Updated 11:58 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

World|Tue, May. 19 2009 09:35 AM EDT

Reformed Bodies to Plan Merger; Celebrate Calvin

By Audrey Barrick|Christian Post Reporter

Coinciding with the 500th anniversary of 16th century reformer John Calvin, a meeting between leaders of the two largest reformed church bodies is being held this week to plan their merger.

The executive committees of the 75 million-member World Alliance of Reformed Churches and the 12 million-member Reformed Ecumenical Council will convene in Geneva, Switzerland, where Calvin had promoted the Protestant Reformation.

There, he had also urged visible unity among the Reformers.

"This move towards unity is a fitting tribute to Calvin by his modern day heirs," said Peter Borgdorff, president of the REC, in a statement.

At the Geneva meeting, the two bodies will discuss the structure and budget for the new global communion – which will be known as the World Communion of Reformed Churches – as well as plans for the Uniting General Council in June 2010, when the merger is expected to be formally approved.

"We will be looking at ensuring the financial base of the new organization in light of the current financial climate," Borgdorff said in a statement. "This means shaping the structure so that we can meet the challenges of today while planning for the future."

WARC president Clifton Kirkpatrick commented, "The objective is sustainability."

While some speculate the merger was prompted by financial challenges, Kristine Greenaway, executive secretary of communications for the WARC, rejected such claims.

"The merger was not prompted by financial struggles," Greenaway said in an e-mail to The Christian Post. "While both organizations indeed face financial challenges, the merger was occasioned by the desire to respond to the call to be one for greater stronger witness in the world and to reverse the tendency for the Reformed to yield to divisions."

According to Greenaway, income in the WARC has remained steady from member churches and "has even increased slightly." Income has only declined from churches in Germany. And the decline, Greenaway explained, was not occasioned by a drop in member church commitments, but rather by changes in the church tax system and the decline in the value of the U.S. dollar against the Swiss franc.

Moreover, membership in the WARC has been stable and increasing, she stated.

Greenaway was unable to comment on REC finances.

The proposal for a merger was introduced in 2006 and approved by the executive committees of the two bodies in 2007. In 2008, a draft constitution and preliminary plans were affirmed.

The reasons for merging, Greenaway explained, are to unite the Reformed churches and strengthen their common witness.

"Christian disunity has usually compromised the effectiveness of the proclamation of the Gospel and Christian actions in the world," she stated. "The Bible witnesses to the fact that in unity there is increased strength, and the oneness of believers will lead to the world believing (John 17:21). So the merger will indeed strengthen the common witness of the Reformed family of churches."

Some of the objectives of the WCRC include fostering Reformed confessional identity and unity in the whole church, renewing a passion among Reformed Christians for God's mission, and promoting justice in the economy and the earth and to work for peace and reconciliation in the world.

Heading the new communion as general secretary will be Setri Nyomi from Ghana who is currently the general secretary of WARC. The president of the WCRC will be elected at the June 2010 meeting, which will take place in Grand Rapids, Mich.

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  • Sat May 30, 2009 8:22 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Well done, JHWHNisi,
    a p.p.s. - Calvin observed no-one "can have the least knowledge of true and sound doctrine, without having been a disciple of The Scripture";
    and in his Prefatory letter to the King of a persecuting France from which Calvin and the Huguenots had to flee,
    "Our G-D is not the Author of division, but of peace; and The Son of G-D, Who came to destroy the works of the devil is not the Minister of sin.'

  • Fri May 29, 2009 9:49 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    Good stuff Jehovahnissi!

  • Thu May 28, 2009 11:32 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    "The doctrine of justification itself, as preached by an Arminian, is nothing but the doctrine of salvation by works..." -- C.H. Spurgeon

    â

  • Thu May 28, 2009 8:45 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    There is also no evidence Calvin ever harmed, much less killed, anyone. Michelle Servetus was indicted, tried, convicted and executed by the civil government in Geneva. Calvin was a witness at the trial and testified as to the heretical nature of Servetus' teaching. Servetus was also under a death sentence by the Catholic Church at the time, which is why he was in Geneva in the first place. Further, Calvin's theology was/is identical to Luther's in every respect other than the sacrement of communion. They had different opinions as to the nature of communion.

  • Thu May 28, 2009 10:44 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Calvin did not "rule Geneva with an iron fist." Please read a history of Calvin's Geneva (which was run by a city council, NOT by Calvin). And, yes, read a copy of Calvin's "Institutes of the Christian Religion." We need to make sure we aren't bearing false witness against our brothers in the faith--a little bit of education on the subject goes a long way to ensure we are speaking accurately.

  • Wed May 27, 2009 6:06 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Surprise? Not so long as sin is still in fashion, which it very much has been in every age, not least of all in those centuries leading up to the Reformation -thus its call to the True Church to return to the Word of G-D Alone, or as Calvin expressed it, ad fontes.
    As for the gross characterization of his life and Ministry, a reliable history or two followed up by some equally reliable biographies would set your skewed comments straight. May I suggest beginning with D'Aubigne's History of The Reformation. Then The Institutes - all of them!

  • Wed May 27, 2009 1:01 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 3

    Celebrate Calvin? Sure, let's celebrate a guy who left the Catholic church, but took along their penchant for persecuting or killing anyone who diasgreed with him. He ruled Geneva with as iron a fist as any pope did. What's to celebrate?

  • Tue May 26, 2009 12:35 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    "Scotland voted AGAINST its own constituent Confession of Faith (Westminster), most notably by its ..."

    Why the surprise - this is what Reformers? do - split.

  • Sat May 23, 2009 7:23 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    It will repay to see whether or not this new merger will be accommodating the leading Church of Calvin's pupil,Knox, himself sometime Minister in Geneva; this day the General Assembly of The Church of Scotland voted AGAINST its own constituent Confession of Faith (Westminster), most notably by its foundational, first article, that vows to uphold and affirm Holy Scripture as Jesus Christ the Living Word of G-D as "the Supreme Judge" in all controversies,etc. in the Kirk, and the one rule for faith and life. How? By permitting an actively gay cleric to answer the 'Call' to Aberdeen Presbytery! Both Calvin and Knox not only come out from amang them, but declare it time for another Reformation: back to The Bible!

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