In 1982 the
World Alliance of Reformed Churches' General Council declared
apartheid to be a sin and its theological justification a
heresy, in the process expelling from its membership the
Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK), the major branch of the
Dutch Reformed Church (DRC) in South Africa and the traditional
mother church of South Africa's
Afrikaner population. The shock of this isolation from other branches of the Reformed Churches worldwide led to the adoption in 1986 of the
Belhar Confession by some branches of the DRC; the NGK, while stopping short of adopting the Belhar Confession, retracted its 1976 defence of apartheid as a biblical imperative, instead releasing a "more nuanced" document called
Church and Society that provided "qualified support for separate development." However, the document "reflected the new majority consensus within the NGK which rejected the older,
Kuyperian theology" and thus outraged the more conservative clergy within the NGK: as a "direct result" the Afrikaanse Protestantse Kerk was founded in
Pretoria on Saturday, 27 June 1987 by 3000 dissidents, together with conservative elements from other branches of the DRC in South Africa. Members of the APK also cited the influence of
Arminian and
liberal theology in the NGK as a reason to split off. The new church opposed the use of the
1983 Afrikaans Bible translation during worship services, preferring to use older translations. The APK opposed reforms it considered as
modernist and sought to preserve traditional
Calvinism. ==Growth==