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Archive for the ‘Reformed Theology’ Category

The Sacrament of Responsibility – M. F. Sadler

The Sacrament of Responsibility by M. F. Sadler is a discussion on Infant Baptism according to the Book of Common Prayer. England’s Prayer Book had many links to the Continental Reformation. Bucer of Strasbourg helped Cranmer edit it. Peter Martyr Vermigli’s hand is found in the liturgy of Holy Communion which shares the same general outline as the Hungarian Reformed service of Word and Holy Commmunion.

The doctrine of infant baptism in the Book of Common prayer is easily misunderstood by Baptists and even other “Reformed” people as teaching something “Roman Catholic”.

Sadler’s book is an exposition of the early Reformation doctrine of infant baptism. This doctrine is not unique though to the English. When compared to the doctrine of baptism connected with the church that gave us the Heidelberg Catechism, we can see the two are quite similar when we compare Sadler’s teaching to this baptismal liturgy of the Canadian and American Reformed Church. This liturgy is a direct “descendant” of the liturgy published by the Palatinate Church (which gave us the Heidelberg Catechism) in the time around 1563.

It may prove quite helpful for modern Reformed people to consult in order to explain their practice of infant baptism.

Events in the Perth Amboy Magyar Reformed Church

krisztus_vandorai_dvd_plakat (2)Events in the Perth Amboy Magyar Reformed Church

Christ’s Hungarian Pilgrims – Film Premiere

Last fall the directors and film crew from the Debrecen Television (DTV) spent a month filming on the East Coast, as well as in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and Michigan. The purpose of their visit was to find and record for posterity those Hungarian Reformed churches, which, for whatever reason, have ceased to exist.

From the more than 300 hours of filming, seven 35-minute segments have been prepared. With this 7-part series, it is hoped that those pastors and congregations who faithfully served in each location will be remembered and not forgotten.

Our church will premiere parts of this series on November 1st at 5:00 PM, after the Community Reformation Service. There will not be sufficient time to view the entire series, but it will be available for sale. The President of DTV, Tamás Széles, and film director, Ferenc Vojtkó, will be present for the local premiere.

The series will also be shown in Cleveland, Ohio, on October 30 and in Ligonier, Pennsylvania, on November 2.

Invite your friends and neighbors to this event, which will be followed by dinner.

Community Reformation Sunday Service

The American Hungarian Reformed Ministerial Association – Eastern Classis will conduct a joint Community Reformation Service on November 1. The tri-state area pastors and congregations will give thanks for the Reformers’ faith and devotion. But most of all we will thank the Lord for keeping our Reformed congregations even through the strongest storms of challenges of our faith.

The worship service will begin at 4:00 pm here in Perth Amboy Hungarian Reformed Church. Following the worship service, the series “Christ’s Hungarian Pilgrims” will be premiered (see article below). Supper will also be served.

Come and invite others to this special occasion!

John Calvin Sunday

We are celebrating the 500th anniversary of the birth of the great reformer, John Calvin, this year. The Hungarian Reformed Church in America’s celebration began last October with the successful performance of the choir of the Great Church of Debrecen in New York City. The American Hungarian Reformed Ministerial Association and the Presbyters’ Association have encouraged each congregation to remember Calvin during this year in some form. In earlier issues of the Newsletter, we have printed articles about Calvin, but we are now preparing a special event for October 25th.

At both of our worship services on this day, we will introduce you to the Reformer’s life and works. Selections of his writings will also be read.

We cordially invite you to attend these extraordinary worship services. Looking forward to seeing all of you.

John Calvin at 500 – Faithful and Welcoming Luncheon, General Synod Grand Rapids

A paper presented at the UCC General Synod at the Faithful and Welcoming Luncheon by Rev. Dr. Charles Hambrick-Stowe, Senior Pastor of First Congregational Church, Ridgefield, CT. Used with Permission.

The preacher starts with a text, and I have a text. I’m here to talk about John Calvin and the possible relevance of his legacy for the church and for the church’s mission today. But I have a text. It’s a great text, a plumb-line – yes, the Word is that plumb-line God showed to the prophet Amos – a plumb-line and a powerful corrective for a church foolish enough to imagine, as social context changes, that the gospel must also change. It may indeed be true that, as the 19th century protest hymn puts it, “time makes ancient good uncouth,” but if the gospel is the gospel it’s the eternal gospel and it’s what brings hope and life as the context changes with time and culture. Here it is, from the book of the prophet Isaiah 51:1-2:

Listen to me, you that pursue righteousness, you that seek the Lord.

