An accidental blog

"If God is sovereign, then his lordship must extend over all of life, and it cannot be restricted to the walls of the church or within the Christian orbit." Abraham Kuyper Common Grace 1.1.

Saturday, 21 November 2020

A Short Introduction to Abraham Kuyper’s Lectures on Calvinism By Jesse Sumpter


Jesse Sumpter is a Classical school educator based in Moscow, Idaho. In this brief - 48 page - introduction to Kuyper’s Stone Lectures he begins by identifying three of Kuyper’s “key ideas”. These he identifies as the lordship of Jesus; Calvinism as life system; and spheres of authority. 

The remaining chapters in this booklet then follow each of Kuyper’s lectures. Sumpter provides a summary of each one and provides copious quotes from each lecture. 

The book provides an entry-level introduction to the lectures and would be helpful for those who haven’t as yet read Kuyper’s lectures.




Friday, 20 November 2020

Fashion Theology - a brief review


 Fashion Theology

Robert Covolo

Waco Texas: Baylor University Press.


ISBN 978-1-4813-1273-8

Hbk, xiv + 200 pp


This book is a wonderful, nuanced discussion of the relationship between fashion and theology. Covolo shows that fashion is not independent of theology. Theologians have not been as silent about fashion, as has often been supposed, and their discussions go beyond accusations of fashion being trivial and being about vanity. Those discussed include Tertullian, Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin, Kuyper and Barth.


In these excavations of theological discourse and 


fashion theory Covolo identifies several interesting interrelations. Fashion theology is much more than fig leaves!

Saturday, 31 October 2020

Mike Wagenman discusses Kuyper at the Layman’s Lounge

 

Mike Wagenman discusses Kuyper on the Layman’s Lounge podcast here
It’s well worth checking out.

Friday, 23 October 2020

Review of Toxel’s What is Man?


What is Man?
Basics of the Faith
A. Craig Troxel
Philipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing
Pbk, 36pp, £3.99
ISBN 978-1-59638-166-7



This is a brief introduction to biblical anthropology and is part of the rapidly increasing series on the Basics of Faith from P&R Publishing. Troxel is a professor of systematic theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia and is the author of a fuller book on the subject With all Your Heart. 

The strength of this book is that it begins with humans made in the image of God. He sees humans as a unity of body and soul and espouses a holistic dualism. He provides good arguments for the rejection of the trichotomous views (ie body, soul and spirit). 

He then moves in briefly to discuss the heart: “the Bible’s principal word to describe humanity’ inner self”. 

The central core of the booklet then utilises Thomas Manton’s notion of the fourfold state of man: man in a state of innocence, in the state of sin, in the state of grace, and in the state of glory. 

This is a useful introduction to a holistic dualism - even if I don’t fully agree with some of his points. I look forward to reading his fuller treatment of the human heart.





Thursday, 22 October 2020

Bartholomew’s review of Reformed Theology & Evolutionary Theory

 Craig Bartholomew reviews Gijsbert van den Brink’s Reformed Theology & Evolutionary Theory at Sapienta



Bartholomew concludes:

I am grateful to van den Brink for his stimulating work. My own hunch is that there is more potential conflict between evolution and the biblical metanarrative than the author thinks. I am not a creationist but am reluctant to diminish the primary authority of Scripture as the lens through which we read and interpret the world, including science. I side with Bavinck and Kuyper in thinking that Christian faith needs to be fully engaged in the practice of science, rather than being kept separate from science, as van den Brink suggests. I take comfort from the fact that Christians need not put all their eggs in one basket but have various possibilities open to them on the question of origins. My sense is that the above issues need to be attended to in detail as part of our quest for the truth of evolution.

Friday, 25 September 2020

Adventures in the Kuyper archive

 Jasmijn Vervloet, curator of the Protestant Heritage collections at the VU Amsterdam, is embarking on an adventure in the Kuyper archive to gain a better understanding of Abraham Kuyper, the founder of VU Amsterdam.

Details here.





Thursday, 24 September 2020

Square-inch.net

 Henry De Jong has created a website to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the AACS/ Institute for Christian Studies Niagara conferences. The site is full of photographs, reminiscences, interviews, YouTube clips and more. https://square-inch.net/


 


He has an article in the Christian Courier "A Legacy of Learning: Institute for Christian Studies Marks Milestoneexplaining the project.



Friday, 18 September 2020

Review of Kuyper's On Education

 Stiemsma, Shaun (2020) "The Presence of the Past: A Review of Abraham Kuyper's On Education," Pro Rege 49(1): 43 - 47.  Available at: https://digitalcollections.dordt.edu/pro_rege/vol49/iss1/8





Wednesday, 26 August 2020

Popma's Scriptural Reflections on History - out soon

 K.J. Poma's Scriptural Reflections on History translated by Harry van Dyke is soon to be published by Wordbridge publishing.



Full detail are here.

