This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . (Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
The Johannesburg East Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in the Johannesburg suburb of Doornfontein, just east of downtown. It is also known as the Irene Church after the sobriquet of its second and third churches on 1 Beit Street. Five weeks before its centennial (July 8, 1997), on June 1, 1997, Johannesburg East was absorbed by the Johannesburg Reformed Church (NGK), from whence it had seceded on July 8, 1897. [1]
The influx of people to the Witwatersrand in the wake of the discovery of gold there in 1886 became too much for the Rev. N. J. van Warmelo and the church council of the Heidelberg Reformed Church (NGK) to handle. The first NGK service in Johannesburg was held in the middle of that year outdoors by a willow near where the Abraham Kriel Children’s Home and the Langlaagte Reformed Church building would later stand.
It was a proponent from the Du Toit's Pan Reformed Church near Kimberley, Rev. J.N. Martins, who would come to the boomtown to “preach the dear Gospel to our brothers in the gold fields.”
The city grew quickly and a series of suburbs began to form, including Hillbrow (to the east), Mayfair (to the west, later home to the Mayfair Reformed Church), Rosebank (to the north), and Rosettenville (to the south). When Johannes de Villiers was appointed the first mayor of Johannesburg in 1897, the city was already home to 100,000, half of them white (mainly English-speakers and Russian Jews) and in some areas numbering 24 men for every woman. There were 591 hotels within city limits, and almost as many brothels. [2]
The Church grew apace, and by the outbreak of the Second Boer War in 1899, the following congregations had all arisen on the Rand: Langlaagte (1892), Boksburg (1894), Fordsburg (1896), Jeppestown and Johannesburg East (both on Thursday, July 8, 1897), and Germiston (1899). Only one of these first six NGK churches on the Rand remained by 2012, Johannesburg proper, with 60 members (according to the NGK Yearbook) after Boksburg’s less than 100 members joined Boksburg South by the end of 2011.
The first pastor of Johannesburg East, Rev. Pieter Gerhardus Jacobus Meiring (1897-1904), came to town around 1895 as a curate to serve the growing downtown portion of the mother church. Forty members signed a petition calling for the downtown and areas just to the east to secede, including Harry J. Hofmeyr (later mayor of Johannesburg and vice-chancellor of the University of the Witwatersrand), Lourens Geldenhuys, P. van Os (first secretary of the congregation), O.J.J. van Wyk (its first cashier), C.L. Neethling, and J. van Eyssen. The first verger was P.J. Preller. Among the most prominent names on the list was that of a young prosecutor named Jan Smuts, who had settled with his wife shortly earlier in a humble dwelling on Twist Street.
At first, Johannesburg East used the mother church’s building on Von Brandis Square, but the latter’s sale forced other arrangements. For the time being, the congregation used the Freemasons’ Hall on Plein Street. However, on September 4, 1898, they were able to move into their first dedicated church, a hall on plots 346 and 347 on the corner of Hol (now Edith Cavell Street) and Plein Streets, part of the mother church’s provisions. Mayor De Villiers had laid the cornerstone on Saturday, May 7, 1898, of what would later be called “Irene Hall.” The Boer War and World War I would try the congregation, but finances recovered by the early 1920s.
By 1926, the growth of Johannesburg’s northern suburbs had shifted the congregation’s center of gravity away from the Irene Hall, prompting decisions to move the place of worship with it. The noisy tram and motorcycle traffic and omnipresent dust from mine tailings discouraged moving the building for the time being. In the end, the church council decided to instead build a church among the rising apartment blocks in the Hillbrow area.
On November 21, 1929, the council members officially approved construction and started a fund for the purpose, which raised £4,370 in ten months. The cornerstone was laid on June 11, 1932 and from Friday to Sunday, March 3–5, 1933, the first official Irene Church and its outbuildings, costing £13,000 (including the pulpit, the pews, and the second organ), was inaugurated.
