Early on in his Spiritual life Arthur Pink was a sincere dispensationalist. His perspectives began to change in the late 1920's and in his book A Study on Dispensationalism he examines his central protest against dispensationalism: that it wrecks the solidarity and materialness of Scripture.
Arthur Walkington Pink was an English Christian evangelist and Biblical researcher known for his staunchly Calvinist and Puritan-like teachings. In spite of the fact that he was born to Christian parents, before his conversion he entered into a Theosophical society (a mysterious gnostic gathering common in England amid that time), and rapidly climbed inside their ranks.
Change in his spiritual life came from his father's patient admonitions from Scripture. It was the verse, Proverbs 14:12, 'there is a way which seemeth acceptable unto a man, yet the end thereof are the methods for death, ' which especially struck his heart and forced him to repudiate Theosophy and take after Jesus.