Friday, 10 July 2020

Iron sharpens Iron (ISI) - a ThinkingFaithNetwork initiative



Iron sharpens Iron (ISI) is all about sharpening up as a disciple of Jesus Christ. We are inspired by Proverbs 27:17 “As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.”

ISI is sponsored by LifeMatters, part of the ThinkingFaithNetwork, based in Leeds. It is completely free and open to anyone.
We are now living in a confusing, post-Christian society.
Today the vast majority of British people are secular. Secular people live as if there is no God and everything is just physical. Secular people have no fear of God and the pagan gods. Their horizons of happiness are thoroughly secular and materialistic. For some the focus is on watching football, drinking lager and watching television. For others it's opera, sophisticated chitchat and poetry. All this without any reference to God and His kingdom.

How should we as disciples of Jesus Christ respond to our post-Christian culture. Should we bury our heads in the sand and ignore it or do we sharpen up as disciples and engage with our complicated and challenging world?

ISI meets every fourth Friday of the month and our speakers present a short talk and then we discuss the topic in hand. We want everyone to contribute to the discussion. We encourage heated debate. We want to learn from each other so we can bear fruit for Jesus Christ, the Lord of heaven and earth. We are now meeting by zoom.

So far we have looked at the following issues:

  • A Christian response to the New Age
  • A Christian perspective on business
  • A Christian discussion about Mafia hitmen and evil
  • A Christian reflection on the pervasive impact of secularism
  • A Christian framework for God’s kingdom and public life
  • A Christian response to Covid-19
  • A Christian discussion about serving God in engineering


If you would like to know more about ISI, when and where we meet, contact the convenor of the group Mark Roques.  
mark@realitybites.org.uk

Thursday, 25 June 2020

Interview with Chris Gousmett of Thumbwidth Press

Chris Gousmett (Dunedin, New Zealand) is a retired information manager, having worked in that field in various government agencies. He has a PhD in historical theology, with a thesis on the relationship of anthropology and eschatology in the Church Fathers. He is now active in research and writing in Biblical studies, theology and philosophy, and translation of Dutch material into English.

He has recently established an e-book publishing venture to make new Reformational literature available, as well as re-issuing Reformational books now out of print. He is on twitter @chrisgousmett


Chris was kind enough to answer some of my questions.



Who or what are your key influences?
I suppose the most influential period was when I was at the Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto in the mid-1908s, where I completed a Master’s degree in philosophical theology. There I had the privilege of studying with Al Wolters, George Vandervelde and Bernie Zylstra, as well as with other staff, including Jim Olthius who was my thesis supervisor.

I suppose I was closest in thinking to Bernie, Al and George than to Jim, but one strong influence from Jim was the importance of anthropology (theory of the human person) for Christian thinking in every field. That has one way or another been part of most of my research projects ever since, most notably in my PhD thesis at Otago University, New Zealand, which explored the influence of anthropological theories on eschatology in the Church Fathers.

In later years I have learned a great deal from Antheunis Janse in this regard, and would like to see his work given more recognition in Reformational circles. I have drafted translations of his many works on anthropology and would like to see these published one day.

How did you come across Reformational philosophy?
An encounter with someone who shared an interest in a book I was reading led to discussion about Christian engagement with the wider world, and he told me about people he knew who were also interested in discussing such issues, and I was put in touch with them. I have often wondered how I could have come across Reformational thinking if it had not been for that encounter, as it is not very prominent in New Zealand or indeed most of the world, and that keeps me alert for opportunities to share about it with others who may be searching for more than they are currently aware of, given the limited exposure that Reformational thinking has even in Christian circles.

What do you feel are its strength and its weaknesses?
The strength of a Reformational vision for life (not just in philosophy) means that there is nothing that falls outside of the authority of Christ, and that is truly liberating in that we are not on our own in dealing with the consequences of the fall in our occupations, our leisure, our relationships.

I sometimes explain the difference between a Reformational vision and traditional evangelicalism by re-wording the Great Commission as it is actually understood in evangelicalism: “Some authority in heaven and earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of some nations,... teaching them to obey some of what I have commanded you. And surely I am with you some of the time, to the very end of the age.” A Reformational vision can see that “all” means “all” and can work this out in terms of everyday living.

Its weaknesses largely relate to the difficulties of communicating this vision in ways which people can readily grasp. For most people, it is so radically different that they struggle to comprehend the extent of what we are actually saying. Also, sometimes it can come across as a technical, intellectual approach that is disconnected from the issues people deal with every day. But a good part of that is the anti-intellectualist tendency in evangelicalism, and the Biblicist approach which insists on a specific verse to back up every assertion. And of course, many evangelicals see the issues we discuss as outside of the scope of Christian discipleship, and purely optional rather than something that gets to the core of life. The subjectivist tendency in evangelicalism also prevents people from seeing that this is something that they ought to grapple with, as it is only “your opinion” placed against other people’s “opinion”.

You have begun a new publishing venture - Thumbwidth Press (https://www.thumbwidthpress.net/). What are your dreams and hopes for Thumbwidth?

