Navigation
Content
Buscar

Reformed Christian Church in Serbia & Montenegro

Church family:Reformed churches
Based in:Serbia
Present in:
Membership*:

About membership

Statistics of church membership, number of churches, congregations, pastors, etc. are those given by the churches and organizations, unless otherwise indicated. WCC member churches have various ways of defining their membership: state churches in which virtually every citizen is baptized and thus counted as a member, churches which include in their membership persons who are baptized but not actively participating, churches in which only adult baptized or communicant members are counted, etc. No attempt has been made to classify the membership figures in such categories, because agreed upon indicators to so do not exist.

17,000
Pastors:19
Congregations:48
Member of:
 WCC (1948) 
Associate member of:
Website:

This church used to be part of the Reformed Church in Hungary, from the time of the Reformation until 1920. By the Treaty of Trianon (1920), which was and still is perceived by the Hungarians as unjust and cruel, Hungary was split up and lost large parts of its territory to the surrounding newly formed states. Some three million Hungarians were forced to live as minorities in Yugoslavia, Romania, Czechoslovakia, Austria and the Soviet Union (Ukraine). Like in the other countries, the Reformed Hungarians in Vojvodina, the northern part of Serbia, had no other choice than to organize their own church, the Reformed Christian Church in Yugoslavia. After the wars in the 1990s and the dismantling of Yugoslavia, the name of the church eventually became the Reformed Christian Church in Serbia and Montenegro.

The church has kept the same confessions as the Reformed Church in Hungary, the Second Helvetic Confession and the Heidelberg Catechism. The church is scattered and the main problem is to organize the pastoral care of the diaspora. The pastors travel continuously to visit several small congregations under their care. Among the priorities of the church are children and mission to young people. In spite of the material and economic difficulties of the members of the church and the pastors, the church takes its mission very seriously. It participates in healing the wounds of the war, of NATO bombing and of the years of dictatorship. The church has good ecumenical relations with the other WCC member churches in the country.

Last updated: 1.1.2006

User notes on «Reformed Christian Church in Serbia & Montenegro» :

About user notes

You may enrich this page by contributing with corrections, further details and comments.
Don't use this system to contact us!

Learn more about user notes




User login

Enter your username and password here in order to log in on the website:
Login
Not yet registered?