See, for instance, [http://www.wayoflife.org/database/ruckman.html Cloud's website]. Ruckman's position was, however, supported by [[Gail Riplinger]].
- White, 109.
- "Bible Baptist Bookstore".
- Roy E. Beacham and Kevin T. Bauder, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=uQWTxDdIO6IC&dq=peter+ruckman&pg=PA47 One Bible Only? Examining Exclusive Claims for the King James Bible]'' (Grand Rapids: [[Kregel Publications]], 2001, pp. 47–48.
- James R. White, ''The King James Only Controversy: Can You Trust the Modern Translations?'' (Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1995), 109. His invective has often been [[ad hominem]]. One of Ruckman's targets was Stewart Custer, once chair of the Bible department at BJU: "By far the most shameful and shocking thing about Stewart's work is not his ''lying'' (we would expect that) and his stupidity (we take that for granted, ''but we will document it for the reader''); the most shocking thing was the performance of [[Robert Sumner]] ([[The Sword of the Lord]]) and [[Bob Jones, Jr.]] (BJU) in actually seriously recommending" his work. Peter S. Ruckman, ''Custer's Last Stand'' (Pensacola: Bible Baptist Bookstore, 1981), iii.
- Ruckman, Peter. (December 1985). "My Calling". Twenty-two Years of the Bible Believers' Bulletin.
- Ruckman, Peter. (1995). "THEOLOGICAL STUDIES VOL. I".
- Ruckman, Peter. "Theological Studies, Volume 1".
- Cloud, David. "What About Peter Ruckman?".
- Ruckman, Peter. "The Two Raptures".
- Ruckman, Peter. "The Sure Word of Prophecy".
- Ruckman, Peter. "How to Teach Dispensational Truth".
- (1980). "Eternal Security".
- Ruckman, Peter. "Ruckman Reference Bible".
- Cloud, David. "What About Peter Ruckman?".
- Ruckman, Peter. (1993). "Questions and Answers".
::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::