The goal for Thumbwidth Press is to have a website where e-books from a Reformational perspective can be made available to the public. Many younger people do not read hard-copy books that much any more, it seems, so I hope that publishing Reformational material in e-book format will be more accessible to them. I have a number of books in preparation for release as e-books, both new and re-release of Reformational classics to make them accessible for a new generation. The material I am seeking to publish is more introductory and exploratory than academic, perhaps explained as at the “worldview” level rather than the “philosophical” level.

You have also had published a new ebook dealing with COVID-19, Trusting in God during a global pandemic. Could you say something about why you wrote this and who is it aimed at?

This book was written to help children and early teens (10-15 years approximately) to grapple with what is going on in the world around them, which must be a frightening experience for many. It seeks to answer the question, Where is God in all this, and how can I trust him when so many terrible things are happening? It explores how God is always trustworthy but that sometimes people do things which spiral out of our control into things like the pandemic. I seek to explain that people are responsible in many ways for the events that brought about the pandemic and its global impacts and that this is a manifestation of human sinfulness and disobedience to God resulting in consequences which could be more or less expected. I trust that children (and their parents) can be strengthened in their faith and trust in God through my little book.

What books are you reading at the moment?
I have just finished The Liturgy of Creation by Michael Lefebvre. This is an account of the creation narrative as structured by the ancient Hebrew liturgical calendar rather than by a chronological account. It explores how various events in the Pentateuch were given dates which do not correspond with the date on which an event happened, but with the sequence of festival celebrations and their relationship with each other. It is a fascinating argument and makes better sense of the dating in these books than attempts to connect them with a chronological calendar.

I am now working through The Unintended Reformation: How a religious revolution secularised society, by Brad Gregory. This explores how the dramatic social upheaval of the 16th century reformation led unintentionally to secularisation in many fields of human endeavour. It comports well with the Reformational view of how secularisation came about, and it would be a fascinating exercise to do a careful comparison of Gregory’s views with those of Dooyeweerd on the same issues. I suspect that Gregory would see Reformational scholarship as confirming many of his conclusions. I am eager to continue reading this book, as I have gained much from the first 50 pages and expect the rest of this book to be equally insightful and helpful. I think it should be required reading for any Reformational seeking to influence current society – it both gives in-depth explanation as to how things have got to be the way they are, and is a warning to be alert to the unintended consequences of what we are engaged in today.


What do you like to do for fun?
Now that I am retired I have time for a number of activities. I am building a model railway which I enjoy, and my son shares in that with me, helping to run the trains. My wife and I often invite friends for a meal and fellowship, and we enjoy walking and visiting beaches and other scenic spots, of which there are many here in Dunedin.




Saturday, 20 June 2020

Christian philosophy diagrams

Richard Russell has over several decades been drawing and sharing numerous diagrams to illustrate Reformational philosophy.


For the first time they have been collected together in this volume.

Richard A. Russell, 2020. Christian Philosophy DiagramsBristol: All of Life Redeemed.



Saturday, 13 June 2020

El Reformacional




I have recently been in "zoom" contact with a group in Mexico City. They have founded a Christian school and seminary on Reformational principles, and have a vision for a Christian University.

They have also been producing translations of Reformational philosophy into Spanish for use in their school and seminary.

They have begun a Reformational newspaper online (http://elreformacional.com/) - it is well worth checking out particularly if you can read Spanish.

If you'd like more details on it I'm sure that Andrés García (via twitter: @elreformacional) would be happy to provide them.


They are also on twitter @elreformacional


Friday, 12 June 2020

#Kuyperania


Fred  Zaspel has a brief note on Kuyper's Ever in Thy Sight a Books at a Glance:


I have not read Abraham Kuyper in great depth, but I have read enough that when I saw this little devotional, I was eager to take a look. I was not disappointed. Rich, warm reflections on the Psalms – theologically informed and brimming with insightful devotional application. Refreshing daily readings for any Christian.






Joustra, R. 2020. Abraham Kuyper’s Overseas Manifesto. (May 6) Providence Magazine
has been examining Kuyper's foreign policy.



Two papers have been recently published discussing Kuyper:


Freire, Lucas G. 2020. Abraham Kuyper and Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer as Anti-Rationalist Liberals. Journal of Church and State forthcoming

Ford, Brian 2020. Neoliberalism and four spheres of authority in American education: Business, class, stratification, and intimations of marketization. Policy Futures in Education 18(2):200-239. 












Thursday, 11 June 2020

Saturday, 6 June 2020

Abraham Kuyper: An Annotated Bibliography - is now online!



Abraham Kuyper: An Annotated Bibliography 1857-2010 by Tjitze Kuipers and originally published by Brill in 2011 is now online in a revised and updated version. 