Look to the rock from which you were hewn,

and to the quarry from which you were dug.

Look to Abraham your father and to Sarah who bore you;

For he was but one when I called him, but I blessed him and made him many.

Abraham and Sarah . . . and their spiritual offspring, the faithful down through the generations being built into a living temple, in time with Jesus Christ revealed as the cornerstone, and, like Peter the rock, God keeps hewing stones from that quarry of faithfulness to build into that temple. We’re here to mark a significant anniversary of one of those living stones, one whose theology played a major role in the shaping of our history. But I must say . . .

How tantalizingly odd it feels for me to be invited to reflect on the legacy of John Calvin at the Grand Rapids General Synod luncheon of this important group in the United Church of Christ. Now . . . Before I tell you why this moment is so strange, let me introduce you briefly to John Calvin, in this, the 500th anniversary of his birth.

Thinking back to world history in high school or college (or church history at seminary if you’re a minister), you may remember the big names associated with the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century – Martin Luther, Ulrich Zwingli, and John Calvin. While Luther and Zwingli were contemporaries (born in 1483 and 1484 respectively), Calvin was born a quarter-century later. So he was a second-generation Reformer, building on the principles set forth by Luther, Zwingli, and others: Salvation by faith alone through God’s grace in Jesus Christ (not by any goodness on our own part); bowing to the authority of Scripture (not papal hierarchy); the sovereignty of God over all of life, with reform of both church life and the civil order (replacing medieval Catholic hierarchies with more dynamic, fluid, participatory social structures under divine authority and biblical moral standards). Calvin implemented the Reformation so effectively by mid-century in the city of Geneva, Switzerland, that the Scottish Reformer John Knox called Geneva “the most perfect school of Christ that ever was in the earth since the days of the Apostles.” This influence gave rise to an international movement generally known as “Calvinism” – also and perhaps more properly called “the Reformed Tradition.” (Branches of the great family of the church in this tradition: Presbyterian, Congregational, all denominations with the word “Reformed” in their name, most Baptists.) While other names, like Zwingli, Bucer, or Heidelberg Catechism authors Ursinus and Olivianus, among others, played major roles in shaping the movement, Calvin’s theological influence is preeminent and persistent.

Calvin was born in northern France in 1509. Unlike almost every other Reformer he did not begin his career as a Roman Catholic priest or monk. Educated in the humanities in Paris, with a Master of Arts degree at age 18, he felt drawn to theology, but his father insisted that he study law. He received his law degree in 1532 but, when his father died, he immediately returned to the Greek and Latin classics, dreaming of a scholar’s career. Sometime during 1533 or 1534, however, Calvin’s life was re-directed by a conversion away from Roman Catholicism to the theological perspective of Luther and the Reformation. Years later he described his experience this way: “By an unexpected conversion [God] tamed to teachableness a mind too stubborn for its years” . . . such that within a year “anybody who longed for a purer doctrine kept on coming to learn from me, still a beginner, a raw recruit.” Elsewhere Calvin writes as a theologian of the heart – and that is how Charles Partee describes him in his new book The Theology of John Calvin (WJK Press, 2009) and the thrust of Herman J. Selderhuis’s portrait in John Calvin: A Pilgrim’s Life (IVP, 2009). Indeed, the crest Calvin designed for himself depicts a hand holding or offering a heart. But for Calvin the first step is the “taming” of the mind, by God’s grace receiving a “teachable mind.” All the spiritual gifts that have to do with feeling and behavior – heart and hand — flow from a sound, biblical understanding of what God has done for us in Jesus Christ.

Forced into exile with other French Protestants, in Basle Calvin wrote the first version of his famous Institutes of the Christian Religion in 1536 – this brief first edition (a theological handbook) bulked up over the years until the final edition which flexes its muscles at more than 1,500 pages, one of the greatest expositions of Christian theology ever written. Calvin still hoped for a quiet life of scholarship and in the summer of 1536 he was on his way to Strasbourg for that purpose. But hostile Imperial Catholic troop movements forced him to stop over in Geneva – and, as they say, the rest is history. William Farel, the leading Reformer of that Swiss city believed that Calvin was just the man to guide and shape the church’s future. Calvin said no. Farel answered Calvin’s refusal with the warning that, if he did not commit to Geneva, God would surely curse his scholarly endeavors. Calvin stayed in Geneva, becoming the leading preacher and theological teacher. He was 27 years old.

