|
Anabaptism in 16th Century Europe
Written by Ronald J.
Gordon ~ Published April, 1998 ~ Last Updated, October, 2000 ©
This document may be reproduced for non-profit or educational
purposes only, with the
provisions that the entire document remain intact and full acknowledgement be
given to the author.
It is extracted from the European Origin of the
Church of the Brethren.
| "The Short Answer" - A movement
that repudiated ecclesiastical control through infant baptism and
sacramentalism, to attain radical discipleship to Christ by separation
from worldly enticements. ANA (Greek "again") baptists made
both a theological (to believers) and political (to authorities)
statement through the act of rebaptizing. Their illegal rebaptisms
were perceived by the government, in a similar manner to draft card burning
in the turbulent 1960s. Anabaptists were routinely hunted by
Täufenjager (baptist hunters) and executed through drownings
(mockingly called the third baptism) and as human torches. |
Challenge to the Reformers
 |
| Melanchthon
at Augsburg before Charles V |
he enthusiasm of the Reformers was finally given vent for expression
at the Diet of Augsburg in 1530, when the Emperor Charles V
required a formal presentation of specific justifications surrounding the
activities of the Reformers. Although Luther was barred from attending, his
friend Philipp Melanchthon and fellow professor in theology at Wittenberg,
brilliantly articulated the justifications for reform. So masterfully did he
enunciate the basic articles of faith undergirding reform that Lutherans still
regard the Augsburg Confession as one of their primary declarations of faith.
However, enthusiasm for reform was not limited to Germany, for just a few years
after Luther posted his church door arguments, Ulrich Zwingli had found himself
in trouble with a Catholic bishop in Zurich, Switzerland, over matters
pertaining to the observance of Lent. He had previously started a small cultural
study group of several men, especially including Conrad Grebel and Felix Mantz,
but their focus gradually turned more to biblical matters. Each was proficiently
skilled in Latin, Hebrew, and Greek; and they concluded from a scrupulous
examination of the New Testament that infant baptism was scripturally
groundless, that only believers with a mature comprehension of their decision
should receive baptism. After corresponding with Luther on numerous issues, he
gradually decided in 1522 to leave the priesthood. Zwingli believed that
ultimate authority in the church belongs in the local community of believers,
not a distant ecclesiastical body. In the Disputations of 1523, Zwingli sought
to become responsible under the cantonical government, which was a distinct
signal of his break with Rome. Subsequently, the city of Zurich removed
themselves from papal authority to become an evangelical city. Grebel and Mantz
were passionate about reform and wanted to actively pursue their new
conclusions, but Zwingli protested that it would incite an uproar and he
gradually began to distance himself from them. Three years later, in January of
1525, Zwingli disputed his former companions before the Great Council of Zurich,
in which the Council sided with him and declared Grebel and Mantz to be
radicals. Nevertheless, they were not deterred from pursuing their convictions,
and they soon gained the companionship of Georg Blaurock, a priest who shared
their theological views, and likewise eschewed the power of Rome. During one of
their meetings involving a spirited discussion of believer's baptism, Blaurock
requested to be "re-baptized" since he was first baptized as an
infant. Grebel baptized him, and Blaurock, in turn, baptized Grebel and Mantz.
Anabaptism was formally born on January 21, 1525. Additionally, it should be
noted that Conrad Grebel was a lay person - not an ordained priest, minister, or
the holder of an important ecclesiastical office. This is an interesting
departure from the normal caste of the Reformers.
Others soon joined their company and adult
"re-baptism" or ANA (Greek for 'again') BAPTISM was born, since each
follower was initially baptized as an infant.. Resistance from the state was
immediate with Felix Mantz being executed by drowning at Zurich, and fellow
companion Wolfgang Uliman, along with others were burned at the stake in Waldsee.
