On this day in 1907, the entire nation of the
Netherlands celebrated the seventieth birthday of Abraham Kuyper. A national
proclamation recognized that "The history of the Netherlands, in Church,
in State, in Society, in Press, in School, and in the Sciences the last forty
years, cannot be written without the mention of his name on almost every page,
for during this period the biography of Dr. Kuyper is to a considerable extent
the history of the Netherlands."
The boy who was born in 1837 was at first thought to
be dull, but by the time he was twelve he had entered the Gymnasium. Years
later he would graduate with highest possible honors from Leyden
University. In short order he
earned his masters and doctoral degrees in theology before serving as minister
at Breesd and Utrecht.
The brilliant and articulate
champion of Biblical faithfulness was called to serve in the city of Amsterdam
in 1870. At the time, the religious life of the nation had dramatically
declined. The church was cold and formal. There was no Bible curriculum in the
schools and the Bible had no real influence in the life of the nation. Kuyper
set out to change all of this in a flurry of activity.
In 1872, Kuyper founded the daily
newspaper, De Standard.
Shortly afterward he also founded De Heraut, a weekly devotional
magazine. He continued as editor of both newspapers for over forty-five
years—and both became very influential in spreading the winsome message of a
consistent Christian worldview.
Two years later, in 1874, Kuyper
was elected to the lower house of Parliament as the leader of the
Anti-Revolutionary Party—and he served there until 1877. Three years later he
founded the Free University of Amsterdam, which asserted that the Bible was the
foundation of every area of knowledge.
Following a stunning victory at the
polls, Kuyper was summoned by Queen Wilhelmena to form a cabinet and become
Prime Minister of the nation in 1902—a position he held for three years. A
number of politicians were dissatisfied with Kuyper’s leadership because he
refused to separate his theological and political views separate. To him, they
were identical interests since Christ was king in every arena of human life. He
believed that Christ rules not merely by the tradition of what He once was,
spoke, did, and endured, but by a living power which even now, seated as He is
at the right hand of God, He exercises over lands, nations, generations,
families, and individuals.
Kuyper was undoubtedly a man of
tremendous versatility—he was a noted linguist, theologian, university
professor, politician, statesman, philosopher, scientist, publisher, author,
journalist, and philanthropist. But amazingly, in spite of his many
accomplishments and his tremendous urgency to redeem the time, Kuyper was also
a man of the people.
In 1897, at the 25th anniversary of
his establishment of De Standaard, Kuyper described the ruling passion
of his life: "That in spite of all worldly opposition, God's holy
ordinances shall be established again in the home, in the school, and in the
State for the good of the people; to carve as it were into the conscience of
the nation the ordinances of the Lord, to which Bible and Creation bear
witness, until the nation pays homage again to God."
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