This is a game-changer for Kuyper students! https://sources.neocalvinism.org/kuyper/

Saturday, 16 May 2020

Interview with Adolfo García de la Sienra Guajardo

Adolfo García de la Sienra Guajardo is a professor at the Universidad Veracruzana, Velacruz in Mexico. He has recently translated the first volume of Dooyeweerd's New Critique of Theoretical Thought into Spanish. He was kind enough to answer some of my questions.


Many thanks for agreeing to this. Could you please start by saying something about your story, who you are and what you do?


Thanks for preparing this interview, Steve. 
Who am I? This is a very tough question, indeed. When I was very young this question made me reflect a lot. It is the question that the caterpillar asks Alicia in Wonderland. When she replies “I am a little girl”, he retorts: “Yes, but who are you”. The only reply that I found at that time was that I am I. Granted, this is not terribly informative, but, as  Calvin said: “it is evident that man never attains to a true self-knowledge until he have previously contemplated the face of God, and come down after such contemplation to look into himself”. What this means is that we don’t know who we are until we have a knowledge of God in Jesus Christ. But then, as Dooyeweerd says, we are an expression of God’s image. Out of that we are really nothing, nobody.
Now, it is obvious that you are not asking for my passport, but, I guess, some information about my existence in the totality of meaning, in relation to concrete things that we all know, like my country, profession, and things like that. I would say that I am a servant of Christ placed in the Mexican Republic. My profession is philosophy, and I am a research professor at the Institute of Philosophy of the University of Veracruz. I have two sons, Rodrigo and Adolfito, and I’m married to Luz María Suárez. We live in Coatepec, Veracruz, in the outskirts of Xalapa, a beautiful town surrounded by coffee plantations.

Who or what are your key influences?
I am son of Marx (and Coca-Cola). I was raised as a Roman Catholic and even was an altar boy. But the influence in the public Mexican universities was quite Marxist. Everybody spoke about the revolution, Marx’s Capital, and it was taken for granted that the only decent position was that of a revolutionary like Che Guevara. Yet, my early formation in philosophy was strongly based upon mathematical logic, and so I developed a curiosity, an interest in understanding Das Kapital from a logical point of view. That’s how I began to make logical analyses of theories. My first influence after Marxism was logical positivism, especially Rudolf Carnap’s writings, then Mario Bunge, but I was a disciple of C. Ulises Moulines, who taught me the logical methods initiated by Alfred Tarski at Berkeley, and Patrick Suppes at Stanford. I ended up working under the advice of Suppes at Stanford, where I wrote a rather technical dissertation on the logical foundations of the labour theory of value.
On the other hand, I was still very young when I began to deeply dislike Marxism. It was an instinctive rejection, but I really did not have a very firm and clear philosophical position, although I was close to Spanish Scholasticism, mainly Francisco Suarez’s Disputations. My full liberation came many years later, thanks to the Gospel and later Reformational philosophy.

I knew about Reformational philosophy thanks to a lecture by Dr. John Paul Roberts in the Juan Calvino Seminary of Mexico City. He has been a great influence upon me, as well as Roy A. Clouser, who is, in my view, the greatest (albeit neglected) American philosopher alive now.

Your book A Structuralist Theory of Economics has recently been produced, could you say a little something about that? 
It is a very technical book where I use the structuralist view of theories in order to discuss and reconstruct the logical structure of several economic theories, as well as their methodological issues from that point of view. From the point of view of WdW, it is a book devoted to the retrocipations of economic theory in the arithmetic, spatial and logical modalities. This means that it deals with representations of economic phenomena in those realms. I think, in particular, that representational measurement can be seen as a theory of the analogy of different modalities in the mathematical modalities. I intend to develop this point in forthcoming papers.

Why has a Christian philosopher written on such a topic?
Because I am interested in the logical foundations and methodology of economic theories. Actually, I have been teaching economic theory for many years. 

Is there such a thing as Christian economics?
I don’t think so. Economics is like physics: there is no unified theory, no unified field, as I discuss it in my paper “The Economic Sphere” (Axiomathes 20 (1): 81-94 (2010)). We have a philosophical view of the economic sphere (that I present in this paper), but not a theory properly said. In my book, Chapter 6, I present a very general view of what an economic system is.

You have recently translated the first volume of Dooyeweerd’s New Critique of Theoretical Thought into Spanish. How did you first come across Dooyeweerd and Reformational philosophy? 
When I returned to Mexico from Stanford, back in 1986, I became Christian and all philosophies, even that of Suárez did not quite squared with my new faith. Then I was invited by a brother to a lecture by Dr. John Paul Roberts, who used to come to Mexico often to teach Reformational philosophy. I fell in love with this philosophy at first sight, back in 1992.

The translation of the New Critique could not be an easy task! What was the motivation behind doing it?
One of my projects has been to provide the Spanish-speaking Christians with Reformational literature. I have published Willem Groen van Prinsterer’s Unbelief and Revolution (I ignore who made the translation, but I revised it no less than five times, and made the typography). I have also translated: Dooyeweerd’s Roots of Western Culture; H. Evan Runner’s Unionville Lectures, all in a single volume; and Roy Clouser’s The Myth of Religious Neutrality.