This first effort at leadership in Geneva did not go well – in two years Calvin and Farel were voted out. Calvin spent three happy years from 1538 to 1541 in Strasbourg teaching at the university, pastoring the church of French refugees, engaging in international and even Protestant/Catholic theological dialogue, and getting married. His writings in defense of Reformation theology were so impressive, and the political climate had changed such, that Geneva invited him back in 1541. And there he served, exercising authority in the church and great influence in the civil realm (though rarely without opposition and never with absolute power) until his death at age 55 in 1564.

In addition to the Institutes, Calvin wrote many volumes of commentaries on the books of the Bible – so that, in addition to being a theologian of the heart, he must be considered a biblical theologian, far more than a systematic theologian. Calvin’s Geneva became the refuge for Protestant exiles from many European countries, including English Puritans when the Catholic Queen Mary was on the throne. Congregationalists in England and New England in the 1600s looked back to Geneva in many ways as a model, although they sought to gather churches congregationally rather than with a Presbyterian polity. There are many good books on Calvin’s life and thought, including a number of new publications coinciding with his 500th birthday.

So why did I call this experience of speaking today “tantalizingly odd”?

To a few here at General Synod – all too few, I’m afraid – our topic today might not seem strange, but altogether appropriate. After all, during this 500th anniversary year, academic conferences, sermon series, publications, and adult education sessions devoted to Calvin are happening around the world. Calvin and the theological framework associated with his name are stunningly vital forces in today’s global church. Perhaps you’ve read about this resurgence – not only in publications like Christian Century and Christianity Today but in the secular media. At the end of last year in its “What’s Next in 2009” issue Time magazine listed “10 Ideas Changing the World Right Now.” Number 3 on Time’s list is a movement called “The New Calvinism.” But most in the UCC (if aware) would be put off by these hard-core “young and restless” new Calvinists (Collin Hansen, Young, Restless, Reformed, CT 2006, book 2008). Indeed, most in the UCC are unaware, or have forgotten, that in our traditions we were ever any kind of Calvinists at all – or we blush with shame at the thought that we ever were. We may express pride that Jonathan Edwards, known as America’s greatest theologian, was one of “us” – but most in the UCC cringe at the thought of his Reformed theology, his evangelical Calvinism.

Okay . . . in the UCC, we did remind ourselves of our place in that family tree in the 1980s and 90s when we were required to demonstrate our right to be at the Lutheran-Reformed Dialog table and ultimately be included in the Formula of Agreement with the ELCA, RCA, and PCUSA. Our denomination may not have stood very firmly in the Reformed Tradition by that time but – in that venue – at least we could say that this was the primary (but not the only) historic Christian tradition from which we emerged. Our claim to that heritage often seemed like double-talk to our dialog partners twenty years ago but we got away with it.

And here we are in Grand Rapids, of all places – the Mecca of Calvinism in North America with its Dutch Reformed heritage, home of educational institutions and publishing firms that mediate Calvin’s influence in the twenty-first century. To come to this city to speak about John Calvin on the one hand is like carrying coals to Newcastle. But this is the national meeting of the UCC, a church with a pretty bad case of amnesia when it comes to history. And I’m a historian and a pastor . . . So: What else would I come here to talk about other than the legacy of John Calvin!

It’s so strange because: It’s been a long time since Calvin has been regarded as anything like a hero in our denomination. It’s been easy to forget Calvin for a number of reasons. Our UCC roots are overwhelmingly Calvinist (e.g., the insignia of the Reformed Church included Calvin’s crest, heart in hand, along with that of Zwingli and other symbols). But nobody ever said that John Calvin was the founder of the German Reformed Church or the Congregational movement within English Puritanism. In the United Church of Christ we lack the identity-bestowing advantage of a single founder that Methodists and Lutherans and newer movements like the Church of God in Christ or the Vineyard fellowship can point to. So we are not compelled as a namesake to regard Calvin as a touchstone like a Luther or a Wesley or a John Wimber or a C.H. Mason.

