Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Event: A Kuyperian Response to the Crisis in the Public Square
Event: A Kuyperian Response to the Crisis in the Public Square
Mar 16, 2026 8:03 PM

Every lightning-fast news cycle highlights the turmoil and tension of our current age.

Cultures are clashing both in Europe and in the United States as refugees from the Middle East and Central America seek asylum. Americans are deeply polarized. Political dialogue has e toxic. Sometimes the very foundations of a free and open society are met with deep skepticism in the popular media and throughout the larger culture.

In order to address these significant issues, the Acton Institute is hosting Crisis in the Public Square, a free two-day international conference at the Institute’s headquarters in Grand Rapids, MI. (The event will also be available via livestream for those who cannot attend in person.) This conference will draw upon the work of Abraham Kuyper, the Dutch politician, educator, and theologian to present possible solutions for rediscovering civic virtue and building a society in which all may flourish.

Why Kuyper? What does he have to offer to the twenty first century? Kuyper was one of the early proponents of utilizing the concept of a Christian worldview. Kuyper famously said, “There is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: ‘Mine!'”

In this quotation, we hear answers or suggestions of answers to five important questions:

Where are we? In God’s world, a creation, claimed by Christ.Who are we? Those who are claimed by Christ.What is wrong? The world and we assert an illusory autonomy.What is the remedy? Recognizing and embracing Christ’s lordship over all of life.What time is it? It is time to do Christ’s work in his world, to be the functioning body of Christ.

This way of understanding Abraham Kuyper’s concept of a worldview is exceptionally helpful place to start in addressing the significant challenges of our time. Kuyper provides us a framework that encourages us to have an expansive Christian vision and encourages us towards cultural engagement and transformation.

Sometimes it is helpful to employ additional metaphors when thinking about Kuyper’s worldview concept. For instance, we might use the notion of a picture that always keeps God in the frame, succumbing neither to naturalism (ignoring God altogether in our thinking about contemporary challenges) or to a God-of-the-gaps mentality that brings in God as an explanation, or invokes his mystery, when all other explanations fail.

On the evening of November 5, as part of the broader conference, the Acton Institute will confer the Novak Award and its $15,000 prize to the Brazilian academic Prof. Lucas G. Freire of the Center for Economic Freedom at Mackenzie Presbyterian University in Sao Paolo, Brazil. In the annual Calihan Lecture, Professor Freire will speak to the important role churches and intermediary institutions play in promoting free markets and free societies.

Thanks to a generous donor, this event– including meals and parking – is free. Join the Acton Institute in person or via livestream for this exciting conference on November 5 and 6, 2018. Additional information and registration is available here: acton.org/kuyperconf.

Melvin Flikkema contributed to this post.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Avoid the ‘Ignorant Arithmetic’
Joe Carter, purveyor of the evangelical outpost (no longer active online), had a discussion last week worth paying attention to on the specifically Christian pursuit of knowledge. He argues that this applies even in something so apparently noncontroversial as mathematics. Regarding questions of math and science, “Even the concept that 1 + 1 = 2, which almost all people agree with on a surface level, has different meanings based on what theories are proposed as answers,” he writes. He also...
Supernaturalist verse of the day
By faith we understand that the universe was formed at mand, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible. Hebrews 11:3 NIV ...
Compassion — A uniquely human trait
Jordan Ballor, associate editor at the Acton Institute, responds to a study published by Joan Silk, a researcher at the University of California, which finds that monkeys do not passion. Silk’s team placed a chimp in a situation where it had the option of pulling one of two ropes. Pull the first rope, and the chimp received a bit of food. Pull the second rope, and the chimp received the same bit of food, but a monkey in a neighboring...
Europe’s social model closes doors to the poor
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Americans living in Europe were often scolded about the need for big, centralized government to look after the poor, and we heard yet again about the moral superiority of Europe’s social model over America’s market-driven one. People who follow the Acton Institute and read the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page are too smart and well-informed to fall for such bromides. The American Entreprise magazine also devoted a whole issue debunking Europe’s claims. But when...
German thought and the Vatican
In today’s Times of London, William Rees-Mogg writes about the Vatican and its apparent rejection of intelligent design. Rees-Mogg also makes this provocative claim about Pope Benedict and some possible surprises from this new pontificate: His critics had expected him to be more conservative than his predecessor. I tended to share this expectation myself, but refrained from expressing it because new leaders always surprise one; they move in directions no one had previously foreseen. We should have been more conscious...
A ‘Special Interest’ in education
A story on today’s Morning Edition by Claudio Sanchez examines the future of the school system in New Orleans following the hurricane Katrina disaster. New Orleans school superintendent Ora plains that charter schools are stepping in to fill the void left when public schools were cancelled for the remainder of this school year. She says, “There are so many different agendas. The mayor has decided that the city can run 20 schools under a charter. We have individual schools going...
The ‘Royal Road of Liberty’
From Herman Bavinck: Even a freedom that cannot be obtained and enjoyed aside from the danger of licentiousness and caprice is still always to be preferred over a tyranny that suppresses liberty. In the creation of humanity, God himself chose this way of freedom, which carried with it the danger and actually the fact of sin as well, in preference to forced subjection. Even now, in ruling the world and governing the church, God still follows this royal road of...
Abp. Tutu supports use of DDT to fight malaria
The Kill Malarial Mosquitoes NOW! coalition announced today that Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu has endorsed the campaign to use DDT as a primary weapon in the fight to control and eliminate malaria. The coalition wants 2/3 of world’s malaria control funds to be spent on DDT, or any more cost-effective insecticide, plus bination therapies (ACTs). Archbishop Tutu describes malaria as a “devastating” disease that is holding back African development. Many African countries desperately need cost-effective insecticides, such as DDT, to...
Saving small-town America
For those of us who harbor some nostalgic sentiment for this country’s agrarian past… I’ve written previously about the corrosive effect of subsidies on American agriculture. Now, Denis Boyles, in a thoughtful piece on NRO, notes from a similar perspective the importance of entrepreneurial thinking in preserving the agricultural towns of rural America. Here’s one piece: When I asked Genna M. Hurd, the co-director of the Kansas Center for Community Economic Development at the University of Kansas and an expert...
What Sarbanes-Oxley hath wraught
Aaah, the magical soothing balm that is government regulation! The delightfully titled Now Batting for Pedro Borbon blog (“Manny Mota…Mota…Mota”) reveals the (predictable) results of governmental efforts to “increase transparency” in the business world: So, let’s review. The law that was supposed to ensure greater transparency and make the stock market safe for all of us, especially the little guy, is panies to purge the little guy, e less transparent, and shun our world-class public capital markets. Score another beaut...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved