CALVINISM IN HOLLAND 

     In the struggle which freed the Netherlands from the dominating power of the Papacy 
     and from the cruel yoke of Spain we have another glorious chapter in the history of 
     Calvinism and humanity. The tortures of the Inquisition were applied here as in few other 
     places. The Duke of Alva boasted that within the short space of five years he had 
     delivered 18,600 heretics to the executioner. 

     "The scaffold," says Motley, "had its daily victims, but did not make a single convert . . . 
     There were men who dared and suffered as much as men can dare and suffer in this 
     world, and for the noblest cause that can inspire humanity." He pictures to us "the 
     heroism with which men took each other by the hand and walked into the flames, or with 
     which women sang a song of triumph while the grave-digger was shoveling the earth 
     upon their living faces." And in another place he says: "The number of Netherlanders 
     who were burned, strangled, beheaded, or buried alive, in obedience to the edicts of 
     Charles V., and for the offence of reading the Scriptures, of looking askance at a graven 
     image, or ridiculing the actual presence of the body and blood of Christ in a wafer, have 
     been placed as high as one hundred thousand by distinguished authorities, and have 
     never been put at a lower mark than fifty thousand."1 During that memorable struggle of 
     eighty years, more Protestants were put to death for their conscientious belief by the 
     Spaniards than Christians suffered martyrdom under the Roman Emperors in the first 
     three centuries. Certainly in Holland history crowns Calvinism as the creed of martyrs, 
     saints and heroes. 

     For nearly three generations Spain, the strongest nation in Europe at that time, labored to 
     stamp out Protestantism and political liberty in these Calvinistic Netherlands, but failed. 
     Because they sought to worship God according to the dictates of their conscience and 
     not under the galling chains of a corrupt priesthood their country was invaded and the 
     people were subjected to the cruelest tortures the Spaniards could invent. And if it be 
     asked who effected the deliverance, the answer is, it was the Calvinistic Prince of 
     Orange, known in history as William the Silent, together with those who held the same 
     creed. Says Dr. Abraham Kuyper, "If the power of Satan at that time had not been 
     broken by the heroism of the Calvinistic spirit, the history of the Netherlands, of Europe 
     and of the world would have been as painfully sad and dark as now, thanks to 
     Calvinism, it is bright and inspiring."2 

     If the spirit of Calvinism had not arisen in Western Europe following the outbreak of the 
     Reformation, the spirit of half-heartedness would have gained the day in England, 
     Scotland and Holland. Protestantism in these countries could not have maintained itself; 
     and, through the compromising measures of a Romanized Protestantism, Germany would 
     in all probability have been again brought under the sway of the Roman Catholic Church. 
     Had Protestantism failed in any one of these countries it is probable that the result would 
     have been fatal in the others also, so intimately were their fortunes bound together. In a 
     very real sense the future destiny of nations was dependent on the outcome of that 
     struggle in the Netherlands. Had Spain been victorious in the Netherlands, it is probable 
     that the Catholic Church would have been so strengthened that it would have subdued 
     Protestantism in England also. And, even as things were, it looked for a time as though 
     England would be turned back to Romanism. In that case the development of America 
     would automatically have been prevented and in all probability the whole American 
     continent would have remained under the control of Spain. 

     Let us remember further that practically all of the martyrs in these various countries were 
     Calvinists,- the Lutheran, s and Arminians being only a handful in comparison. As 
     Professor Fruin justly remarks, "In Switzerland, in France, in the Netherlands, in 
     Scotland and in England, and wherever Protestantism has had to establish itself at the 
     point of the sword, it was Calvinism that gained the day." However the fact is to be 
     explained it is true that the Calvinists were the only fighting Protestants. 

     There is also one other service which Holland has rendered and which we must not 
     overlook. The Pilgrims, after being driven out of England by religious persecutions and 
     before their coming to America, went to Holland and there came into contact with a 
     religious life which from the Calvinistic point of view was beneficial in the extreme. Their 
     most important leaders were Clyfton, Robinson, and Brewster, three Cambridge 
     University men, who form as noble and heroic trio as can be found in the history of any 
     nation. They were staunch Calvinists holding all the fundamental views that the Reformer 
     of Geneva had propounded. The American historian Bancroft is right when he simply 
     calls the Pilgrim-fathers, "men of the same faith with Calvin." 

     J. C. Monsma, in his book, "What Calvinism Has Done For America," gives us the 
     following summary of their life in Holland: "When the Pilgrims left Amsterdam for 
     Leyden, the Rev. Clyfton, their chief leader, decided to stay where he was, and so the 
     Rev. John Robinson, Clyfton's chief assistant hitherto," was elected leader, or pastor by 
     the people. Robinson was a convinced Calvinist and opposed the teachings of Arminius 
     whenever opportunity was afforded him. "We have the indisputable testimony of Edward 
     Winslow, that Robinson, at the time when Arminian-ism was fast gaining ground in 
     Holland, was asked by Poly-ander, Festus Homilus, and other Dutch theologians, to 
     take part in the disputes with Episcopius, the new leader of the Arminians, which were 
     daily held in the academy at Leyden. Robinson complied with their request and was soon 
     looked upon as one of the greatest of Gomarian theologians. In 1624 the Pilgrim pastor 
     wrote a masterful treatise, entitled, "A Defense of the Doctrine Propounded by the 
     Synod of Dort, etc.' As the Synod of Dordrecht, of international fame was characterized 
     by a strict Calvinism in all its decisions, no more need be said of Robinson's religious 
     tendencies. 

     "The Pilgrims were perfectly at one with the Reformed (Calvinistic) churches in the 
     Netherlands and elsewhere. In his Apology, published in 1619, one year before the 
     Pilgrims left Holland, Robinson wrote in a most solemn way, 'We do profess before God 
     and men that such is our accord, in case of religion, with the Dutch Reformed Churches, 
     as that we are ready to subscribe to all and every article of faith in the same Church, as 
     they are laid down in the Harmony of Confessions of Faith, published in that name.'" (p. 
     72, 73.) 

     Footnotes: 

     1Rise of the Dutch Republic, I., p. 114. 
     2Lectures on Calvinism, p. 44. 

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