Multiple founders or, we might say, the polygenesis of UCC traditions have made it easy not to remember Calvin. In the German Reformed Church, for example – as a French-born theologian whose work as Reformer was carried out in Geneva, Switzerland – Calvin was always esteemed as one foundational influence among others. When John Williamson Nevin at the German Reformed seminary at Mercersburg in the 1840s argued persuasively that the Lord’s Supper was not just a memorial meal – arguing for Christ’s real spiritual presence (his “mystical presence”) in the sacrament of Holy Communion, he did so by demonstrating that this was the position of John Calvin. No wonder that Nevin’s theology has received a warm welcome in Dutch Reformed circles. Still, while the German and Dutch Reformed churches had very much in common, the German Reformed included Ulrich Zwingli in their creation narrative more prominently than did the Dutch. And the German Reformed Church always understood itself as “the church of the Heidelberg Catechism, so that 1563 document infused a certain irenic spirit in the German Reformed Church. Now, the Dutch Reformed also adopted Heidelberg as a theological standard and continues to employ it in worship to a far greater degree than anything we have seen in recent years in the UCC. But the Dutch also adhered to the Canons of the Synod of Dort (1618-19), a creedal statement that self-consciously sought to establish Calvinist orthodoxy over against the softer tenets of Arminius and Arminianism. Calvinism’s famous TULIP acronym (total depravity, unconditional election, limited atonement, irresistible grace, perseverance of the saints) traces to this Dutch Calvinist document. My point here is that Calvin was important, but only relatively so, in the GRC. As the life of the United Church of Christ developed in more activist and less theological directions after 1957 the influence of John Calvin diminished to the vanishing point.

Among Congregationalists Calvin’s prominence had waned long before 1957 – to a large extent, more like 1857. In fact, you could think of the 1800s in American Congregational history as a century-long process of de-Calvinization. We tend to forget that John Robinson and William Ames and other English Congregationalists were delegates at the Synod of Dort and New England readily adopted the strongly Calvinist Westminster Confession as its theological standard the Cambridge Synod. New England Congregationalists from the time of Plymouth in 1620 and Massachusetts Bay and the Connecticut colonies from the 1630s on, pretty much through the American Revolution, had understood themselves (and middle-colony Presbyterian cousins) as the leading New World outposts of the international Calvinist or Reformed movement. But by the period of the Revolution, the Enlightenment, with its emphasis on rationalism, was making headway – the idea that human reason, science and technology, could solve the problems of the world. At the start of the nineteenth century, in the New Republic, a theological struggle was going on in New England – some moved away from the classic theology of seventeenth-century Puritanism and of eighteenth-century evangelicals like Jonathan Edwards – going so far as to reject as unreasonable such essential doctrines as the Trinity and the divinity of Christ. As many churches were swept into Unitarianism, orthodox believers were forced to establish new congregations. Several theological schools of thought flourished among these more traditional Christians (our UCC forbears), but they all identified themselves as standing in the Calvinist or Reformed Tradition. As Harvard drifted toward and then embraced Unitarianism, New England’s institutions of higher learning – Yale College, Andover Seminary, Hartford Seminary, Bangor Theological Seminary – were all established as bastions of orthodoxy, to defend Calvinist theology as it was interpreted in successive generations. It was Congregationalism’s evangelical Calvinism that fueled the social reform movements of the decades leading up to the Civil War. You might think that that would settle the matter, that as the New England diaspora spread west Congregationalism would remain steadily within the Reformed theological family. But no – over the middle and later decades of the 1800s more theologically liberal ways of thinking emerged. We could chart this in a number of ways if we had time – e.g., the wording of faith statements from the Burial Hill Declaration (1865) to Kansas City Statement of Faith (1913). As John von Rohr puts it in The Shaping of American Congregationalism: While the Kansas City Statement gave lip service to “the faith which our fathers confessed,” its substance exhibited the “liberalization of theology that had occurred” in the denomination. “The older pattern of tracing a personal pilgrimage from sin to salvation was abandoned, and the theme of personal redemption was only briefly mentioned. . . . The statement instead . . . emphasized the churches’ striving to know God’s will, to walk in God’s ways, and to labor for justice, peace, and human ‘brotherhood.’” At the tercentenary of the Cambridge Platform, early New England’s affirmation of evangelical Calvinism, in 1947 the keynote speaker announced, “Calvinism as a whole is no gospel for today.” So quite some time ago John Calvin fell from hero status – becoming irrelevant and worse.

For many decades now in our denomination, Calvin has been seen – at best – as an embarrassment, the crusty old uncle that you wish would stop coming to family gatherings. If Presbyterians still wanted to engage in conversation with Calvin that was their business, we were too progressive-minded for that and it wasn’t too hard to ignore him as we adapted ourselves to modern, more supposedly relevant ways of thinking. No surprise then that, by the time the United Church of Christ got itself up and running in the 1960s, the idea of paying homage to John Calvin was the farthest thing from anybody’s list of action-items. If anything, Calvin became a pariah, symbol of patriarchal oppression, and Calvinism the bête noir of UCC progressivism – doctrines of original sin, atoning sacrifice, election, predestination, irresistible grace, the sovereign holiness of God – even the idea of doctrine itself! – are seen more as the problem than the solution to the human situation. Okay, the notion of covenant remains very important in UCC polity, but does anybody care what “covenantal theology” meant to the Puritans and to Calvin before them?

