Abraham Kuyper (1837–1920) -- pastor, theologian, journalist, politician -- is highly regarded as exemplifying how a Christian worldview can be confidently expressed in both theory and practice. Honoring the spirit of Kuyper’s legacy, The Kuyper Center Review annually publishes substantial essays that relate the tradition of Reformed theology to issues of public life.
Few themes are more directly related to Kuyper’s thought than that of church and academy. The essays in this volume examine Kuyper’s vision for a distinctively Christian university and consider what it means today, especially in light of how secularized the Netherlands has become since Kuyper’s time. The contributors explore Kuyper’s understanding of church and academy by placing it in a broader intellectual and theological context and drawing comparisons with other notable theological thinkers. Taken together, these essays show that much can still be learned from Kuyper and his contemporaries.
ContributorsH. Russel BotmanMichael BrautigamGijsbert van den BrinkAd de BruijneJavier A. GarciaGordon GrahamMarinus de JongDylan PahmanHarry Van Dyke
Gordon Graham is Henry Luce III Professor of Philosophyand the Arts at Princeton Theological Seminary, author ofThe Re-enchantment of the World: Art versusReligion.,