What were the highlights of doing the translation?
It is just delightful to see how the great Dutch philosopher destroys Kant’s philosophy, and exhibits the miserable apostasy of German Idealism. After understanding the degradation and religious uprooting of Humanism by its successors, mainly Nietzsche, one wonders why National Socialism did not erupt before the twentieth century.

What were the difficulties you faced?
Naturally, at the beginning you have to make decisions regarding the terminology. A particularly difficult term is “naive experience”. In Spanish “naive” is usually translated as innocent, kind of stupid; someone whom one may abuse easily. I have translated it as “experiencia intuitiva”. Another term could have been “experiencia natural”, but I think the first one is more accurate.

How has Dooyeweerd and Vollenhoven ideas been received in Mexico? Is there much interest in their work?
There is increasing interest. There are already schools and universities where Dooyeweerd (more than Vollenhoven) is being taught. I think that the movement already has no less than fifty or sixty enthusiastic followers in Mexico. There is an organization in Chile, Reforma Chile, that has more than one hundred members, with influence in the government, that is well acquainted with Kuyper’s and Dooyeweerd’s work. A translation into Portuguese of Clouser’s Myth has just appeared in Brazil.

What do you think are the strengths and what are the weaknesses of the Reformational approach?
Even though the Reformational approach is very strong in itself, it is rather recent. The main problem, at least in Hispanic-America, is that public universities are controlled by Humanism, that the Reformed churches are still a minority, and that private universities are mostly Catholic. But I am very optimistic and I think that a huge growth is coming in the forthcoming years.

Are there any other projects you are working on?
I want to revise Dooyeweerd’s philosophies of logic and mathematics, especially his criticism of Dedekind’s construction of the real numbers through cuts, as well as its implications for Non-Standard Analysis. Within this framework, I intend to prove the existence of a representation of the geometric segments of the straight line in Non-Archimedian Euclidean space into the system of hypererreal Non-Standard numbers, following the steps of Otto Hölder’s “Die Axiome der Quantität und die Lehre vom Mass”. The nature of these representations, as “jumps” among modalities or analogies, has to be philosophically clarified.

What do you like to do for fun?
I like TV, cinema, scuba diving, music listening. I love food, a nice wine, liquor (tequila, whiskey and Spanish brandy) and not very often a nice cigar. And I don’t care that the Pentecostals have excommunicated me for this.

If you were stuck on a desert island what two luxury items would you take with you?
You mean on top of essential stuff like the Bible and a knife? Well, a good mask with snorkel, fins and a harpoon. A musical instrument like a flute. I’m afraid that tablets, computers and cell phones wouldn’t  be of much use. Perhaps a box of powerful tools and a boat would very luxurious.







Wednesday, 13 May 2020

Interview with Lucas G. Freire

I recently caught up with Dr Lucas G. Freire, a professor a Mackenzie Presbyterian University in Brazil. He is also the most recent addition to the www.allofliferedeemed.co.uk pages.

Before returning to Brazil in 2018 to work at Mackenzie, Lucas had been a Postdoctoral Fellow at the School of Philosophy of North-West University in Potchefstroom. While living in England, he was a Research Associate at the Kirby Laing Institute for Christian Ethics and a Lecturer in International Relations (IR) at the universities of Plymouth and Exeter.

Could you start by telling us about yourself?

I divide my professional time between teaching, which takes up most of my time, and research in religion, history, and political economy. I'm a husband and proud father of three children. Since I married Emma, we've moved a lot, but now we live in São Paulo, where I'm an Assistant Professor of Economics at Mackenzie Presbyterian University's business school and she writes for US media outlets from home.

I was born and raised in Brazil, in a Presbyterian household. My parents made a point of taking me to church, Sunday school, and children's choir. A typical Brazilian schoolday lasts only four to five hours, so I had plenty of time to do other things. In my spare time, I would often play the piano, play football, or do English lessons. In my late high school years, I noticed that I had to be sure about the foundations of my worldview and I also noticed that much of the school curriculum was aimed at placing alumni at a good university, and not really on education per se. That was when I made the choice to read independently and to attend a model UN. That learning experience helped me decide on International Relations (IR) as my degree subject.

I was also offered a place at a public university's Economics programme. Since I couldn't make up my mind, I did two undergraduate degrees. Economics, for free, in the morning, and IR at a philanthropic Catholic university in the afternoon. Back then I had energy for this sort of thing, but I had to spend less time playing the piano. I had to read books like The Capital and Keynes' General Theory after midnight - can you imagine that? The thing is unreadable under normal circumstances! Cramming for calculus and econometrics was even worse. By the end of the fourth year, I was very tired. I guess you could call that a reductionistic lifestyle.

