Sphere sovereignty and irreducibility: The ambiguous use of Abraham Kuyper's ideas during the time of apartheid in South Africa
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to highlight the notion that the concept of sphere sovereignty as
postulated by Abraham Kuyper was used in an ambiguous if not invidious manner in the history of
South Africa, specifically during the time of apartheid. On the one hand, it is associated with the
justification of apartheid, which is particularly evident in the document Human relations and the
South African scene in the light of Scripture (1976). On the other hand, it is also associated with
Black Liberation Theology, specifically by Alan Boesak, who resisted apartheid. The problem is
that both these perspectives reduce the complexity of reality to race. According to Kuyper sphere
sovereignty meant that no aspect of reality could be an absolute point of departure to structure the
whole and each aspect is sovereign in its own domain. Thus, race or any other aspect cannot be
the norm to structure reality. The unity and the structure of creation are located in God as creator
of all reality. It is precisely this irreducible perspective of Kuyper that can be beneficial for postapartheid
South Africa because it views reality as a complex connectivity.