Balogh, Ferencz
BALOGH, FERENCZ: Hungarian Reformed;
b. at Nagy Várad (140 m. s.e. of Budapest) Mar.
28, 1836. He was educated at the gymnasium of
his native city and at the Reformed theological
seminary of Debreczin (1854-58), where he remained
nine years in various capacities. He visited Paris,
London, and Edinburgh for the purpose of further
study in 1863-65, and in 1866 was appointed
professor of church history in the Reformed theological
seminary of Debreczin, where he has since remained
and of which he has been rector five times. He
has been an elder in the session of the Reformed
Church since 1860, and an ecclesiastical councilor for
life in the Transtibiscan superintendency of the
same religious denomination since 1883. He was
a delegate of the Hungarian Reformed Church
to the general councils of the Presbyterian Alliance
at Edinburgh (1877) and London (1888), and was
a member of the national synod of Debreczin in
1881-82. He has been a member of the committee
of the Hungarian Protestant Literary Society
since 1890, and an honorary member of the British
and Foreign Bible Society since 1904. In theology
he is a strict adherent of the Helvetic Confession.
His numerous works include the following in
Hungarian: “Peter Melius, the Hungarian Calvin"
(Debreczin, 1866); “History of the Hungarian
Protestant Church" (1872); “General Church
History to the Present Time" (5 vols., 1872-90);
“History of Dogma up to the Reformation"
(1877); “Principal Points of Modern Theology"
(1877), a polemic against the German Evangelical
Union; “Literature of Hungarian Protestant
Church History" (1879); “Specific Illustrations of
the most Recent Unitarian History" (1892);
“Phenomena of the History of Dogma in the
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries" (1894);
and “History of the Reformed College of
Debreczin" (1905). He likewise wrote in English
History of the Creeds, which appeared in the
Report of the Proceedings of the Presbyterian Alliance
(Philadelphia, 1880), and is the author of numerous
minor contributions in Hungarian, French, and
German, while in 1875 he founded at Debreczin
the Hungarian weekly “Evangelical Protestant
Gazette,” which he conducted for three years in
a successful crusade against the Budapest
“Protestant Union.”