I applied for a bunch of postgraduate programmes and accepted a very good funding deal at the University of Exeter, in the UK, with PhD funding already included. I took half a year between graduation and the beginning of my Exeter MA in International Relations to obtain a license to work as an insurance broker for a family business. At Exeter I learned to do independent research. I had a very good supervisor, excellent lecturers, and a nice group of colleagues. Towards the end of my MA, it was clear already that perhaps I should have studied some field in the Humanities from the beginning. But in Brazil, you dream about doing either Engineering, Law, or Medical School. Doing Economics and IR was already a small act of rebellion at that time, but also a compromise, because I had indicated that History would have worked better for me and was discouraged from pursuing that. Now things have changed in Brazil. People are less traditional about their degree options. Unfortunately, if I could go back in time I'd still do none of the main ones. I'd go for Liberal Arts in the classical style, but that's not available in the country. Too bad.

My PhD supervisor was Colin Wight. He gave me a break to read Dooyeweerd and other Reformational work after my MA to try to come up with a Reformational project. In the end we agreed on a broader question, "what's the role of metatheory in IR?" and it did help to have taken four months to read philosophy, but mostly we agreed that doing Reformational IR would be too difficult to get it done in five years or so. I completed my thesis in 2012 and graduated in 2013.

By that time, I had developed an interest in the history of political ideas and also in the history of foreign relations in the ancient Near East. Since then, I have been writing on different topics, such as economics and politics in the ancient Near East, Reformational philosophy applied to politics, IR theory and a few historical topics.

Who or what are your key influences?

My parents taught me the importance of church attendance and the value of studying and working hard. My grandparents taught me to enjoy being around my extended family, including my cousins, and the importance of history, culture and the arts. My Italian granddad read me some Italian literature and Reader's Digest stories when I was little. We also heard classical music, travelled, and attended concerts together. In my PhD years, I had the blessing of meeting the Wieske family in Northeast Brazil. They were there as a missionary family. I went back to the area several times and they always showed hospitality and, in their daily routine, provided a role model of a Christian family working for the Kingdom.

In cultural or intellectual terms, I guess I should mention that paying attention to J.S. Bach's music shaped my worldview as much as reading Abraham Kuyper's Stone Lectures or Francis Schaeffer's trilogy. I found in Bach a good balance against some of the romantic tendencies you can see, for example, in Kuyper. I was under the preaching of a pastor who had strong views on Christianity not only as a religion or way of life for the individual but also a cultural force for the common good. When I discovered Kuyper and the rest, my heart and mind were already prepared for that sort of approach.

Another influence I should mention came from people and events that taught me to mistrust the hubris of political authoritarianism. My Italian granddad was a child during World War II and his family never joined the Fascist party. As a result, they had much less access to food and clothes and suffered a lot during the war. This is part of the reason why he later decided to try something new in Brazil. I grew up hearing his stories about the horrors of war. My other grandfather was older and he had been drafted by the Brazilian Army to join the allied forces and fight the axis powers in Italy. But, before shipping to Europe, in the Army base, he decided he shouldn't go fight the war, so he had to hide for a few years before amnesty was granted for defectors. When I was born, Brazil was still under the rule of a military junta, but later transitioned to a convoluted period of democratic transition. High inflation was destroying people's livelihoods. I remember running in front of the "price man" at the supermarket to get products for the previous day's price before the new tags were placed in them. My father got his salary and would have to immediately spend most of it by stocking up groceries for the entire month. This was very early in my childhood, until age nine or so, but I still have vivid memories of the national currency changing name every six months or so. By college time, I was already immune to the idea that politicians are more enlightened than the rest of us.

Then, when I read books such as The Road to Serfdom or, say, Orwell's 1984, they helped me conceptualize what I had already noticed intuitively. I had already grasped Lord Acton's maxim that "absolute power corrupts absolutely". If you have, let's say, an Augustinian view of the potential damage we can cause to fellow human beings if unhampered by checks and balances, then you can easily identify some of the naivete about human nature both right and left on the political spectrum, and that can lead you to the normative point that civil government should be limited in scope.

A final influence I should mention is Dr Jonathan Chaplin. I worked with him part-time as an assistant in a project on religion in the EU at KLICE. I'm very thankful for the interactions I had with him and that helped me advance a publication agenda in Reformational political philosophy after my PhD. But the most striking thing Jonathan taught me was how to have a proper academic conversation on contentious issues. Jonathan is a very skilled writer and communicator. I noticed I was at odds with some of his political views, but he's such a gentleman, and he taught me a lot through his polite behaviour. He played the role of mentor, of someone who wants to focus more on the common ground, making sure I knew I had a place in the Reformational movement and had something to contribute. I'm very thankful for the time I spent at KLICE.


How did your interest in Reformational philosophy begin?

I guess I was hearing a lot of preaching on the need to be a Christian in whatever you do, not just family life or personal conduct towards others, but also in the way you frame your vocation and think of it. Then I searched for material on this and Schaeffer was the first stop, Kuyper was the second stop, Van Til the third and, finally, Dooyeweerd. By the second year of college, I had read a good selection of articles on faith and culture across the Reformed spectrum - from Sproul to Rushdoony. I have to say I ran some risk reading theologically controversial material at such an early age, but those writers had a gift with words, plus it helped me improve my English language skills, and I had been well catechised, so that provided me with a good filter.

