The Rev. John Randolph Elliott ("Randy") was an extraordinary, ordinary man.
Randy will be long remembered as a man of prayer with deep faith, warm spirit, unwavering integrity, rigorous self-discipline, large intellect, and contagious laughter most often heard with a big family that he loved and gave him great joy—a family eternally grateful for his presence in their lives. Indeed, he lived with eternity in his heart, and entered his heavenly home triumphant in 2020.
Randy was born third of five children to Herschel Adams and Ruth Elliott in Wilmington, Delaware in 1947. His favorite childhood memories included neighborhood baseball, long games of monopoly, and summer afternoons listening to Phillies games on the car radio while parked in the driveway.
Randy's teammates named him senior captain of the undefeated 1964 Brandywine High School football team. Injury cut short football hopes at Yale and he turned most of his attention to studies—he graduated Magna Cum Laude in 1969. His advisor commended Randy as "my first student that came to Yale wanting to enter the Ministry and left Yale still wanting to enter the Ministry." Also capturing his hopes and attention during those college years was Esther Lee Van Sice. Esther and Randy married in 1970 in Elkton, Maryland in a service officiated by her father, the Rev. Howard Van Sice.
Together they cared for Randy's ailing father and mother before moving to Princeton, New Jersey, where Randy graduated Summa Cum Laude from Princeton Seminary in 1972. While enjoying the stimulation of an Ivy League education, his observation of churches slipping through cultural accommodation galvanized Randy's Christian orthodoxy, an unflinching faith in the inerrancy of Holy Scripture, and his personal zeal for Jesus Christ. That zeal, combined with dedication to daily prayer, remarkable personal discipline, and a keen intellect made him a Bible teacher of insight and excellence, filled with the Holy Spirit.
Parkway Baptist Church in Willingboro, New Jersey called Rev. Elliott to the pulpit in 1973. Arriving as a family of two, he served seven years before moving to First Baptist Church in North East, Pennsylvania as a family of five. In North East, Esther and Randy raised their three sons, John, Steve, and Nathan. Prestigious churches in great cities later attempted to hire him, but his answer was always "Here I have been called and here I will raise my family." North East remained Randy and Esther's home since 1980.
He faithfully served as the Senior Pastor at First Baptist Church of North East for 25 years. While touching the lives of thousands through ministries of pastoral care and counseling, he distinguished himself as a scholarly preacher and teacher of God's Word. Weekly church attendance swelled five-fold and WCTL radio broadcasted his sermons weekly for over fifteen years. Yet his greatest satisfaction came through teaching small groups of men, teens, and college students the principles of Christian life and faith, a practice he continued well into "retirement," which included preaching throughout the region and interim pastoral roles at Immanuel Baptist Church in Erie, Pennsylvania and Bethel Baptist Church in Jefferson, Ohio.
Randy never stopped learning. Well into retirement he continued Bible memorization and his study in Biblical Greek. His home library was "narrowed down" to approximately four thousand books on Christian discipleship, theology, apologetics, philosophy, biographies, current events, and American history. The day after his passing, a last addition to his library arrived—an audio course on Law and the U.S. Constitution. Randy loved America. Daily family prayers thanked God for our freedoms of speech and faith, and he earnestly prayed for the strength of persecuted Church leaders in the communist and Muslim world, including many personal friends by name, like Pastor John Cao held in a Chinese prison today.
Randy's favorite hymn was "Abide With Me." While Randy lives eternally in the presence of the Lord, he lives on here in his three sons. The energetic boys were guided to manhood by Randy's "family rules and essentials" positioned conveniently above the toilet in 1986 to encourage frequent reading:
Family Rules
Slop is out…excellence is in.
Work without complaint.
Work…then play.
Always be truthful.
Be kind…care when someone hurts.
Respect property…or plan on replacing it.
Be thankful.
Be respectful and polite.
Two Essentials
Honor God by obeying His commandments.
Build your family…make it special.
Randy taught his family "17 words" repeated after prayers and before family dinners,
"Heaven is my home, Jesus is my Lord,
the Bible is my authority, excellence is my standard."
Help Support International Ministers
This Fund in memory of Reverend John R. Elliott is used to support international ministers who become part of the Mount Freedom Church family while attending Asbury Theological Seminary.