| January
6, 2009
Meeting the Church:
Rev. Fr. David Hudson
In
what we hope to be the first of a regular interview series on this website
called Meeting the Church, we had
the pleasure of a brief discussion with Rev. Fr. David Hudson, a priest of the
Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese in the Americas.
Fr. David’s experience is one from which we can all learn and which
helps us to better appreciate the treasure we have in our Orthodox Church.
Fr.
Hudson lives in Alpharetta, a suburb of Atlanta, Georgia. He
and his wife, Mary, are certified public school teachers, and the proud
parents of three daughters: Heidi (married to Mihai Popa, and mother of Bella,
now 2-1/2), Heather (married to Iosif Logigan and soon to give birth to
Aaron), and Hannah, a student at Georgia State University.
The
Hudson family lived in Cluj-Napoca in Transylvania from 1993 until 2002.
Originally, they went to Romania as Protestant missionaries, but after
converting to Orthodoxy there, Fr. David was ordained into the priesthood in
December 1999. Their activities in
Romania included:
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1993-1995:
Protestant church planting mission; taught courses in a Baptist
Theological Institute; developed music ministries in Baptist and Lord’s
Army assemblies.
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1996-1997:
Continued as free-lance missionaries; composed and recorded album of
Christian worship songs in Romanian.
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1998-1999:
Spearheaded project for translating and publishing DYNAMIS Biblical
meditations (www.dynamispublications.org) in the Archdiocese
of Cluj.
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2000-2002:
Worked under the umbrella of the Orthodox Christian Missions Center (O.C.M.C.);
taught missiology courses at Orthodox Theological Faculty of Cluj;
director of St. Basil Social Mission Center (Christiana School), Cluj.
Many thanks to Fr. David for sharing with us!
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Fr.
David, what was it that led you to missionary work in Romania?
I
was raised in a Protestant Evangelical environment which glorified missionary
work as the highest calling. From
my childhood I aspired to be a missionary, but only as I began to approach
midlife did I make the decision to do it now. For
a long time I had thought about doing missions in “Post-Christian” Western
Europe, where only about 20% of the population attends church regularly. Just
then the Berlin Wall fell, and we were swept up in the tide of missionaries
going to former Communist countries, which we believed had been effectively
“atheized”.
Please
explain to us the programs in which you were involved, including your
responsibilities and activities.
My
own personal spiritual journey, in parallel with my missionary work, resulted
in an interesting potpourri of activities. At
first, I was the leader of a team sent to help provoke and organize Romanian
Neo-Protestant communities to make a concentrated effort to plant a new church
for every 1000 people in the country. My
interest in the historical Church also led me to be involved with the Lord’s
Army, a controversial personal renewal movement linked both to the Romanian
Orthodox Church and other non-Orthodox groups. This
was consistent with my upbringing in the “Wesleyan Movement”, a
little-known, non-Calvinistic, pietistic branch of the Western Church which
takes its inspiration from the Anglican priest, John Wesley, and which fosters
an appreciation for holy living in any denominational setting. Unlike
my missionary colleagues, I was not necessarily interested in seeing people
convert FROM Orthodoxy, but I wanted to be sure they really knew Christ WITHIN
Orthodoxy.
While
teaching about the history of Judeo-Christian Worship at a Baptist theological
institute, I had a student who had been raised Orthodox, and whose brother was
a priest. Since we missionaries
were not particularly welcome in Orthodox circles, I found a way to pursue my
interest in Orthodoxy which was both low-profile and personal. I
went out to the remote village where my student’s brother was serving as
priest, and while I did not realize it would happen, I “discovered”
Orthodoxy. This turned out to be a
very “bumpy road”, or sometimes I call it “the long and winding road”
(sorry, Beatles!). It certainly
turned my responsibilities and activities upside down.
What
was your own spiritual experience while there?
What impressed, inspired and challenged you?
Well,
I had not, up until this point, gotten to know anyone who made me think they
took their Orthodox faith seriously and personally. Without
that dimension I, as a Protestant Evangelical, could never see Orthodoxy as a
viable faith. The family of my
student was very devout, and yet open and friendly to me, and this was
something I could relate to because the measure of Christianity that I grew up
with was personal piety and holy living. I
had read and studied about Orthodoxy, and then I went to a humble village
church, where the priest permitted me, a non-Orthodox, to observe inside the
Altar during the Divine Liturgy. I
was overwhelmed with the truth and beauty of the Liturgy -- I was easily
convinced that this was the true Christian worship. But
I still had a problem: I didn’t know there were any Orthodox Christians who
were living their faith. I thought
all the Orthodox were “nominal” Christians, who just went to church on
Sundays and then lived all week as though God were not around.
