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Conclusion : Establishing and Navigating Reformed Identity in the Rural Low Countries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 February 2024

Kyle Dieleman
Affiliation:
Dordt University, Iowa
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Summary

Abstract

Using the concept of identity, the focus on lay religious experience in rural communities allows for unique insights into the lives of Dutch Reformed Christians. In particular, rural churches adopted theological ideas but, in some cases, adapted that theology for their own particular contexts. Similarly, rural Dutch Reformed churches sought their own solutions for navigating ecclesiastical life, as is evident in their varying approaches to nominating and electing elders and deacons, to addressing other confessions within their communities, and to dealing with conflict within their churches. Even the desire for order and proper Sabbath observance were theological principles which rural churches sought to apply in ways unique to their specific rural settings. Thus, religious life in Dutch Reformed churches at local levels was varied to the point where rural churches could establish, maintain, and navigate the religious identities of their communities.

Keywords: Religious Experience; Rural; Identity; Reformed; Dutch Republic

One of the basic and most important arguments of this book is that lay religious experience in Dutch communities was far from monolithic and was, in fact, often divergent from official proclamations by theologians and synods. Such a conclusion may seem obvious, but scholarship on the Reformations at least occasionally remains beholden to arguments or implicit assumptions that the Reformations were a top-down affair in which powerful theologians dictated changes to religious laity. The acceptance of these arguments and assumptions has arisen out of a temptation, driven in part by Enlightenment ideals, to privilege theology over practice.

For far too long the story told of the Reformation was one where powerful, white men opened people's eyes to religious truth. Once these heroic leaders illuminated the gospel truth, Christians throughout Europe bravely joined the cause. This top-down approach, if hyperbolically described, placed the impetus for change in the hands of a few theologically literate men. However, this narrative is no longer sufficient. Discussing Luther, for example, Susan Karant-Nunn pointed out over forty years ago that “the age is past when men look exclusively to the life and theology of Martin Luther for insight into the success of the German Reformation.” The Calvin Studies Society, in a volume edited by Amy Nelson Burnett, provided a similar corrective regarding Calvin through a sequence of essays that address the “myth and reality” of Calvin.

Type
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Navigating Reformed Identity in the Rural Dutch Republic
Communities, Belief, and Piety
, pp. 225 - 236
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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