By around 2007, like-minded people in my town set up an association for translating and discussing Reformational material and later they managed to obtain the rights to publish Dooyeweerd in Portuguese. This is how I met Guilherme de Carvalho, who later on also trained at L'Abri and opened its first urban branch ever in Brazil. He encouraged me to read not only Dooyeweerd but also Rookmaaker and Alister McGrath. At that time I started to translate Reformational material into Portuguese. First, a book chapter by Matt Bonzo on globalisation. Then, Dooyeweerd's 32 propositions on philosophical anthropology for private circulation.

In 2011, during my PhD years, I attended the "Future of Creation Order" conference in Amsterdam and presented a paper on IR and Dooyeweerd and a paper written with another Brazilian colleague, Leo Ramos, who at the time was pursuing the notion of using Dooyeweerd in IR as a critical theory. The 2011 conference was crucial to rekindle my interest in Dooyeweerd's philosophy.


What are your current research interests? How does your Christian faith influence your research projects?

In 2018 I delivered the Calihan Lecture at the Acton Institute and applied the notion of sphere sovereignty to interpret the crisis we are facing in the public square. This lecture has recently been published in the Journal of Markets & Morality. Last year I finished a project on the classical liberal background of the anti-revolutionary movement. An article summarising the main findings will come out in the Journal of Church and State in 2021. I didn't want it to be too controversial and deliberately toned down the argument after the first peer review, but the main point is that Groen van Prinsterer and Kuyper fall under the category of "anti-rationalist liberals", together, of course, with figures such as Lord Acton, Edmund Burke, Alexis de Tocqueville, and others who were, together with the anti-revolutionaries, very critical of the "rationalist liberalism" of, say J.S. Mill or the French liberals. As part of this project, I wrote an epilogue to the Portuguese translation of Kuyper's speech on the social question, a book chapter for a South African publisher on Christian ethics and entrepreneurship in an interventionist economy.

My faith influences my projects mostly in the research questions. Sometimes, this is very obvious, such as when I want to offer an application of the concept of sphere sovereignty to a particular policy area, like my 2016 article on security studies in Philosophia Reformata. In other projects, the connection is less direct. I share Dr David Koyzis' concern with idolatry in our political life, but use a different angle when I approach the subject. My PhD on metatheory used some of M.D. Stafleu's views on theory to conceptualize metatheory, but non-Reformational readers will probably have the same use for the thesis as Reformational scholars. I also study particular Christian thinkers, like Martin Wight or Johannes Althusius and this obviously appeals more to a Christian audience. Finally, my research in Assyriology is thinly connected to my Christian faith, as it tends to be mostly empirical. But of course being Reformed means I would have more of an interest in trying to understand how covenants worked in the ancient Near East, as it was the case with Meredith Kline and others in the past.

I have changed some of the focus of my views over time, and now I think that the Christian worldview applied to how you interpret your vocation and act can be developed in a less theoretical and more organic way in the context of a solid local church, good catechesis, good Christian schools and solid family time with prayer and Bible reading. I see less of an emphasis on life in the local church than I'd like to see in the Reformational movement, particularly, after Dooyeweerd, and that's a development that the movement should perhaps regret. For that reason, I keep my eyes open to identify positive contributions of "implicit" Christian scholarship out there that might not be as fluent in "Reformational" as I wished in the past.


You have experienced academic life in the UK, South Africa and Brazil. What contact have you had with the reformational movement in each of these countries - how are they the same and how are they different.

My contact was mostly with philosophers and political theorists and, to a lesser degree, theologians. In Brazil and the UK, Reformational scholars tend to be outside the university system, working academically on the side, and they are theologically diverse - I'd say more diverse in the UK than in Brazil, but in both countries, you'll see a lot of interest in Reformational scholarship across different church communities. I think one key difference is that people interested in Reformational scholarship in Brazil tend to be more influenced by American evangelicalism, whereas in the UK it's easier to find a Reformational attending a mainline church.

In South Africa, I was working at what is, or was, perhaps the last 'Reformational' philosophy department in the world at NWU in Potchefstroom under the leadership of Prof Michael Heyns. I was there when Prof Renato Coletto became the Chair in Philosophy and saw Prof Daniê Strauss, Prof Bennie van der Walt, and Prof Henk Stoker present and discuss papers at our internal seminar. Professors Bob Goudzwaard and Elaine Botha also visited and offered advanced courses. In that environment, I had the impression that there were many scholars still influenced by Reformational philosophy applying it to different fields and with tenure at different universities. I'm not sure if that will be the case in five years or so. But there was more of a formal presence in the university setting. And most of them were in some sort of Reformed church, either the GKSA or two of the "national" churches.

