A Global Look at Kuyper's Inch
鈥淭here is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: 鈥楳ine!鈥 鈥 Theologian Abraham Kuyper first spoke these words in Amsterdam at the inauguration of a Christian university in 1880. The 鈥渄omain鈥 to which Kuyper referred isn鈥檛 the natural world, but the stuff we humans create鈥攇overnment and culture, technology and commerce, buildings and books. To be co-creators with our Creator has practical implications in our ordinary, day-to-day lives. From caring for our families to leading people or organizations, what we do each day鈥攁nd how we do it鈥攎atters to God.
SHEPHERDING A CONGREGATION THROUGH WAR IN EUROPE
Heero Hacquebord 鈥92 is a native of South Africa, who moved to the United States as a teen. Since 1997, Hacquebord has lived and worked in three different regions of Ukraine; he and his family now live in the western Ukranian city of L鈥檝iv.
Hacquebord serves with Mission to the World, the mission board of the Presbyterian Church in America and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. He says expressing spiritual truths through his third language is often humbling, a strong reminder that 鈥渙ne has to know people鈥檚 heart language in order to really connect with them and their culture.鈥
Since 2022, Hacquebord has also faced the daunting task of shepherding a congregation through the Russian invasion and war. 鈥淟鈥檝iv has been a major hub for those fleeing the active war zone in other parts of the country. Caring for people among all the pain, turmoil, and disruption of war has been a deeply emotional experience,鈥 he says. Questions such as what it means to pray for one鈥檚 enemies and how to understand war from a Christian perspective are not just theoretical, but pressing and immediate concerns.
鈥淚n some circles there seems to be the notion that Christians should keep their hands clean from the unsavory dirt and blood of conflict. But, truly, the 鈥榙omain of human existence鈥 includes not only art, education, and economics, but also warfare,鈥 says Hacquebord. Citing Ecclesiastes 3, he adds,
鈥淚n this fallen world there is 鈥榓 time to kill, and a time to heal 鈥 a time for war, and a time for peace.鈥 Nobody who loves Christ wants to be engaged in killing; but sometimes we must fight in order to save lives, culture, beauty, truth, and to create peace.鈥
NURTURING A SIMPLE LIFESTYLE IN NORTH AMERICA
A universal commitment to the value of beauty, truth, and peace happens on smaller scales, too. Andrea Wagner Dekker 鈥07 believes God delights in and honors the small ways his people faithfully and lovingly attend to the day-to-day. She and husband Dave Dekker 鈥04 enjoy small-town life in west Michigan, raising their four young kids in an antique farmhouse. Dekker鈥檚 days are full: caring for her family, volunteering, and running a small online business that helps people embrace simple living and create peaceful homes.
Her website, andreadekker.com, offers recipes, easy-to-follow advice, resources, and blog posts about topics such as personal finance, organization, and family. She also sends weekly email newsletters to subscribing members that contain practical tips, life updates, and video content. Dekker has been featured in publications such as Rachel Ray Home, HGTV Home, and HuffPost, to name a few.
鈥淢any people grow up with big hopes and dreams to be used in extraordinary ways for God鈥檚 kingdom. But most of us will be used in very ordinary ways within our own homes, families, and communities. That鈥檚 where I see my calling,鈥 Dekker says. For Dekker, all our work matters to God, whether that鈥檚 making to-do lists, planting a vegetable garden, or trying a new recipe to share around the table. As mundane as these tasks can feel, they take on a unique beauty when we remember God can use our work in ways we could never expect or imagine.
IMPROVING ACCESS TO PERSONAL FINANCING IN AFRICA
As a student, Ghanaian native Pearlyn Budu 鈥09 could not have imagined her current career鈥攖hat鈥檚 because it didn鈥檛 yet exist. Budu graduated one year after the 2008 global financial crisis that led to the rise of the digital financing (fintech) industry. Today, she is the head of commercial operations for Uganda at M-KOPA, a fintech platform that helps financially excluded people access personal financing for everyday, life-improving commodities, such as smart phones, electric motorcycles, solar power systems, and health insurance. The company serves over three million underbanked customers in Kenya, Nigeria, Uganda, and Ghana.
According to the World Bank, only 20% of Africans have bank accounts. M-KOPA鈥檚 customers, who reflect this statistical reality, are typically low-income, have no credit histories, and may earn their living through informal employment, meaning both their source and amount of daily income is inconsistent. 鈥淢ost organizations do not see value in offering services to this type of customer, due to their limited earnings,鈥
Budu says. 鈥淚mproving access to financing for this segment of customers is what my role is about.鈥 Budu鈥檚 respect for the value and dignity of all people inspires her dedication to her role. She has seen informal traders, farmers, and boda boda drivers acquire smartphones through M-KOPA鈥檚 simple financing plans; having reliable internet access significantly improves their businesses and quality of life.
