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PublicationHorváth Iringó20111046Pages: 720--727

Az Erdélyi Református Egyházkerület gyülekezeteire vonatkozó 17–18. századi levéltári források kiadása 2005-től a fennmaradt korabeli tárgyak bemutatásával bővült ki. Ez a körülmény kiváló lehetőség az egyházközségek tulajdonában lévő, néhol feledésbe merült, használaton kívül rekedt textíliák feltérképezésére is. A kutatás kiterjed a források és a fennmaradt emlékanyag összevetésére is, ami a tárgyak újfajta megközelítését teszi lehetővé: sor kerül a textíliák gyülekezetben betöltött szerepének vizsgálatára, és az ennek függvényében kialakult megnevezéseik, jellemzőik meghatározására is. Jelen tanulmány a történelmi Küküllői Református Egyházmegye 1676-ban induló vegyes protokollumában szereplő, a gyülekezetek 1676-os jövedelemés vagyonösszeírásainak textíliákra vonatkozó adatait szeretné értelmezni.

PublicationHorváth Iringó20071004Pages: 863--870

Textiles from the 18th Century at the Reformatted Congregations of Déva and Hátszeg. The two chosen congregations can be found in towns of the historical HunyadZarand region. Among the characteristics of this Transylvanian area is that it lost a major Hungarian population during the last centuries. Reformatted congregations died out so many historical and cultural monuments and objects were also lost in time. The congregations of Deva and Hatszeg have a specific character. In the last century many objects were moved here, on purpose to save them, from the surrounding churches, where no reformatted lived anymore. Unfortunately only a few textiles survived till our days: at Deva – two pieces, at Hatszeg – three pieces. One of them was donated to Deva, and one to Hatszeg, as we can read from the inscriptions on the textiles, telling us also by whom and when they became property of the congregation.

PublicationBancea Gábor20071001Pages: 45--68

Canaanite Abominations as Presented in the Book of Deuteronomy. A Theological Evaluation. Before entering in the Promised Land the people of Israel were told not to follow the forbidden practices of the polytheistic nations (Deut 18, 9–14), to avoid all kinds of magical and superstitious practices designed to discover the will of gods, or even to compel the gods to action in certain ways. The occult, superstitions, divinisation, sorcery, spiritualism were abominations all to Yahweh and brought about His judgment. Yahweh made His will known through revelation, by the aid of His prophets, whose words would be clearly understandable to the people in contrast with the ambiguous and mysterious spells of those who worked with magic and divinisation. Israel must be blameless in regard to every form of divinisation, magic or spiritism.