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Pies, Docs, Kuyps, And Confessionalists

The Confessionalist wants to engage the world but recognizes that what binds Reformed Christians together is not an agreed cultural agenda or even an eschatology (a vision of the future) but the Word of God as confessed by the churches. Thus, sometimes the interests of the Confessionalist with intersect with those of the Kuyperian (e.g., Machen’s defense of private Christian schools) and sometimes it may diverge (e.g., Machen’s libertarianism). He recognizes that the church’s confession of the Word has clear implications for the way the faith is lived both on the Christian Sabbath (Sunday) but also Monday through Saturday.

The first time I heard the expression, “Pies, Docs, and Kuyps” was during a seminary lecture by Derke Bergsma. He was relating what had already become a fairly standard sociological taxonomy in the Reformed world. There are three kinds of Reformed folk: Pietists, Doctrinalists, and Kuyperians. I have heard or seen this analysis traced to George Marsden but I do not know where.

Pietism (not to be confused with piety) values the immediate encounter with the risen Christ and personal religious experience above everything else. A Pietist may have an active or contemplative piety. He may be orthodox in his confession but orthodoxy is not essential to Pietism. Religious experience is of the essence of Pietism. The practice of the faith is more important than doctrine but not as important as religious experience. History is interesting to him insofar as it illumines and fuels religious experience. Pietism has been perhaps the dominant movement in American evangelicalism (or a major part of the dominant spirit) since the First Great Awakening in the early 18th century. It was fueled by the Second Great Awakening in the 19th century and by the ongoing tradition of revivalism in American religion since. The neo-Pentecostalism of the Cane Ridge (1800) Topeka and Asuza Street revivals (1906–07) the immigrant Pietists, who came to the USA from Germany and the Scandinavian countries in the 19th century, contributed mightily to the transformation of American Christianity into the Pietist model. If you are an American evangelical, you are almost certainly a Pietist or the child of a Pietist. For more on this movement see the relevant chapters in Recovering the Reformed Confession.

A Doctrinalist values orthodox doctrine above all else. Think of Berkhof’s Systematic Theology. Above all else, the Doctrinalist wants to distill the essential theological truths of a biblical passage. Like the Pietist, he is not very interested in history (when doctrine developed, where it developed, how it developed, and why). History interests him insofar as it clarifies doctrine. He loves Scripture but (sees it less as the history of redemption and more as a source of doctrine). He values piety but not as much as doctrinal truth. In the USA, a Doctrinalist may well be a refugee from Pietism. His interest in philosophy is stronger than his interest in history and practice.

In this taxonomy, a Kuyperian is shorthand for the Transformationalist approach to relating Christ and culture. He is chiefly interested in the creation of a distinctly Christian worldview toward the end of a cultural engagement and influence. The name of the category is a reference to the great, indefatigable, and inimitable Abraham Kuyper (1837–1920), a Reformed minister, theologian, and scholar who founded a Reformed denomination (Gereformeerde Kerken), a university (The Free University of Amsterdam), edited and wrote for two newspapers, helped to found a political party (Anti-Revolutionary Party), served as member of Parliament, and served as Prime Minister of the Netherlands (1901–05). Kuyperians are interested in piety (but not typically Pietism) and doctrine but what (in this scheme) really animates a Kuyperian is the problem of Christ and culture and the vision of engaging and transforming culture under the influence of the Christian faith.

Obviously in such a taxonomy there caricatures are going to emerge but no one is meant to think of a caricature as a photograph or a careful portrait. A caricature captures and exaggerates certain obvious features. So it is with this very quick sketch. There is another problem with this taxonomy, it lacks a category or two. Where does the “redemptive-historical” theologian (e.g., Geerhardus Vos) fit? The Redemptive-Historical theologian and preacher has been an important figure in Dutch-Reformed theology and church life since at least the 1640s, when Johannes Cocceius began writing.

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