Reformed Churches in the Netherlands
The Reformed Churches in the Netherlands was the second largest Protestant church in the Netherlands and one of the two major Calvinist denominations along with the Dutch Reformed Church since 1892 until being merged into the Protestant Church in the Netherlands in 2004. The PKN is the continuation of the Dutch Reformed Church, the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands and the Evangelical [Lutheran Church in the Kingdom of the Netherlands].
History
The Reformed Churches in the Netherlands was founded in 1892 as a merger of two groups that had split off from the Dutch Reformed Church:- a part of the Christian Reformed Church in the Netherlands, which had originated in the 1834 [Dutch Reformed Church split], and
- the group around Abraham Kuyper, which was formed in the 1886 [Dutch Reformed Church split].
Abraham Kuyper was the most important leader of the movement, and under his leadership the gereformeerden became a separate so-called "pillar" in Dutch society, next to the hervormden and the Roman Catholics. Part of the gereformeerde pillar were for example the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and the Anti-Revolutionary Party, a political party now part of the Christian Democratic Appeal.
Since its founding in 1892, two groups have separated from the GKN. The first split was in 1926, over a conflict about biblical interpretation: the orthodox majority maintained the historicity of the account of Adam and Eve, while the more liberal wing deemed it merely allegorical and left to form the Gereformeerde Kerken in Hersteld Verband. In 1971/1972, the GKN renounced the historic position.
The second schism, called the Vrijmaking, occurred in 1944, when the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated) split off from the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands.
The long process of reuniting with the Dutch Reformed Church began in 1962 and ended on May 1, 2004, when the GKN, the NHK and the Evangelical Lutheran Church merged to form the Protestant Church in the Netherlands. At that time, the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands had around 675,000 members, 400,000 of whom were churchgoers. There were 857 congregations, with some 1,000 church buildings.
Seven congregations did not agree with the merger and founded the Continued Reformed Churches in the Netherlands on May 8, 2004.