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Going Dutch in the Modern Age: Abraham Kuyper's Struggle for a Free Church in the Netherlands - Historical Theology Book for Scholars & Church History Enthusiasts | Perfect for Academic Research & Religious Studies
Going Dutch in the Modern Age: Abraham Kuyper's Struggle for a Free Church in the Netherlands - Historical Theology Book for Scholars & Church History Enthusiasts | Perfect for Academic Research & Religious Studies

Going Dutch in the Modern Age: Abraham Kuyper's Struggle for a Free Church in the Netherlands - Historical Theology Book for Scholars & Church History Enthusiasts | Perfect for Academic Research & Religious Studies

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Abraham Kuyper is known as the energetic Dutch Protestant social activist and public theologian of the 1898 Princeton Stone Lectures, the Lectures on Calvinism. In fact, the church was the point from which Kuyper's concerns for society and public theology radiated. In his own words, ''The problem of the church is none other than the problem of Christianity itself.'' The loss of state support for the church, religious pluralism, rising nationalism, and the populist religious revivals sweeping Europe in the nineteenth century all eroded the church's traditional supports. Dutch Protestantism faced the unprecedented prospect of ''going Dutch''; from now on it would have to pay its own way. John Wood examines how Abraham Kuyper adapted the Dutch church to its modern social context through a new account of the nature of the church and its social position. The central concern of Kuyper's ecclesiology was to re-conceive the relationship between the inner aspects of the church--the faith and commitment of the members--and the external forms of the church, such as doctrinal confessions, sacraments, and the relationship of the church to the Dutch people and state. Kuyper's solution was to make the church less dependent on public entities such as nation and state and more dependent on private support, especially the good will of its members. This ecclesiology de-legitimated the national church and helped Kuyper justify his break with the church, but it had wider effects as well. It precipitated a change in his theology of baptism from a view of the instrumental efficacy of the sacrament to his later doctrine of presumptive regeneration wherein the external sacrament followed, rather than preceded and prepared for, the intenral work grace. This new ecclesiology also gave rise to his well-known public theology; once he achieved the private church he wanted, as the Netherlands' foremost public figure, he had to figure out how to make Christianity public again.

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In explaining how the Dutch Reformed could exist in a largely secular yet still national church society, Abraham Kuyper was forced anew to wrestle with the meaning of church government and baptism. John Halsey Wood Jr. gives not only a fine account of Kuyper, but also a skilled handling of church-state relations and the idea of a “nation,” something poorly lacking in modern scholarship.In short, a nation isn’t a state. A nation is the collective ethnos of a people, including language, religion, and culture. The state is the necessary (yet often parasitic) apparatus in the modern world. Surprisingly, one could have a national church without a state church.Kuyper’s solutions were new because while advocating separation of church and state, he also tried to avoid a purely voluntarist church while also having a relatively high view of the sacraments. Said another way: would not leaving the government of the church to “the people” entail the horrors of the French Revolution?Rooted and GroundedKuyper was able to alleviate some of the tension with his concept of “organicism.” The organic church precedes the institutional churchRooted: free life doesn’t come from human skill but from the hand of the Creator (63).Grounded: metaphor for the institutional churchKuyper’s use of organicity isn’t supposed to be Hegelian, but like our Lord (John 15-17) it is to note our interdependence.Unfortunately, Kuyper’s desire for a purer church drove him very close to a Baptist view of baptism. If the church is a church of believers, then why baptize babies? Kuyper solved this problem at great cost: he presumed regeneration on the part of the infants.ConclusionThis is an outstanding account of late Dutch church and state politics. Wood notes Kuyper’s strengths and weaknesses and places them within the unique situation Kuyper found himself.