Reformierter Weltbund: Georges-Lombard-Preis geht an Eun Young Hwang

Korean student wins Lombard Prize for study of Calvin and ecology

A Korean theology student has won the 2009 Lombard Prize for his study of the implications of John Calvin’s theology for the current ecological and economic crisis.

Eun Young Hwang, a student at Yale University Divinity School in the United States, was awarded the USD $1000 prize for his essay examining today’s environmental crisis in light of Calvin’s image of God and justice.

Results of the essay competition were announced 30 October by the World Alliance of Reformed Churches which coordinates the annual competition on behalf of the Lombard Prize Committee.  The award is named for the Genevan banker, Georges Lombard, who served as WARC’s General Treasurer from 1948 to 1970.

To mark the quincentary of the birth of Calvin, the theme of the competition was “What would Calvin Say? Responsible Stewardship in the Face of Today’s Ecological and Financial Crisis”.  

In his essay, Eun Young Hwang describes the self-regulated market as a “satanic mill” that transforms nature and human beings into mere commodities. Eun writes that Calvin proposes an alternate model where individuals and creation should be treated as the “image of God”.

Two candidates tied for second place. David Balázs Magyar (Hungary) and Jean-Paul Agidi (Ghana) each receive USD $600. Third prize winner Sobana Isac Samuel (India)  receives USD $300 for her entry.

WARC’s General Secretary Setri Nyomi says, “It is significant that these awards are announced in connection with Reformation Day. The ideas expressed in these essays indicate how much the new generation of emerging young theologians are committed to becoming renewal agents as the Reformers were.”

In paying tribute to the man for whom the award is named, Nyomi says, “Georges Lombard was himself committed to making a difference in the world. As WARC’s General Treasurer, he was a remarkable leader in ensuring that WARC’s resources make a difference in the world.”

Lombard’s daughter, Catherine Kuhn-Lombard, says she is “delighted” with the results and with the question chosen for the 2009 competition.

“You couldn’t find a better theme, given the present state of global warming and all it affects. If young theologians can think about and help others to promote a better world, that meets the very aim of the award: to encourage us to care, dare, share.”

Kuhn-Lombard says the family launched the award to honour their father’s commitment to putting his faith into action. “My father was concerned about the relationship between faith and material goods and he put his beliefs into practice through the church and through WARC.”

Douwe Visser, who heads WARC’s theology office which administers the competition says, “We congratulate the winners and are grateful to the Lombard Darier Hentsch Bank for making the award possible.”

The essays were judged for their presentation of issues related to today’s ecological and financial crisis and of biblical and theological perspectives on those questions.

Jury members included theologians from South America, Asia, Europe, North America, Africa and the Caribbean.

Competition winners will receive their awards in Grand Rapids, United States, in June 2010 at the Uniting General Council where WARC will merge with the Reformed Ecumenical Council to form the World Communion of Reformed Churches.


Meldung des Reformierten Weltbundes (WARC), www.warc.jalb.de

USA: Die Reformierte Kirche in Amerika (Reformed Church in America (RCA)) übernimmt Belhar Bekenntnis

Anti-apartheid document finds new life in US Reformed Church Washington DC
(ENI/RNS). For some 400 years, the small Reformed Church in America has relied on only three confessional statements of belief, all of them forged in the crucible of the Reformation. This week, they'll add a fourth, and its unlikely origins - apartheid-era South Africa - speak volumes about the changing nature of global Christianity and its impact on one of America's oldest denominations, Religion News Service reports.

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Eine Bewegung gegen den Strom: zwei weltweite Kirchennetzwerke schließen sich zusammen

Hauptauftrag der neuen Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen: Einheit der Kirchen und soziales Engagement
Die beiden größten Netzwerke protestantischer Kirchen der reformierten Tradition treffen sich vom 18 bis zum 28. Juni 2010 in Grand Rapids im Nordosten der Vereinigten Staaten; um eine neue Organisation zu bilden. Das drückt einen neuen Stand der Beziehungen zwischen zwei Kirchenfamilien aus, die einst auch voneinander getrennt waren.

Kristine Greenaway (WARC), Genf (gekürzt), 7. Juni 2010; Übersetzung: Stefan Maser

Schweiz / SEK: Globalisiert reformiert

Wipf: ''Gemeinschaft sein ohne hierarchische Struktur''
«In Grand Rapids fällt ein historischer Entscheid: Aus der weltweiten Allianz der Reformierten wird eine theologisch fundierte Gemeinschaft», sagte Thomas Wipf, Präsident des Schweizerischen Evangelischen Kirchenbundes SEK, an der Tagung der Schweizer Reformierten vom 27. Mai 2010. Damit haben sie sich auf den Gründungsakt der Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen WRK vom 18. bis 27. Juni 2010 in Grand Rapids (Michigan, USA) vorbereitet.

Schweizerischer Evangelischer Kirchenbund SEK, Medienmitteilung, Bern, 28.5.2010
A respected American Indian religious educator and cultural consultant is to be a featured speaker at an international gathering of Reformed churches in the United States this June. Richard Twiss, a member of the Rosebud Lakota/Sioux Tribe, will address the founding meeting of the World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC) in Grand Rapids.

Reformierter Weltbund, 22. April 2010

WRK: Bibelarbeiten ''Das ist unsere Familie''

''Einigkeit im Geist durch das Band des Friedens''
Fünf Bibelarbeiten zur Vorbereitung auf die gemeinsame Generalversammlung des Reformierten Weltbundes (RWB) und des Reformierten Ökumenischen Rates (REC) zur Bildung der Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen (WRK) in Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA vom 18. bis 27. Juni 2010. Als PDF zum Download auf www.reformedchurches.org

Barbara Schenck
An international panel of pastors and theologians is drafting a 'manifesto' on church unity and social justice for a new global organisation of Reformed churches. The text is to be presented in June to the Uniting General Council (UGC) of the World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC) in Grand Rapids, United States.

Barbara Schenck

Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen: Eine Stärkung des ökumenischen Miteinanders

Bukowski: ''Innerreformierte Aufspaltung in zwei Weltbünde wird endlich überwunden.''
Vor der ''Vereinigenden Generalversammlung'' von Reformiertem Weltbund und Reformiertem Ökumenischem Rat. Ein Gespräch mit Peter Bukowski, dem Moderator des Reformierten Bundes.
Leaders of two global networks of Reformed churches set to merge in June have issued a statement declaring their commitment to a continued focus on justice concerns following the merger. The text includes specific reference to racial justice.

WARC, 10 February 2010

WCRC: Uniting General Council

Newsletter Januar 2010
Volunteers Still Needed for Historic Merger - WCRC Uniting General Council Schedule of Main Events

Barbara Schenck