This church would serve the congregation for 38 years, but in 1968, the council assigned O.H. Oosthuizen & Associates to design a replacement, the plans for which were approved by the middle of the year. The congregation bought the land for R93,000 and sold the old Irene Church in January 1969, but construction on the new one did not begin until April 1970. The cornerstone was laid on August 8, 1970, and the last services were held in the old church on January 31, 1971. The final cost of the new Irene Church, including the organ built by Erwin Fehrle on a design by Walter Supper of Esslingen am Neckar, Germany, was R280,000. The building opened midday on March 4, 1972, followed by an evening concert using the largest organ in the local NGK at 2,407 pipes.
Five congregations would secede over the years from Johannesburg East: Turffontein (in 1906, including part of Jeppestown as well), Johannesburg North (in 1942, including parts of the original Johannesburg, using a hall in Orchards built by Johannesburg East in 1905), Parkhurst (in 1944, including more parts of Johannesburg), and Johannesburg-Observatory (in 1964, served by Rev. Hendrik Snijders as its first pastor). As Observatory grew empty of Afrikaners, the local congregation was absorbed by Johannesburg North. Parkhurst and Parkhurst merged into Parkkruin Reformed Church in the 1990s, while Turffontein merged with Johannesburg South Reformed Church (NGK) in 1994 to form Deo Gloria Reformed Church. In 1992, Jeppestown similarly merged with its daughter churches (Malvern Reformed Church, Bezuidenhout Valley Reformed Church, and Belgravia Reformed Church) to form Kensington Reformed Church.
For over fifty years, the NGK in Johannesburg made a coordinated effort to alleviate the spiritual and material poverty of the local Afrikaners. In 1937, the Nederduitse Hervormde of Gereformeerde Kerk (as the Transvaal NGK was called until 1957) founded an organization known Randse Armsorgraad (Caring Arms on the Rand). In 1944, the Johannesburg East church council counted 7,824 families in need of assistance, and the organization was already the leading social welfare charity on the Rand. Post-World War II economic growth began to alleviate poverty, homelessness, and unemployment among Johannesburg Afrikaners, but the February 23, 1945 issue of the Irenenuus stated that between 450 and 500 people in the congregation still received alms. The article attributed the poverty to causes such as alcoholism, illness, bereavement, divorce, unemployment, fornication, sloth, and mental illness. On September 10, 1941, the Irenenuus quoted Mrs. T. Vermeulen, a Johannesburg East social worker, as saying poverty itself was less their enemy than the abuse and bootlegging of liquor. The council’s congregation religious report for July 1944 to June 1945 attributed an uptick in the misery to wartime conditions.
In the late 1950s, the NGK began focusing more heavily on the mission. From September 28–30, 1959, Rev. P.S.Z. Coetzee chaired a national conference in Bloemfontein on “the [NGK] and its Evangelist mission today,” attended by 102 pastors from the Southern Transvaal Synod (currently the Highveld Synod). The northern Transvaal Synod had already begun hiring missionary pastors and workers as early as 1957, but it was only a year after the conference that the South Transvaal one hired its first four missionaries to work in downtown Johannesburg. The Synod Mission Committee reported at the March 1963 Synod Conference: “early results from Mission work downtown point to the need for more staffing downtown to do the pastoral work. Downtown preaching revealed hundreds among the city’s population simply disappearing.” The report continued to reveal that “one of the congregations,” namely Johannesburg-Braamfontein (the main Johannesburg one), “found halfway through its pastoral care efforts that 653 unchurched people came in, to say nothing of 627 who went to church but did not know the council.” The situation was exacerbating, and neither Johannesburg nor Johannesburg-East had the staff to keep up with demand.
