Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Establishing Order via National, Provincial, and Local Church Orders: “Let All Things Be Done with Decency and Order”
- 2 Establishing Authority: Electing Elders and Deacons
- 3 Establishing Confessional Identity : An “Honest Citizen, Even Though a Catholic”
- 4 Navigating Intra-Confessional Conflict: “Live at Peace with Everyone”?
- 5 Establishing Belief and Practice: Rural Approaches to Sabbath Observance
- Conclusion : Establishing and Navigating Reformed Identity in the Rural Low Countries
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Establishing Belief and Practice: Rural Approaches to Sabbath Observance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Establishing Order via National, Provincial, and Local Church Orders: “Let All Things Be Done with Decency and Order”
- 2 Establishing Authority: Electing Elders and Deacons
- 3 Establishing Confessional Identity : An “Honest Citizen, Even Though a Catholic”
- 4 Navigating Intra-Confessional Conflict: “Live at Peace with Everyone”?
- 5 Establishing Belief and Practice: Rural Approaches to Sabbath Observance
- Conclusion : Establishing and Navigating Reformed Identity in the Rural Low Countries
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Abstract
The Sabbath played an important role in early modern Dutch Reformed churches in terms of both theology and piety. Theological understandings of the Sabbath were not uniform in the Dutch Reformed tradition, as demonstrated here by the differing emphases of Jeremias Bastingius and Cornelis Corsten. Similarly, expectations around practices of Sabbath observance were also far from uniform. Sabbath desecration in rural communities was a frequent complaint from Dutch Reformed classes and provincial synods. However, those complaints occur less often in the consistory records of rural churches. Thus, a tentative conclusion is that rural Dutch Reformed Christians, because of the uniqueness of their rural contexts, had different, perhaps more lax, understandings of proper Sabbath observance than did their urban counterparts.
Keywords: Sabbath; Theology; Heidelberg Catechism; Discipline
One of the most basic identity markers for Reformed Christians in the Low Countries was attendance at Sunday worship services. However, expectations for Sunday observance went beyond simply going to church. The Fourth Commandment, as explained in the Reformed tradition, might appear simple at first glance. Indeed, the tendency in modern scholarship has been to ground the origin of theological disputes about the Sabbath in the Puritan tradition, which arose in England and was later transported by migrations to the Low Countries and the Americas. However, recent studies have begun to demonstrate the complexity of understandings of the Sabbath within Dutch Reformed communities.
Theological debates about the Sabbath had significant implications for expectations regarding how Sundays were to be observed. Not surprisingly, the theological expectations did not translate seamlessly into practice. A number of academic studies have tangentially noted the ways in which Sabbath complaints were registered and disciplined in church records. My previous research has also focused on the ways in which the Sabbath was disciplined at a variety of ecclesiastical levels; I have focused on how Sabbath expectations and practices aligned or failed to align with theological understandings. The current chapter builds on my previous research and expands it in two ways.
First, this chapter will broaden current understandings of Dutch Reformed theological approaches to the Sabbath. Given the number and variety of theological voices within the Dutch Reformed tradition, which itself defies neat categorization, developing a more complete understanding of the theological perspectives requires additional scholarly work to add to what has previously been done.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Navigating Reformed Identity in the Rural Dutch RepublicCommunities, Belief, and Piety, pp. 189 - 224Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023