Church, temple come together for eternal light
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- It all began as a temporary arrangement in the spring
of 1974.
Flory and Felix Van Beek had just founded Temple Isaiah in memory of
their son, Ralph, who had died of cancer at age 16. The young
congregation -- Conservative by denomination -- had quickly outgrown
meetings in private homes and Flory Van Beek managed to convince folks at
the brand-new Harbor Christian Church to share their sanctuary.
Now, more than a quarter century later, the two congregations still
call the same Irvine Avenue building home. Over the years, they’ve lent
singers to each other’s choirs, held common potluck dinners and joined in
Thanksgiving services.
When Jewish holidays fall on a Sunday, the church’s 200 members move
out to a park for mass. The sanctuary’s painted glass panels are neutral
to both religions and simply fill the room with bursts of colorful light.
A large wooden cross gets covered with Israel’s flag during Friday
services and the Jewish Holy Arc stands on wheels and is easily rolled
into position in front of the altar.
To honor the friendship and commemorate the six million Jewish people
murdered during the Holocaust, church members will present an eternal
light to the temple congregation Friday. The lamp -- made from a
150-year-old watchman’s lantern that artist Lynda Nosanov found in the
basement of a house in the Jewish quarter of Toledo, Spain -- will remain
lit permanently.
While eternal lights form an essential part of Roman Catholic churches
as well as many others, denominations such as Harbor Christian’s
Christian (Disciples of Christ) that emphasize scripture rarely have
them.
But “it’s a nice symbol of God’s presence,” said Rev. Dennis Short,
the church’s pastor. And “we wanted to honor Felix and Flory [Van Beek].
We’ve enjoyed our relationship. We’re very close.”
Rabbi Marc Rubenstein, who leads Temple Isaiah’s 100-family
congregation, said he likes to call the building “churple” -- a
combination of church and temple.
But “when we come here, we don’t think of our sanctuary as a church,”
he said. “We think of it as a temple.”
Rubenstein added that he and Short would engage in a pulpit exchange
for the first time to celebrate the eternal light.
Sitting in the sanctuary Monday morning, Flory Van Beek said the lamp
was “fantastic.”
Nosanov “constructed it in such a way that there are six panels for
the six million Jews [who perished during the Holocaust] and 12 smaller
ones for the 12 tribes of Israel,” she said.
Van Beek, whose slight accent still reveals a hint of her native
country of the Netherlands, escaped the Nazis by hiding in Christian
homes for three years. While she and her husband emigrated to America in
1948, many family members, including her mother, were murdered in
concentration camps.
Only about 5,200 of the Netherlands’ Jewish population of 140,000
survived the Holocaust and Van Beek collected her memories in her 1998
book, “Flory: Survival in the Valley of Death.”
Standing in front of the Holy Arc to decide on the best place to hang
the lamp from the ceiling, Van Beek again told Short how touched she was
by the church’s present.
“We’re all created by the same creator,” she said. “We all have two
arms and two legs. All of our ways of religion go to the same purpose.
Just in different ways.”
FYI
The eternal light will be presented during a Holocaust Remembrance Day
ceremony Friday at 8 p.m. at Harbor Christian Church, 2401 Irvine Avenue.
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