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Copyright Fundatia Societatea Civilia (Civil Society Foundation) Mar 2011

Abstract

The Dutch neo-Calvinist movement launched by Abraham Kuyper (1837-1920) contributed to postwar Christian Democracy in Europe alongside, for example, neo-Thomist social and political thinking. Christian Democrats defend institutional pluralism in civil society against both (socialist) statism and (liberal) individualism. Within this defense of a pluralist society the neo-Calvinist concept of (horizontal) 'sphere sovereignty1 differs from the Roman Catholic principle of (hierarchical) 'subsidiarity1. Recent attention to civil society brings to the fore centuries of Christian social initiatives and societal ideas, already within the Roman Empire, and Biblical roots of this praxis and thought. In this article is described how neo-Calvinism strengthens the central motives of Christian Democracy. The historical roots of these motives are traced in order to picture neo-Calvinism perpectively as only one source of Christian Démocratie thinking among a variety of other historical sources. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Christian Democracy in neo-Calvinist perspective: Central motives, historical roots
Author
Nijhoff, Rob A
Pages
18-22,95
Section
Crestin democratia
Publication year
2011
Publication date
Mar 2011
Publisher
Fundatia Societatea Civilia (Civil Society Foundation)
ISSN
12216720
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1018567957
Copyright
Copyright Fundatia Societatea Civilia (Civil Society Foundation) Mar 2011