Budu loves adventure and exploring new cultures, two qualities that equipped her to move from her home city of Accra, Ghana, in West Africa to Kampala, Uganda, in East Africa. Taking a leadership position in a still-emerging industry while navigating language and cultural barriers hasn鈥檛 been easy, but Budu鈥檚 commitment to the instructions of Micah 6:8 keep her centered: 鈥渢o seek justice for all, act with mercy, and walk in humility with God.鈥
ENGINEERING SOLUTIONS TO BUILD INFRASTRUCTURE IN SOUTH AMERICA
Nick Liza 鈥13 lives by another important biblical principle found in Luke 12:48鈥斺渢o whom much is given, much is required.鈥 Since 2014, he has used his engineering background to help lead the way in the expansion of trenchless technologies and utility service installations in South America.
Trenchless technology allows upgrades and expansion of underground infrastructure like gas, water, and sewer without opening trenches in existing city roads and disrupting urban activity. 鈥淚t is a push for 鈥榗lean cities鈥 where overhead cables that were once used basically become nonexistent,鈥 Liza says.
As an engineering manager for Vermeer Latin America, Liza brings products that best fit the Latin American market and needs to infrastructure expansion projects and renewable energy applications. He oversees a large territory extending from Mexico to the lower tip of Argentina.
Liza said one of his greatest daily challenges is working crossculturally. 鈥淭his includes leading with others who have different beliefs, worldviews, and lifestyles, understanding different laws (as countries have their own regulations), and sourcing different types of available resources.鈥 His faith helps him 鈥渓ead in a loving, caring, and respectful manner.鈥
Working cross-culturally has also made a deep impression on Liza鈥檚 understanding of Kuyper鈥檚 metaphor. Christ鈥檚 claim over every square inch is 鈥渘ot just creation鈥攖rees, rivers, animals鈥攂ut also the development of societies, technology, medicine, and even everyday human interactions.鈥 He believes both progress and difficulty (a natural outcome of human striving) fall under God鈥檚 sovereignty 鈥渢o bring forth blessing to an ever moving forward world.鈥
REDEEMING HUMAN ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT IN AUSTRALIA/OCEANIA
It would be impossible to talk about 鈥渢he whole domain of human existence鈥 without also considering the way humans interact with their environment for better or, often, worse. Janelle Wierenga 鈥98 is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. There she collaborates with a team of researchers attempting to save an endangered species of penguins, one that is culturally important to the local M膩ori tribes of New Zealand.
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to discover the source of two diseases causing significant mortality and morbidity within the rarest penguin on the planet,鈥 Wierenga says. She works with a steady commitment, even though she recognizes it may be too late to save the yelloweyed penguins, also called hoiho in M膩ori. 鈥淢ost people would put up their hands and say this is too big, we can鈥檛 do it,鈥 Wierenga says. 鈥淚 just want to keep trying. Development of a covid vaccine demonstrated the remarkable progress the scientific community can make through collaboration around a unified goal鈥攖he same could be true for endangered species like the yellow-eyed penguins.鈥
Wierenga appreciates the way all living things are interconnected and believes learning to 鈥渟hare our home鈥 with them is important. 鈥淣ew Zealand, for example, is one of the first countries in the world that has designated rivers as living entities, which gives them a level of protection and respect that can hopefully lead to more legal protection. How we take care of one profoundly affects the others.鈥
EMPOWERING UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES IN ASIA
The idea that what is good for one of us is good for all of us extends beyond environmental activism to education and humanitarian efforts as well. Since 2018, Joy Lee 鈥09 has served as the executive director of a young, local non-profit organization called YICF in Jakarta, Indonesia. YICF is an umbrella entity with two main subentities鈥擱oshan and LIFE. Roshan is a refugee education center that serves almost 200 refugee children and adults, while LIFE is a service providing early childhood education and after school tutoring to almost 500 Indonesian children of waste-picker communities surrounding one of the largest open landfills in the world, Bantar Gebang.
As executive director, Lee finds herself interacting with many sectors, some faith-based and others secular. 鈥淚 feel very passionate about bridging the gaps between these worlds and especially calling believers to collaborate creatively and humbly. I love Romans 12:2, which challenges us to not settle for the patterns of this world鈥攊ncluding the patterns we are molded into by our industries, fields of study, and even political alignments.鈥 A recent, short-term partnership between YICF and some of the world鈥檚 largest AI companies reinforced this belief.
Building partnerships across diverse private and public sectors reminds Lee of the claim God holds over all that humans build and create. It also reminds her to whom her work ultimately belongs. Whether partnering with underserved people, building a strong volunteer network, or pitching pilot programs to industry leaders, Lee says her deep hope is to live purposefully and open to what God wants to see happen through her.