I
had been to the Cathedral Square in Cluj on the night of the Pascha Vigil,
with the thousands of people milling around, talking, and otherwise not
engaged in worship. But now I went
to the same service with a devout Orthodox family in the village, and lived
the Feast for a few hours through their eyes. It
surpassed anything I had known as a Protestant Evangelical, brought up in a
very demonstrative, pietistic form of Christian worship.
I was, I guess you could say, “hooked”.
But that wasn’t enough to assure my conversion. That
took three more hard years. But
I’ll have to leave that for another time and place -- maybe I need to write
a book.
Is
there any aspect of the culture or way of life in Romania that you found to be
especially unique or inspirational?
We
were in love with the Romanian way of life for the entire nine years we lived
in Cluj. First of all, although I
am thoroughly Anglo-Saxon, my wife is Italian-American and our children were
raised in New York before going to Romania, so the Latin connection was
already strong. We love Romanian
food, Romanian humor, the warm hospitality, the way Romanians know how to have
fun, to improvise a solution to almost any problem. We
love their musicality and artistic flair; and now that we’re Orthodox we
also deeply appreciate the entire patrimonial heritage of the Romanian people:
the churches, castles, old cities, and other architectural treasures, the
iconography, the music, etc. The
Romanian people have an amazing capacity for ascetic struggle, for being happy
and healthy without a lot of comforts, for making what to us Americans appear
as superhuman efforts for their faith, their God, and their Church.
What
was this journey like for the rest of your family?
From your daughters’ perspective, what do you think they learned and
most benefited from while in Romania?
We
had been prepared for the cross-cultural challenge through an excellent
missionary training program, and we also had previous experience as a family
when we spent a summer working with Angolan refugees in Portugal, and a fall
doing missionary work in India. Our
three daughters went to Romanian schools, had Romanian friends, and spoke
Romanian well. At home we were
American, and preserved our own special family life and traditions -- and we
are still extremely close, now that we have two Romanians as our sons-in-law. In
fact, our two oldest daughters graduated from the Babes-Bolyai University in
Cluj. Although we made the
decision to return to America for their long-term benefit, it was not an easy
choice for any of us, and for the most part, we treasure our experiences and
friends and relations in Romania. There
were negative experiences in our last few years in Romania which made it
easier to leave: trials related to our conversion there, and the stress of
living sort of in a fish bowl… eventually we felt we needed to return to a
normal, low-profile American life.
Having
returned to the United States after your life-changing experiences in Romania,
is there anything in particular that you would like to remind or impress upon
Orthodox faithful here?
I
suppose it is not possible in North America to fully live an Orthodox life, in
an organic way, as you can in Romania. My
initial sense after discovering Orthodoxy in Romania and then comparing it
with Orthodoxy in America was that, in Romania even the Protestants breathe
Orthodox air, whereas in America, the Orthodox are too like the Protestants.
After six years of learning to live in America as an Orthodox convert
priest, I realize that North America and Protestantism have strong points that
the Orthodox can learn from, but I still sorely miss the organic Orthodox
environment, where Orthodoxy is not compartmentalized into a small segment of
life, as it is here in our secularized and secularizing American environment. What
I would impress on the Orthodox faithful here is to continue the fight to work
out the life of Orthodoxy in America, and especially for Orthodox unity, and
an organic Orthodoxy rooted in our North American realities.
Finally,
what advice do you have specifically for Orthodox young people who came to
North America from Romania, and then also for those who are American-born?
I
have a very warm place in my heart for people who have changed their cultural
identity. We learned that as
missionaries leaving America for another place, we had our own culture that we
could call “blue”. Then we
went and embraced a new culture, which we could call “yellow”.
As a result, we would no longer be “blue”, nor would we become
“yellow” -- we would be “green”. America
embraces bi-culturalism, so there is no need to compartmentalize our Orthodoxy
and consider it foreign. We must
not retreat into cultural and linguistic ghettos, which keep Orthodoxy hidden
from the rest of the American population. Our
Orthodoxy must be what we are, bi-lingual and bi-cultural, multi-lingual and
multi-cultural. We must affirm,
celebrate, and enjoy what we are, and continue to grow in every part of our
lives, and in relation to the setting in which we were placed to do God’s
work. If we are not called to
embrace America, then we probably should not be here.
For American-born Orthodox youth, and especially the readers of this
website, who are likely to be second or third-generation Romanian-Americans,
the bi-cultural identity may be secondary, and that is completely normal. Whether
we be immigrants, children of immigrants, or converts (another kind of
foreigner), my advice is the same: Be authentic and work hard on your
salvation (Phil.
2:12). Look back,
to understand and appreciate what has been handed to you; look around, to
assess what is good and to discern what needs to be rejected; look up, because
only God will never disappoint or fail you; look within, to make sure you have
enough faith to make the world a more beautiful place; and look ahead, to
understand your destiny. Seize
the day!
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| Fr.
David with Staff and Students of Christiana School. |
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