What, then, is the legacy of John Calvin for our churches and for our Christian witness today. Is there a legacy that we can embrace? If some of us will be reluctant to go as far as the younger generation of “New Calvinists” and older standard-bearers like John Piper, Tim Keller, Mark Dever, or (God forbid) R.C. Sproul, we should remember that the Reformed Tradition has always been a broad, multi-layered movement. I am suggesting at the very least that we rediscover our place in that branch of the Christian family. But let me be more specific now about where I think Calvin can connect with us directly and theologically.

John Calvin is known as a theologian but at the start of the Institutes he states that theology is impossible apart from piety, a devoted heart. (It is notable that John Thomas, in his farewell words here at Synod, identified “piety” is seriously lacking in the UCC today and called for its recovery.) Here for Calvin is the root of it all: “I call piety that reverence joined with love of God which the knowledge of his benefits induces” (I.2.1). He writes that “doctrine” is a matter “not of the tongue but of life. It is not apprehended by the understanding and memory alone . . . but it is received only when it possesses the whole soul and finds a seat and resting place in the inmost affection of the heart” (III.6.4). Here is where we see Calvin as a theologian of the heart and as a biblical theologian – and as a theologian of the Holy Spirit. It is by the work of the Holy Spirit in our mind, heart, and hands that we can begin to live the life that God intends for us. Here Calvin employs the biblical, Pauline term “sanctification.” And Charles Partee writes that, when it comes to sanctification, Calvin’s theology “glitters.” Calvin identifies the doctrines of justification and sanctification as the heart of the redemptive narrative of the gospel.

I think that today we need to rediscover, reclaim, learn how to preach again the twin doctrines of justification and sanctification. John Calvin can help us do that. This could be John Calvin’s gift to us. I learned first-hand at a Lutheran-Reformed consultation at New York back in 1987 – where Gabe Fackre, Louis Gunnemann, and I represented the UCC – just how distinctively Calvinist it is to insist on the link between justification and sanctification. In the Reformed tradition we share with Luther’s theology the bedrock belief that justification – being accepted as right with God – is solely by our trust in God’s gracious love in Jesus Christ. There is nothing we can do to merit salvation, we could never be good enough to earn a place in heaven, this is purely a gift from God, in no way a human achievement. Calvin calls this “the main hinge” on which the Christian religion turns (III.11.1). But God does not only accomplish this work of salvation for us – God also wants to accomplish his will in us. In his “Reply to Sadoleto” (written in Strasbourg in defense of the Reformation), Calvin states: “We deny that good works have any share in justification, but we claim full authority for them in the lives of the righteous. . . . If you would duly understand how inseparable faith and works are, look to Christ, who, as the Apostle teaches (1 Cor. 1:30) has been given to us for justification and for sanctification. . . . Where Christ is, there too is the Spirit of holiness, who regenerates the soul to newness of life. In his Commentary on 1 Corinthians 1:30 he writes: “We cannot be justified freely by faith alone, if we do not at the same time live in holiness. For those gifts of grace go together as if tied by an inseparable bond” (quoted in Partee). In the Institutes he writes: “Christ justifies no one whom he does not at the same time sanctify. . . . we are justified not without works, yet not through works, since in our sharing in Christ, which justifies us, sanctification is just as much included as righteousness” (III.16.1). What I learned in New York at that Lutheran-Reformed dialog is that Lutherans get more than nervous, they cringe, when the discussion turns to “living in holiness” and salvation being “not without works.” Deathly afraid of any emphasis on human action, the Lutheran tendency (the Lutheran gift to the church) is to keep the focus on what God does for us in Christ. Calvin, however, insists that when God does something for us by the work of Christ, God also does something in us by the work of the Holy Spirit.

By contrast, the tendency in the UCC since 1957 has been overwhelmingly toward human action, social action, social reform, living your faith in the public arena. Our activism – our gift – believing means doing – most certainly stems from our Calvinist heritage (whether UCC members know this or not). But – and this, it seems to me, is the spiritual problem of the United Church of Christ – our commitment to faithful living is no longer rooted in a theology of redemption. In many places and at many organizational levels of the church, the very concept of justification and sanctification are ignored or even rejected as obsolete, meaningless, or hurtful doctrines. Salvation is construed as getting in touch with your true self, perhaps especially your true gendered self, so if there is a theological emphasis at all it is on the doctrine of creation (“God doesn’t create junk”) and, with regard to Jesus, the doctrine of the Incarnation, God-with-us, validating us just as we are. But . . . the Fall? Atonement? Reconciliation of sinful humanity with the God of holiness? Word that Christ died for our sins? Who in our churches knows what any of this means anymore?

