The
Name of Our Church
Before
our brethren came to the conference of 1925 and reached
an agreement about the name to be adopted for our church,
they used different local names. In Scandinavia: Adventists
of the Original Faith; in Czechoslovakia: The Seed
of the Woman; in Transylvania: Adventists of the
Ancient Faith; in Yugoslavia: Remnant Adventists;
in South Romania and Bulgaria: Adventists Standing on
the Basis of the Faith of 1844; in Hungary: Seventh
Day Adventists Standing on the Old Platform of 1844.
In Germany, at first they called themselves International
Missionary Society of Seventh Day AdventistsGerman
Union (Internationale Missionsgesellschaft der Siebenten-Tags-AdventistenDeutsche
Union). This can be seen from a circular letter issued in
February 1919. The German brethren showed the same name,
except German Union, in the magazine Watchman of the
Truth (Waechter der Wahrheit) published before July
1919. Beginning with the issue of July 1919, however, they
put an addition to the name in use so far: International
Missionary Society of Seventh Day AdventistsStanding
on the Old Platform of 1844 (Alte, seit 1844 stehengebliebene
Richtung). The German Union was incorporated, December 23,
1919, under the name: International Missionary Society
of Seventh Day AdventistsStanding on the Old Platform
of 1844German Union. At the end of 1921, as can
be seen from the Watchman of the Truth, they preferred to
be known as International Missionary Society of Seventh
Day AdventistsReform Movement (Internationale
Missionsgesellschaft der STA Reformations-bewegung). After
the return of our two delegates from S. Francisco (1922),
where they were not given any hearing, our brethren published,
under the name International Reform Movement of Seventh
Day Adventists (Internationale Reformbewegung der Siebenten-Tags-Adventisten),
the booklet Revival and Reformation among the Seventh
Day AdventistsOur Experience during the General Conference
Session in San Francisco, May 1922. But, afterwards,
their Sabbath Watchman (Sabbat-Waechter), a monthly paper,
was published under the name Seventh Day Adventist Reform
Movement. Later on they added the designation German
Union.
At
our first General Conference session, 1925, the delegation
adopted the name, Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement
General Conference (Generalkonferenz der Siebenten-Tags-Adventisten
Reformations-Bewegung) for "the joint connection of
all Union Conferences," namely, "the entire denomination
in general," according to the Minutes of the General
Conference delegation session (1925 session, resolution
11). Resolution 11 also says that the Principles of Faith
should be published under this name.
It
was agreed in 1925 that the General Conference should be
incorporated separately from the German Union. But this
was not done immediately. After a few years, due to circumstances
mentioned below, the registration of the General Conference
became an urgent need, and it was carried out under the
name, International Missionary Society of Seventh Day
Adventists, Reform Movement, General Conference (Internationale
Missionsgesellschaft der Siebenten-Tags-Adventisten Reformations-bewegung,
Generalkonferenz), and not under the name that had been
adopted by the General Conference delegation in 1925.
When
the statutes were ready for the incorporation of the General
Conference, with the signatures of the Board of Directors,
Brother Otto Welp, the reelected General Conference president,
signed as representative of the Seventh Day Adventist
ChurchReform MovementGerman Union.
According
to the laws then in force in Germany, a corporation must
own property in order to qualify for registration, and the
General Conference owned no property at that time. Therefore,
its registration was delayed. During the General Conference
Committee meeting held in the mission house of the German
Union, June 29 through July 4, 1927, it was resolved:
"That
the General Conference be registered in the same way [as
the Union Conference], so that the same statutes filed at
the registration of the Union may cover also the General
Conference; and that in future the German Union operate
under these statutes, under the name of the General Conference"
(Resolution 8).
The
main reason for this resolution was that the property at
Isernhagen, near Hannover, used by the German Union, had
been purchased with a loan taken from the General Conference,
and that the Union president, Brother W. Richter, had a
serious difference with the General Conference administration.
It was certainly wise, on the part of the General Conference
leading brethren, to take precautions for the protection
of the properties and interests of the work.
The
registration of the General Conference at Burgwedel, near
Hannover, Germany, January 11, 1929, in that emergency situation,
was done on the initiative of the Executive Committee. Both
namesthe one agreed upon by the General Conference
delegation in 1925 and the one registered in 1929were
used for some time, even on the same documents, although
the General Conference delegation in session never authorized
the change. It was wise at that time to use both names in
order to prevent splinter groups from legally taking any
of the names once used by the Reform Movement. The registration
of January 11, 1929, was canceled by the secret police (Gestapo)
on May 11, 1936.
Under
the name that was adopted by the General Conference delegation
in session, in 1925, and that was always maintained by the
General Conference delegation, the General Conference was
registered in the state of California, USA, by Brethren
C. Kozel and D. Nicolici, respectively president and secretary
of the corporation, April 8, 1949, in harmony with a decision
made by the delegation at the 1948 General Conference session.
When this was done, Brother Kozel wrote in his circular
letter of April 18, 1949:
"We
were able . . . to have our General Conference registered
a few days ago. The Lord helped us wonderfully in all these
things. The name of our General Conference is as follows:
Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference,
P. O. Box 234, Oak Park, Sacramento, California, USA."
The
Union Conferences and Fields were notified about this registration,
which they ratified by letter.
In
May 1951, when Brother C. Kozel and his supporters still
were united with us in one religious body, of which he was
the president, the General Conference delegates met in Holland,
under the umbrella of this registration, and under this
name. And it was under this name that the polarized leaders
and delegates, unable to settle their differences, reorganized
themselves into two separate General Conference Committees,
each claiming to be the continuation of the original General
Conference organization, with the original name adopted
by the General Conference delegation in July 1925. Brother
Kozel and his newly elected General Conference Committee
still recognized the bylaws that went along with the registration
of April 8, 1949. They called them "our bylaws"
in their declaration of May 24, 1951.
In
spite of the split, for one year both parties of the divided
General Conference brethren claimed to belong to the corporation
carrying the original name, Seventh Day Adventist Reform
Movement General Conference, registered in the state
of California, USA, with headquarters in the city of Sacramento.
They even signed an agreement on May 7, 1952, recognizing
each other as members and leaders of this corporation, under
this name. That was the only corporation and the only name
officially recognized by both sides. In those days there
was absolutely no controversy over the official name used
by the Reform Movement.
The
two parties continued within one and the same body, with
the same name, the same registration, the same headquarters,
until June 6, 1952, when Brother Kozel and his supporters
decided to reorganize themselves separately from us, but
together with the Denver brethren, who had been disfellowshiped
in the presence and with the approval of Brother Kozel on
March 4, 1949. It was only then, and not at an earlier date,
that they formed their own General Conference corporation
with headquarters in Denmark and later in Germany.
In
a pamphlet published in Latin America by the leaders of
the separated brethren, they explain why Brethren Kozel,
Mueller and Ringelberg (their highest leaders at that time)
decided to make their own reorganization (June 6, 1952):
"In
1951 . . . Nicolici retained the name of the church, the
properties, and the headquarters, exactly as the big church
had done. For this reason, the brethren . . . were forced
to organize themselves without, however, giving up the true
name of the churchSeventh Day Adventist Reform
Movement. In front of this name they only added the
words, International Missionary Society. . . . This they
did only to distinguish themselves from Nicolicis
organization, which retained the name, the properties, and
the headquarters, exactly as the big church had done."Breve
historia de la iglesia en la tierra, p. 2.
In
a nutshell: The name that we have retained is the name that
was adopted at the first General Conference delegation session
in 1925 and that was registered in 1949. That name has never
been changed by the General Conference delegation in session.