From: Darrell128@aol.com
Date: Wed, 9 Oct 1996 08:00:41 -0400 (EDT)

NR #1996-109 Classis Hudson Declines to Overture Christian Reformed Synod to
Receive Hackensack Church Opposed to Women in Office 

 Synod 1996 allowed churches to transfer between classes for reasons other
than geography, a compromise intended to allow conservative churches opposed
to women in office to leave classes which voted to allow women to be ordained
within their boundaries. Classis Northern Michigan has already given its
blessing to Trinity CRC in Mt. Pleasant to seek affiliation with another
classis to ordain its female pastor. However, in the first test case of a
church opposing women in office, Classis Hudson has declined to ask synod to
admit Terra Ceia (NC) CRC. Terra Ceia's current classis, Classis Hackensack,
was one of the earliest classes to vote to allow the ordination of women
within its boundaries and had already voted to overture synod to grant Terra
Ceia's request to transfer to Classis Hudson.

NR #1996-109: For Immediate Release
Classis Hudson Declines to Overture Christian Reformed Synod to Receive
Hackensack Church Opposed to Women in Office

by Darrell Todd Maurina, Press Officer
United Reformed News Service

(October 9, 1996) URNS - Synod 1996 allowed churches to transfer between
classes for reasons other than geography, a compromise intended to allow
conservative churches opposed to women in office to leave classes which voted
to allow women to be ordained within their boundaries. 

 Classis Northern Michigan has already given its blessing to Trinity CRC in
Mt. Pleasant to seek affiliation with another classis to ordain its female
pastor. However, in the first test case of a church opposing women in office,
Classis Hudson has declined to ask synod to admit Terra Ceia (NC) CRC. Terra
Ceia's current classis, Classis Hackensack, was one of the earliest classes
to vote to allow the ordination of women within its boundaries and had
already voted to overture synod to grant Terra Ceia's request to transfer to
Classis Hudson. 

 Hackensack and Hudson have an unusual historical relationship and for many
years there was no clear geographical dividing line between the two classes.
Originally founded by English-speaking seceders from the Reformed Church in
America in 1822, Classis Hackensack was one of two classes in a small
denomination, the True Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, whose information
about conditions in the RCA was instrumental in leading to the 1857 secession
of four of the nine Dutch-speaking immigrant churches in West Michigan to
form the Christian Reformed Church, then known as the True Dutch Reformed
Church. Language barriers and distance initially kept the two groups from
joining, but Classis Hackensack eventually became an English-language classis
in a predominantly Dutch-speaking denomination. For many years, churches in
New Jersey and New York were aligned with classes based on the language used
in worship rather than clear geographical divisions - one of the precedents
for nongeographical classes cited by conservatives in successfully overturing
Synod 1996 to allow churches to change their classical affiliations based on
reasons other than geography. 

 According to the minutes of Classis Hudson's September 25 meeting, "A
request from Terra Ceia CRC to affiliate with Classis Hudson was read. A
motion made not to accede to their request to overture synod to effect this
change was carried." 

 The official grounds for declining the request were that "departing
significantly from the principle of geographical proximity may well impair
effective ministry" - a concern cited by Synod 1996 - and that "classis
provides a framework for churches to work together even when they disagree
and provides a forum for continuing interaction which may lead to
understanding." 

 According to Classis Hudson stated clerk Rev. Don Wisse, the decision does
not strictly close the door to Terra Ceia transferring to Classis Hudson. The
minutes state that "it is stated on the floor that this does not mean that
Classis Hudson will not accept them if synod accedes to the favorable
response of Classis Hackensack to overture synod on this matter." 

 "The bottom line of what Classis Hudson said was that this did not prejudice
classis against Terra Ceia, in fact there was a lot of sympathy to that,"
said Wisse. "I think it would be a benefit to Terra Ceia and I don't think we
ought to bind any council to be where they do not want to be, especially in
the climate of the CRC today." 

 If synod declines to transfer Terra Ceia from Hackensack to Hudson, the
church may have very few options left apart from a transfer to a classis
outside the east coast. While Wisse said that he knows of only two churches
with women deacons in Classis Hudson and no churches with women elders,
Classis Florida and Classis Hackensack have both voted to allow the
ordination of women. Classis Atlantic Northeast is split on the women in
office issue and has a number of congregations and pastors favoring the
ordination of women.

Cross-References to Related Articles:

#1996-076: CRC Synod Rejects 25 Overtures and Communications Calling for End
to Classical Option on Ordination of Women

#1996-077: Churches Allowed to Switch Classes for Theological Reasons

#1996-078: Synod Approves Korean Classis with 15-Year Time Limit

#1996-101: Northern Michigan Nixes Ordination for Mary-Lee Bouma


Contact List:

Miss Mary-Lee Bouma, Expounder, Trinity Christian Reformed Church
 211 W. Broomfield, Mt. Pleasant, MI  48858
 O: (517) 772-0664

Terra Ceia Christian Reformed Church
 3264 Terra Ceia Rd., Pantego, NC  27860
 O: (919) 943-2893

Rev. Don Wisse, Stated Clerk, Classis Hudson
 183 Godwin Ave, Midland Park, NJ  07432
 O: (201) 445-4260 * H: (201) 444-6423




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