Calvin sums it up this way: There is “one sole means of recovering salvation. . . . Christ was given to us by God’s generosity, to be grasped and possessed by us in faith. By partaking of him, we principally receive a double grace: namely, that being reconciled to God through Christ’s blamelessness, we may have in heaven instead of a Judge a gracious Father; and secondly, that sanctified by Christ’s spirit we may cultivate blamelessness and purity of life” (Institutes, III.11.1).

This is not dry doctrine, not mere dogma. It is a vital expression of the Christian narrative. Our story as believers. God’s story of human redemption. As preachers, when we get people into the biblical narrative, that gospel gets into the people. God’s story becomes our story. Throughout the world people are finding hope in this gospel and as that happens churches are thriving. That is the hope for our people and our churches, whatever the future of the United Church of Christ as a denomination.

The 500th anniversary of the birth of John Calvin should prompt us to think again about our theological and ecclesial roots. As God said through the prophet (Isaiah 51:1-2):

Listen to me, you that pursue righteousness, you that seek the Lord.

Look to the rock from which you were hewn,

and to the quarry from which you were dug.

Look to Abraham your father and to Sarah who bore you;

For he was but one when I called him, but I blessed him and made him many.

Holding Fast To The Psalms – Stories From Hungary Beth Lantinga

The following is quoted from the online journal Reformed Worship and the article Holding Fast To The Psalms – Stories From Hungary by Beth Lantinga

“The book of Psalms, embodied in the Genevan Psalter, has nourished Reformed Christians for centuries. This spiritual heritage has a special place in the hearts of Hungarian Reformed believers who have survived the harsh years of Communist repression and domination. Their stories testify to the influence of the psalms in the ordinary and extraordinary details of their lives. In a recent set of interviews with Reformed believers in Hungary, I asked what the psalms meant to them. Some of those interviewed were surprised that I would even ask whether the Psalter was important for them, because the answer was obvious–of course! They had been wrapped in the tapestry of faith into which the Genevan Psalter was woven–in some places obvious and clear, in others as a deep background color–but always present.”

The whole article is well worth reading and discusses how the Psalms are conveyed through the Family, Congregation, and Summer Music Camps.

The website GenevanPsalter.com has English versions of these Psalms.

Calvin For The 21st Century Conference

calvinfor21stcentury

Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary will be hosting its first conference August 27–29. This year’s theme is “Calvin for the 21st Century.” The conference will be held at the Calvin College Prince Center in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Speakers at this year’s conference will include Joel Beeke, Jerry Bilkes, Ligon Duncan, Michael Haykin, Nelson Kloosterman, David Murray, Joseph Pipa, Neil Pronk, Donald Sinnema, Derek Thomas, and Cornel Venema. They will be addressing a variety of ways in which Calvin can assist us in understanding the Word of God, the love of God, the work of the Holy Spirit, redemption, reforming the church, ethics, the benefits of salvation, and reprobation.

Don’t forget to bring your book allowance! Reformation Heritage Books will have a large selection of books on and by Calvin and a host of other subjects available at the conference, all at steeply discounted prices.

Conference Pricing (per participant):

Early Registration (through June 26, 2009) $65.00 x _____ = $______

Regular Registration (between June 26 and August 8, 2009) $90.00 x _____ = ______

Student (includes college and seminary students and their wives) $45.00 x _____ = ______

Look for online registration availability beginning in March at www.puritanseminary.org. Conference accommodations at the Prince Center are limited to 450 attendees, so sign-up early to avoid disappointment. Send all questions and/or comments related to the Puritan Reformed Conference to conference@puritanseminary.org or call 616.977.0599. You may write the seminary at 2965 Leonard Street NE, Grand Rapids, MI 49525.

Introduction To The Puritan Reformed Journal

prts-journal
Reformed Confessions Harmonized with an Annotated Bibliography of Reformed Doctrinal Works brought Dr. Joel Beeke to the attention of the Hungarian Church and introduced the Hungarian theological heritage to the English-speaking Reformed community. The proposal to produce such a work and to make the Second Helvetic Confession a central feature was raised at a conference of Reformed and Presbyterian publishers in Canada which took place about the time liberation from Communism came to Erdely.