Both congregations hired a pastor and a lay worker each solely devoted to mission work between 1960 and 1962. In Johannesburg East, Rev. G.F.K. Carstens served from October 1960 to August 1962, succeeded in February 1963 by Rev. A.J. Pienaar. Meanwhile, starting in January 1961, Mrs. A. Nieuwoudt served as lay missionary. In the first three wards where Rev. Carstens worked, he visited 104 NGK members unknown to the council and 98 non-members of the church itself. Of the 98 outsiders, he catechized, took confession from, and baptized 27. In her first two years since appointment by the Synod, Nieuwoudt found 345 extra NGK members and visited 117 non-members.
The first pastor, Rev. Meiring, later became pastor of the Rondebosch Reformed Church and editor of the magazine Kerkbode . He was also the father of Arnold Meiring, a subsequent pastor of Rondebosch.
In 1913, Rev. (later Dr.) William Nicol was invested in the congregation. Dr. Paul du Plessis wrote in his 1993 D.D. thesis that:
In Johannesburg, the Afrikaner had to fight for spiritual survival. The Church, namely the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa, was closely involved in this struggle, members and ecclesiasts alike. The church bound them together and offered them security. Nicol’s arrival in the Gold City in 1913 dragged him into this struggle when he realized that the Afrikaner, the church, and especially his Lord, called him to evangelize and to assist man in his distress.
Nicol founded the congregation’s newsletter, the Irenenuus, in January 1923, to spiritually advise parishioners. It was written in Afrikaans at a time when the language was just gaining a foothold in the schools and was seldom heard from the pulpit, and would continue to be published until a few years before the congregation’s incorporation into the Johannesburg one. Around August 1923, Rev. Nicol gave the first sermon in Afrikaans to be broadcast on the radio live in the downtown studios. On Sunday, June 7, 1924, at 7:45 PM, a full service would be broadcast for the first time direct from Irene Hall to SABC listeners nationwide, followed on October 4, 1925 by the first such relay of a Communion service. On August 28, 1933, Rev. R.J. de L. Theron of the Alberton Reformed Church announced the publication of the first Afrikaans Bible on radio from that same church.
The Rev. Nicol was also an innovator in his congregation. The use of communion bowls rather than cups during the Spanish flu was reported by Du Plessis as his “practical approach.” There was also a Weekly Freewill Offering, in which members were prompted to bring weekly Thanksgiving offerings to teach them biblical gratitude toward their Lord.” The Rev. Nicol left in June 1938 for Pretoria East.
His successor, Rev. Arnold Meiring, would be equally well-known for his role as moderator of the Transvaal Synods from 1957 to 1961. He served for 13 years in Johannesburg and left in September 1951 for Heidelberg and finished his ministry in Pretoria East like his predecessor.
In the wake of apartheid’s dismantling in the 1990s, whites left downtown and surrounding areas that had long been called “grey.” Therefore, Johannesburg East’s membership shrunk from 1,647 in 1985 and 1,557 in 1990 to 384 in 1994 and 313 in 1995.
On Thursday, June 1, 1995, the Auckland Park Reformed Church (then serving about 550 members and 1,700 students) was absorbed by the Johannesburg congregation, which by then had dwindled to barely over 100 members. Two years later, on Sunday, June 1, 1997, the enlarged Johannesburg congregation absorbed Johannesburg East as well. The headquarters was moved to Auckland Park, with services continuing to be held in Braamfontein and the Irene Church.
The resulting congregation had four pastors: Rev. Johan Krige (student pastor of Auckland Park since January 8, 1982, later CEO of MES), Rev. Christoph Müller (suburbs), and Revs. Attie Botha and Piet Smith (downtown). The congregation stretched from Ellis Park in the east to Rand Afrikaans University (now the University of Johannesburg) in the west, and Revs. Botha and Smith ministered to many non-members downtown.
Although the Melville Reformed Church approached Auckland Park about mergers (Melville’s membership was just 340 in 1994), Melville and the Braamfontein/Irene portions of the district did not come to an agreement. The constituent parts of the Johannesburg congregation split when, around 2000, the Auckland Park church sold the Kingway buildings to a gas station developer, which along with disagreements surrounding Rev. Botha’s dismissal led the area to join Melville as the Melville Cross Reformed Church, worshiping from the Melville church on 51 4th Avenue.