There are more historical Reformational associations in South Africa than in Brazil or the UK. I think the Koers journal exists since at least the mid-1930s. But in Brazil, one particular association - the Brazilian Association for Christians in Science / ABC2 - managed to obtain good funding over the last few years and is now probably one of the best-funded Reformational associations in the world. In the UK I didn't get the chance to network with people based North of London, but I'd say Reformational philosophy has a strong presence reaching indirectly to students in Oxford and Cambridge, via KLICE or some other association, but the number of academics openly pursuing scholarship in this tradition is much smaller.

Central and South America seem to be hot spots for Reformational interests. Why do you think this is the case?

I think there are a number of reasons for that. First, Dooyeweerd and Kuyper are being translated and are for the first time being read in Spanish or Portuguese, in places like Mexico or Brazil. 

Second, there are a number of scholars and public intellectuals that are particularly successful in their fields or in their media presence who are enabling people to make sense of this material. I can think of

Adolfo Garcia de la Sienra in Mexico, 
Manfred Svensson in Chile, 
Guilherme de Carvalho 
Rodolfo Amorim 
Pedro Dulci
Jonas Madureira 
Igor Miguel 
and Davi Charles Gomes in Brazil. 

Third, at least in the case of Brazil, a Reformational research agenda has two good chances of thriving in terms of funding. ABC2, the association that is promoting Christian scholarship among evangelicals, has obtained funding to translate books and to expand on them through videos, conferences, and online courses. This is one space that is open to Reformational scholarship. Another space is Mackenzie Presbyterian University, where there's an internal trust that funds Christian scholarship with small grants. Professors at the university can apply for that every 6 months. 

Fourth, individual publishers are also interested in this material. An important project is that of the Acton Institute with Lexham, publishing some of Kuyper's works for the first time in English. Since many of us don't read Dutch, this is a crucial project with international impact. Similarly, Paideia Press has been republishing some mid-20th century Reformational material and this is helping the current generation to rediscover some of the classics in the tradition. 

Fifth, there are pockets of a more implicit Reformational presence in those places where the Evangelical or Protestant community is small and they end up gaining a great deal of influence. I can think of Plataforma C in Costa Rica, under the leadership of Dennis Petri for one. They are doing important non-academic work, particularly with the agenda of promoting freedom of religion. 

Finally, organisations such as Cardus and authors like Rob Joustra and Jordan Ballor lead by example when they draw novel conclusions and applications to our contemporary setting from the classic Reformational authors. This is a good model for public intellectuals and associations to follow in Latin America.

What Reformational resources are available in Portuguese?

Publishers like Monergismo and Vida Nova in Brazil, as well as Thomas Nelson Brasil and Ultimato, are bringing authors such as J.M. Spier, Goudzwaard, Rookmaaker, Dooyeweerd, and Kuyper, to a Portuguese-speaking audience for the first time. There is an emerging literature of original local authors applying Reformational insights to public theology, such as Gui Braun, Josué Reichow, Jonas Madureira, and Pedro Dulci. When something "Reformational" is about to be published, I'm often contacted to write a foreword or epilogue and "introduce" the work to the Brazilian reader, but the funny thing is that I haven't written a book myself!

Guilherme Carvalho has a column in a newspaper called Gazeta do Povo and for a long time he had one on Ultimato's website, where he writes on public theology from a Reformational point of view. Franklin Ferreira, a Reformed Baptist pastor at Martin Bucer Seminary, has written on what I'd define as "broadly Kuyperian" political concerns from a conservative perspective. There is a new generation of young scholars that are publishing in Portuguese now, some of them under the supervision of Leo Ramos, my coauthor. Tiago Rossi wrote an MA on Reformational political thought and IR and is now working on a PhD exploring this topic further with a focus on Kuyper.


ABC2 and L'Abri are doing a fantastic job to popularize Reformational scholarship through videos, presentations, events, online courses, seminars, and much more. Pedro Dulci runs an "Invisible College" mailing list with a list of Reformational resources in public theology and, for subscribers, a premium mentoring programme that involves essay writing and discussion groups.

Between 2012 and 2015 I blogged on Brazilian politics drawing on a Reformational framework. There's a group called Nucleo Althusius in Recife that runs a reading and discussion club, live internet meetings and an annual Forum in public theology. The group is planning to publish a translation of Groen van Prinsterer's lectures, some original material, and to organise now as a Christian think tank similar to Canada's ARPA combined with Cardus. Matheus Andrade and Vinicius Pimentel are ahead of this. They have experience in politics and law, and Vinicius is also training to be an ordained minister.

What do you do for fun? 

I watch my kids play. That's my TV these days. When I can, I also play music.

What books are you reading at the moment? 

I'm reading La Lingua dei Sumeri, a Sumerian grammar written by four Italian scholars, and The Humane Economist, a Wilhelm Röpke reader edited by Daniel Mugger and published by the Acton Institute.


If you were on a desert island what two luxuries would you take with you?

A harpsichord with spare parts and a good edition of The Well-Tempered Clavier.