The extensive bibliography first appeared as installments in the Christian Observer and Bernie Woudenberg of the Transylvania Reformed Assistance Committee arranged a significant part of the initial financing. The massive growth of functional Calvinist ecumenism over the last two decades owes much to this book and many others which followed from Dr. Beeke’s desk.

Ministers from our community were there at the start and shared dreams of equipping the church with the tools of genuine Reform. Doctorates, seminaries, and a steady stream of books followed.

Puritan Reformed Seminary is part of this vision. The following article comes from the introduction to the inaugural volume of Puritan Reformed Journal and displays the exciting developments among Dr. Beeke’s students.

Lux Lucet in Tenebris rallied persecuted church in Scotland’s hills and motivated the refugees of the Killing Times as they came from Scotland and Ireland to the hills of Western Pennsylvania and on down the Appalachians into the heart of America.

Whether it is the Turk, the Papist, or some political movement, the shadows cast by enemies of the gospel always provoke in Reformed communities a certainty that the Light Shines in the Darkness and the best days of the church are yet to be.

Dreaming of the dawn I ask you to read the editor’s introduction. Then subscribe. For my friends this is advice. For my co-workers this is an appeal from the heart. For my students this is an assignment.

From the Editors

In his little-known study of the important contributions made by the Puritans, Donald A. Carson concluded that it is “impossible to read them without feeling the fire burn within, without being humbled by their almost fantastic grasp of Scripture and of theology” and prayed that God would again give us “such abundant fruit of superior qualities.” [1] Without claiming to be that fruit for which Dr. Carson prayed, the papers in this inaugural issue of The Puritan Reformed Journal do seek to undertake theological reflection along the very lines laid down by the Puritans, submitting to the Word of God as the final and all-sufficient source of truth about God and His salvation, and seeking to understand the many-splendored contours of the biblical witness about the Triune God in Scripture and history. As the Puritans well knew, this entails various realms of theological reflection: biblical, historical, and pastoral theology, and that jewel in the crown, systematic theology. It is the editors’ hope that, in issues to come, all of these realms of theology will be represented and help the church of Christ to increase in the knowledge of her God.

An essay by Joel Beeke provides an appropriate doorway into this inaugural issue by emphasizing our great need for a God-centered ministry. Through an exegetical analysis of 1 Corinthians 1:1-2:5, Dr. Beeke highlights the fact that such a ministry is inevitably Christological, for the great goal of all of God’s works is the glory of His Son. In a biblio-theological study on preaching Christ from the Old Testament, David Murray continues this theme of the exaltation of Christ. He rightly shows that far too much gospel preaching bypasses the Old Testament altogether, despite Christ’s own declaration that all of the Scriptures of the Old Covenant spoke of Him.

Among the most neglected Old Testament books is Leviticus—though the writer of the letter to the Hebrews uses this book extensively, Johnny Serafini, a Brazilian student at Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary, seeks to rectify this lacuna by examining the Levitical prohibition on consuming blood, its New Testament fulfillment, and the godly reverence that should permeate our lives because of this command. The usefulness of the Old Testament for New Testament believers also informs the article of Gerald Bilkes on Ezra’s pattern for church reformation today. We delight in being Reformed believers, but we have not arrived, and must ever search the Scriptures to know the paths God would have us take. Dr. Bilkes’s article is a great help to this end.

In the first of two studies in historical theology, Michael Haykin looks at the Scottish Confession of Faith (1560) and the Irish Articles (1615) with regard to their teaching on regeneration and faith, key issues during the Reformation era. One of the great lines of Reformed witness from the Reformation is the Huguenots, whose history is a thrilling story of great exploits for God, horrific persecution, and god’s succor of His people, great preachers, and revival. Among the most powerful of God’s servants in this French community was the nineteenth-century Calvinist Adolphe Monod (1802-1856). Antoine Theron, a South African student at Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary, opens up Monod’s Christology for us in an informative and insightful essay.

There are three church history studies in the present issue. First, a study of preaching in the Heidelberg Catechism by Daniel Hyde highlights not only the utterly vital role that preaching holds in this confessional document but also its importance in any worship that claims to be Reformed. Second, Randall Pederson offers a fascinating study of a little-known Puritan, Andrew Willet (1561/2-1621), and finally, we have an essay by John J. Murray on his famous namesake, John Murray, undoubtedly one of the key men responsible for the recovery of Calvinism in the latter half of the twentieth century.

If the Puritans were anything, they were preachers and pastors, and it is appropriate that this inaugural issue is rounded out with a trio of pastoralia: an examination of God-centered adult education by Joel Beeke; a meditation on ministerial pride by the Puritan Richard Baxter, who shines most brightly in his dealing with pastoral issues; and a look at pastoral counseling in the face of disease and death by Christopher Bogosh.