This left the Johannesburg Reformed Church with 60 adult members. The Highveld Synod made its long-awaited move out of the Synod Headquarters at 117 De Korte Street in 2009, setting up 18 offices in the parsonage and other buildings of the Kempton Park South Reformed Church at 56 Gladiator Street, Rhodesfield, closer to the center of the synod and more of the remaining members. Kempton Park South continues to use the church to serve less than 30 members, while the few Johannesburg members used the Irene Church. The Rev. Piet Smith (who died on November 3, 2010) was student pastor of Auckland Park starting in 1982, but served Auckland Park, Melville after their merger, and Johannesburg, both the congregations and surrounding residents and homeless, until his 2008 retirement. The congregation remained vacant from then on, although Rev. Smith served as pastoral help until his death. He had also become involved in MES in 1998 and served as a director for it from January 2004.
Today, the Irene Church is home to five congregations since the Johannesburg congregation donated it to Metropolitan Evangelical Services (MES Action) around 2000. Every Sunday the following services are held: at 9:00 AM by the NGK in Afrikaans and English, at 10:30 by the Soul Saving Bible Church in English and the Early Church of Revival in French, at 2:00 PM by the NGK in Portuguese, and at 3:00 by the United Reformed Church in Southern Africa in Zulu and Sotho.
The church is on 1 Beit Street in Doornfontein.
The Dutch Reformed Church is a Reformed Christian denomination in South Africa. It also has a presence in neighbouring countries, such as Namibia, Eswatini, and parts of Botswana, Zimbabwe and Zambia. In 2013 it claimed 1.1 million members and 1,602 ordained ministers in 1,158 congregations.
The Reverend Stephanus Jacobus du Toit was a controversial South African nationalist, theologian, journalist and failed politician. In his younger years Du Toit did much to promote the Afrikaans language as a symbol of Afrikaner nationalism. Apart from the years 1882-8 when he was Superintendent of Education in the South African Republic, he lived in or near the town of Paarl in the Cape Colony. Disillusionment with the Kruger regime led him, in later years, to moderate his views. He was instrumental in initiating the translation of the Bible into Afrikaans and was a proponent of the Afrikaans language. He died an outcast.
Johan Adam Heyns (1928–1994) was an Afrikaner Calvinist theologian and moderator of the general synod of the Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk (NGK) in South Africa. He was assassinated at his home in Waterkloof Ridge, Pretoria.
The Reformed Churches in Namibia is a confessional Reformed church in Namibia. Reformed people come from Angola to Namibia in 1929. The Dorslandtrekkers were mostly Reformed people who had settled in Angola but later moved to Namibia. The Dorslandtrekkers were originally from Transvaal, South Africa, and migrated northwestward starting in 1874 in two large and one smaller group, starting the Humpata Reformed Church under the Rev. Jan Lion Cachet. Later in 1930 3 congregations were established. More farmers came and the church grew. Missionary work was started in 1969 under the Bushmans of the Gobabis region, Botswana. It has 2,757 members and 14 congregations, and adheres to the Apostles Creed, Nicene Creed, Heidelberg Catechism, Belgic Confession and the Canons of Dort.There's no women ordination. Official languages are Afrikaans, Bushman, Gobabis-Kung.
Rev Dr. William Nicol was a Dutch Reformed minister, theologian, educator and Administrator of the Transvaal Province of South Africa.
