What is Neo-Calvinism? Dr. Gray Sutanto gives a brief historical overview of Neo-Calvinism using two of the overarching challenges the theology seeks to address.
So, what is Neo-Calvinism? Neo-Calvinism is not to be confused with new Calvinism, which is a 21st-century, late 20th-century phenomenon of the resurgence of Calvinist soteriology in America, specifically the United States. So, Neo-Calvinism is a much older tradition. It refers to the tradition birthed out of Abraham Kuyper and Herman Bavinck in the Netherlands in the late 19th century, early 20th century. And they were a retrieval movement. They were trying to argue that Reformed orthodoxy has resources to engage modern life in a very new and fresh way. So let me just push two challenges from this Neo-Calvinist movement for us to consider, which we explore in a deeper way in our newest book, Neo-Calvinism: A Theological Introduction.
So, what is Neo-Calvinism? Neo-Calvinism is not to be confused with new Calvinism, which is a 21st-century, late 20th-century phenomenon of the resurgence of Calvinist soteriology in America, specifically the United States. So, Neo-Calvinism is a much older tradition. It refers to the tradition birthed out of Abraham Kuyper and Herman Bavinck in the Netherlands in the late 19th century, early 20th century. And they were a retrieval movement. They were trying to argue that Reformed orthodoxy has resources to engage modern life in a very new and fresh way. So let me just push two challenges from this Neo-Calvinist movement for us to consider, which we explore in a deeper way in our newest book, Neo-Calvinism: A Theological Introduction.