Please note that we have purposefully selected articles of varying levels, some being scholarly in nature, others being of a simpler and practical nature, hoping that all readers will benefit. We would love to hear from you as to how we can improve our journal, which we hope to publish twice annually. Meanwhile, if you are not a regular donor to our seminary, please send in your subscription today (regular donors will receive each issue as a complimentary gift) to ensure that you do not miss an issue.

As editors, we hope that you will be edified as you read this issue and that you will support this literary effort to glorify our great God, to whom be glory now and forever.

+ Dr. Edwin P. Elliott, Jr.

To obtain a subscription in the United States send US$ 20 to Puritan Reformed Journal, Mrs. Ann Dykema, PRJ Administrative Assistant, 2865 Leonard St., N.E., Grand Rapids, MI 49525. This is the link for purchasing the initial issue only.

Debrecen Kántus – English Site

The Hungarian Reformed Church, in the Continental Reformed tradition, has focused the song of its corporate worship on metrical versions of the Psalter in addition to other Bible based hymns.

Below, the Debrecen Kántus (Choir) is pictured. While the main site is in Hungarian, an English language version site is also available as well as in German. There are audio recordings available for download. The site also has a variety of videos (YouTube) available to view.

debrecenkantuschoir

Below are a variety of Psalms performed in Hungarian:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfNPWm2Qfec&eurl=http://www.kantus.hu/index.php?page=video&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iwv-B1PjiY0&eurl=http://genevanpsalter.redeemer.ca/biblio_discography.html&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHxO1u67vSM&eurl=http://genevanpsalter.redeemer.ca/biblio_discography.html&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

Thanks to Dr. David Koyzis, a modern lover of the Genevan Psalter, for pointing out these resources.

Melancthon and the Reformation in Hungary

Professor Buzogany Dezso’s work on Melancthon and the doctrine of Holy Communion is a new and invaluable reference work for those English readers wishing to explore the connection between the formation of the Hungarian Reformed church through the lens of the Communion Controversies on the Continent at large during the time of the Reformation.

It is available from Full Bible Publications in print or electronic format.

While American readers may find the contention that Melancthon is considered the father of a “Reformed” (as opposed to “Lutheran”) church, Professor Buzogany begins the work in this way:

Church historians conclude that the decisive moment during the 16th century formation process of the Hungarian Reformed Church in Transylvania was that, when Melanchthon’s influence over the
Transylvanian Hungarian reformers increased. It has also been said that our accepting of the Swiss doctrines had been a result of his encouragement.

Accordingly, the key factor in our becoming reformed is Melanchthon, or, more precisely, his very own way of approaching the presence of
Christ in the Holy Communion.

But to what degree is this statement true? Though Melancthon’s influence on the Hungarian Reformed church remains undisputed, it requires the balance of this intriguing work to help English readers understand not only Melancthon, but also his impact on the development of the Hungarian Reformed Church

The Reformed Elder

Many churches are in the process of choosing elders for service in the coming year(s). This sermon was preached at First Presbyterian Church Lawrenceburg TN on the topic of the ministry of elders in the congregation according to the Reformed Tradition. While commenting specifically on the development of the office as described in the Scots tradition, there is significant overlap with the Reformed doctrine of the Ruling Elder that emerged throughout the Reformation churches of Europe as documented in such works as Samuel Miller’sThe Warrant, Nature, and Duties of the Ruling Elder

You may download the file here: The Reformed Elder

Sermon: Renewing Your Vows To God – Preparing For Holy Communion

The following is a Communion Preparation sermon preached October 26, 2008 at First Presbyterian Church Lawrenceburg TN by Rev. Chuck Huckaby, a minister in the Calvin Synod.

It is an application of the text from our Lord’s Sermon on the Mount, Matthew 5: 33 – 37. A previous sermon examined the text in more depth and this sermon continues it’s application to the people of God as they approach the Table of the Lord the coming Lord’s Day.

The Hungarian Communion service, of course, wonderfully rehearses these vows in asking participants to state together what we as Reformed Christians “Believe and Confess” and likewise “Promise and Resolve”.

May the Lord assist us, as we come to His Table, to truly “believe and confess” and “promise and resolve” those thing that bring glory to our Savior Jesus Christ and as – by grace – we “walk in newness of life” (Romans 6:3).

This is an MP3 file appoximately 30 minutes in length for scripture reading, sermon and prayer.

Renewing Your Vows