Calvin Synod Herald, 1996 (96. évfolyam, 1-6. szám)

1996-03-01 / 2. szám

CALVIN SYNOD HERALD AMERIKAI MAGYAR REFORMÁTUSOK LAPJA- T -"QUA PATRESS DIFFICILIME ADOPTI SUNT, NOLITE TURPITER RELIQUEM!" ■k'k'k "WHAT OUR FATHERS WITH SO MUCH DIFFICULTY SECURED, DO NOT LOOSELY RELINQUISH!" On the crossroads of life, as our churches on this part of the Ocean entered into our second century, and as we are just a few years before the next millennium, we still display the two flags and the two emblems side by side in all our sanctuar­ies 'from sea to shining sea'. It is evident that TRADITION and TRADITIONALISM, or otherwise described: TRADITION OR TRADITIONALISM, is a real and life-transforming question of our everyday living or our every-Sunday demonstration. Tradition or Traditionalism o 4N There are many of us still here, who will do everything in our power to pre­serve as much as possible of our be­loved mother-tongue in our congrega­tions. There are some among us, who will do anything; and even those, who will do all against using Hungarian in any form in the lives of our churches. This is our fate in our delicate Ameri­­can-Hungarian life! But beyond and above the great problem of language, there is yet a greater problem of preserving our unique Hungarian-Reformed Traditions. The Hungarian language - much to our sorrow - after the Centenarian mile­stone is slowly and gradually disap­pearing; whether we do everything in our power or not. What outlives the language - and should - is our Hungarian Tradition of our Reformed faith: our beautiful litur­gical customs and proven Calvinistic form of our church-government. The great Reinhold Niebuhr wrote: "No present can have firm foundation and no future can be fruitful, unless they are deeply rooted in the past." There is a tremendous difference between Tradition and Traditionalism. Our age confuses the two: judging from the latter discards even the former. Tra­dition is the living Faith of the dead, the faith of our forefathers in us: Tradition­alism is - just the opposite - the dead faith of the living, the spiritless imitation of the dead by the living. Our Hungarian Reformed Tradition is the faith of our fathers still living in us from generation to generation with the precious customs of the Past in the Present for the Future. On the liturgical scene, I only want to mention here the very unique and solemn form of our Hungarian Re­formed Communion Service. Nothing can more readily prove the magnificence of our own traditional Service of Communion than the follow­ing incident I myself experienced. An Anglo-saxon minister from a congrega­tion from Wisconsin was visiting in Cleveland one Sunday. He came to the morning service in our First Hungarian Reformed Church. It happened to be Communion Sunday. I administered the Holy Communion Service. He asked me after the Service what liturgical form I used, since he thought it was the most impressive form he ever experienced. He asked for a copy of the form and notified me for a long time after, that he introduced the same Communion for­mat in his congregation to the great satisfaction of his non-Hungarian con­gregation. And now on the scene of church government, where we excel. There is no better form of governing congrega­tions than our own. No wonder that the forefathers of our American Nation chose the Calvinistic Geneva Form of government as the form to be copied. And because ofthat, this Nation under God became the envy of the whole world. Our Hungarian Reformed Church-government is the perfect prod­uct of Calvin's Geneva church-govern­ment. But our church-government in its true essence is not Democracy (the rule of the people's will), but Theocracy (the rule of God's will). We elect people into our administering Church-Cabinets and Consistories; as elders and presbyters; not to be representatives of their own fallible, human will; but to be represen­tatives of God's infallible and perfect will. On that level, oh what unbelievable dangers at the present in the lives of our congregations?! There are always more and more of those elected into our church boards, who - either willingly or unwillingly - trying to enforce their own petty-little wills upon our congre­gations because of sectarian connec­tions and anti-Calvinistic influences; instead of the rule of God's Will. What tremendous danger to our Traditions especially at times when great deci­sions have to be made in the congre­gational life? 'We are living in danger­ous Ages, there are lions in the cages.' Quoting the great Calvinistic, Hun­garian poet, Ady: "You, who are so few and forsaken: Watchmen! Be vigilant on your appointed posts!" If those, who are called to be watch­men, are not vigilant on their posts, what will happen to the people in our congregations? What will be our future without firm roots in the Past? What will be the fate of our Heritage? Be on guard to preserve our precious Heritage, keep loyal to our Royal Tradition! God save us from the tragedy of Jerusalem! God save our lips to be forced to sing the ancient 79th Psalm ever in our history: "0 god, the heathen have come into thine inheritance; they have defiled thy holy temple; they have laid Jerusalem in ruins." Editor

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