The Groote Kerk is a Dutch Reformed church in Cape Town, South Africa. The church is South Africa's oldest place of Christian worship. The first church on this land was built in 1678. Willem Adriaan van der Stel laid the cornerstone for the church. It was replaced by the present building in 1841 built by Herman Schuette and the original tower was retained. The pulpit is the work of Anton Anreith and the carpenter Jacob Graaff, and was inaugurated on 29 November 1789. The Groote Kerk lays claim to housing South Africa's largest church organ, which was installed in 1954
The Gobabis Reformed Church is the oldest congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) in Gobabis in eastern Namibia. At the end of 2015, according to a poll of 300, it was the second-largest traditional Reformed Church congregation in the country.
The Keetmanshoop Reformed Church is a congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) in southern Namibia, headquartered in the town of Keetmanshoop but also embracing members from the towns of Aroab, Aus, Bethanie, Koës, Lüderitz, and Rosh Pinah. Since the congregation is paired with the Mariental Reformed Church, where the Rev. Johan Dunn is the current pastor since 2017, it also serves members from Mariental, Kalkrand, Maltahöhe, Stampriet, and Gochas. The collective Keetmanshoop-Mariental area is enormous, almost the size of the United Kingdom. The distance between Lüderitz and Stampriet is 500 km, and the even the distance between the two congregational seats, Keetmanshoop and Mariental, is 230 km.
The Johannesburg Reformed Church (GKSA) was the second congregation of the Reformed Churches in Southern Africa (GKSA) on the Witwatersrand after the Krugersdorp Reformed Church (GKSA), founded only a month earlier.
The Brixton Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in the western suburbs of Johannesburg, South Africa, which was absorbed along with the Johannesburg West Reformed Church (NGK) in 1993 into the new Vergesig Reformed Church. Brixton's centrally located building continues to serve the merged congregation, which has since acquired the Langlaagte Reformed Church as well as the Crosby West Reformed Church. Around 1985, the Cottesloe Reformed Church was also absorbed into the original Brixton congregation. Around 2014, Vergesig changed its name to Brixton Church.
The Fordsburg Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) that served the western Johannesburg suburb of Fordsburg from November 6, 1896, to 1988.
The Johannesburg Reformed Church was the first congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) to be founded in Johannesburg on August 14, 1887. All the congregations on the Witwatersrand stem from it, but by the 2010s, the NGK yearbook recorded only 90 in its ward which had long ceased to operate independently.
The Johannesburg North Reformed Church/Andrew Murray Congregation is a bilingual congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in the Johannesburg suburb of Orchards. It was formed in 1999 by the merger of the NGK congregation and the Andrew Murray Congregation and functions as a church without borders.
The Langlaagte Reformed Church was the 28th congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) on the Transvaal and the second in Johannesburg after the Johannesburg Reformed Church (NGK) (1887). The congregation is well known as the spiritual home of the Langlaagte orphanage, later named the Abraham Kriel Children’s Home after Rev. Abraham Kriel, who founded it as pastor of Langlaagte.
The Linden Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in the northwestern Johannesburg suburb of Linden. On July 1, 2018, it merged with the Aasvoëlkop Reformed Church to form the Aan die Berg Reformed Church.
The Parkhurst Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) that was active from 1944 to 1996 in the Johannesburg suburb of Parkhurst.
The Turffontein Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in southern Johannesburg, Transvaal. It was founded in 1906 and for years had a large membership, at times exceeding 3,000.
The Pietermaritzburg Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in Pietermaritzburg, the capital of KwaZulu-Natal, but after the sale of the congregation’s downtown building, its centre shifted to what is now Howick. It was the first congregation founded by Voortrekkers after they left Cape Colony and the 25th oldest congregation in the NGK. The congregation’s membership, however, declined by around two-thirds, from 752 in 2000 to 256 in 2015.
The Potchefstroom Reformed Church (in Potchefstroom, North West, South Africa, is the oldest congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa in what was then the Transvaal or South African Republic. At its founding in March 1842, it was the 28th congregation in what would later become South Africa and the tenth outside of the Western and Southern Cape Synod.
The Rustenburg Reformed Church is the oldest congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA), founded in February 1859 by the denomination’s pioneer, Rev. Dirk Postma.