Sarah McMillan/cvnznews.com
In a country often written off as one of Europe’s most secular, something remarkable happened over Pentecost weekend: 63,000 believers gathered in one place to worship Jesus. No political rally, no music festival — just a massive, unapologetic celebration of Christian faith in the heart of the Netherlands.
For a nation where church decline is treated as a foregone conclusion, the 54th annual Opwekking Pentecost Conference delivered a reality check. Tens of thousands packed the grounds at Walibi Holland, and hundreds of thousands more joined online, turning the event into one of Europe’s largest Christian gatherings.
And the message was unmistakable:
Faith is not fading. It’s rising.
The four‑day conference centred on following Jesus through the power of the Holy Spirit — with worship, prayer, teaching, and ministry that attendees described as “electric” and “deeply moving.” Speakers urged believers to live boldly, not quietly, in a culture that often treats Christianity as outdated or irrelevant.
But the turnout told a different story. A very different story.
This wasn’t a nostalgic crowd clinging to the past. It was a cross‑section of Dutch society — young families, teens, students, professionals, and older believers — all gathering with a sense of expectation. In a supposedly post‑Christian nation, 63,000 people showed up anyway.
Organisers say the hunger is real. In uncertain times, people are searching for meaning, grounding, and hope — and many are rediscovering it in faith. The Netherlands may be secular on paper, but the Opwekking Conference suggests something deeper is stirring beneath the surface.
For Christians worldwide, the message is clear:
God is not limited by culture, trends, or public opinion.
Even in the places where faith is assumed to be dying, believers continue to gather, worship, and proclaim Jesus as Lord.
The Netherlands just reminded Europe — and the world — that the church is very much alive.