Zwingli turned from the movement and began to write and teach with zeal,
bordering on fanaticism, that Anabaptism was false and intolerable. He later
imprisoned Anabaptists in the tower of Zurich, allowing men and women to die
until the last, enduring the stench as their dead were not removed from among
them. As the early church thrived during periods of state persecution, so also
would Anabaptism grow and spread throughout Europe. An old truth was being
validated once again; "Turmoil from without spreads a movement while
turmoil from within destroys it." Protestant refugees would soon find a
haven in the independent French Swiss city of Geneva where Jean Cauvin, known
better in the Latin form of Calvin would soon turn Geneva into a Protestant
Rome. He was educated as a lawyer and created a faith system with logic that
gave it strong conviction. The rigor and depth of Calvinism would spread
as far as Scotland where it was promulgated by the illustrious preacher and
organizer John Knox.
These dedicated recipients of persecution and death
from the European church-state alliance of the Catholic and Lutheran churches
were the most resolute product of the Reformation. They did not pause with
Luther or Calvin, but sought to change the dual hand of church and state
forever. "No exercise of force in religion" was their proclamation.
During this time, citizens were forced to belong to the religion of their
district, and in times of war or domestic unrest, changes in nobility and their
religious disposition could be frequent. Anabaptism was properly a grass-roots
movement by disaffected commoners who did not find early leadership in any
personage of significant notoriety such as Luther or Calvin. For this reason,
Anabaptists did not win intellectual respectability as the larger reform
movements whose figureheads were men of education who produced thoughtfully
reasoned arguments that were persuasive to thinking minds. Disunited groups of
Anabaptists were not privileged with many leaders of academic proficiency,
certainly because their fundamental appeal was more to emotional practicality
than intellect. Possibly due to the precedent setting activities of the major
Reformers who challenged the authority of the Roman Catholic Church with the
Bible itself, and especially since Luther translated Holy Writ into German, the
scriptures were no longer the exclusive property of bishops. Interpretation now
enjoyed a wider audience. The great majority of Anabaptists were peaceful,
constructive, and in some ways nearly ascetic. They adhered to strict ethical
standards, avoidance of immorality, and fundamentally believed that faith was
something to be 'demonstrated' through daily activity. Regretfully due to their
social origin and radicalism, they were regarded as extremists and their
excesses stayed in the public mind. For example, in the 1530's, one group of
Anabaptists under the leadership of John of Leyden gained control of the German
city of Munster where they attempted to institute a government that repulsed
even the sympathetic. They pushed the doctrine of justification by faith to an
extreme form of anarchism, i.e., people determining law according to conscience
instead of a written code. The "mayhem in Munster" disallowed private
property, class distinctions, and permitted a few to engage in polygamy. They
had disturbed an established order that was astonished at their radical
fanaticism and decided to crush them - at any cost.
Anabaptism gave new meaning to spiritual living. It
was an intense experience. Opponent of the movement Sebastian Franek wrote in
1531: "They soon gained a large following, and baptized thousands,
drawing to themselves many sincere souls who had a zeal for God ... They
increased so rapidly that the world feared an uprising by them though I have
learned that this fear had no justification whatsoever" (Chronica, Zeitbuch
und Geschichtbibel). Heinrich Bullinger, successor to Zwingli's writes: "Anabaptism
spread with such speed that there was reason to fear that the majority of the
common people would unite with this sect" (Augsburgs Reformationsgeschichte).
Zwingli himself became so alarmed at the strength of the movement and the
heartfelt convictions of it's adherents that he soon considered his own
conflicts and theological skirmishes with Catholicism to be child's play
(Letter of Zwingli to Vadian, May 28, 1525).
The dual hand of church and state released its
severest form of tyranny on the Anabaptists. The Rhine Valley during the mid
1500's witnessed nightly torches of burning saints. They were mocked and scorned
by angry crowds as they were led to their executions. It is ironic that the very
entity that suffered the initial pain of affliction in the Roman arena now
became the Afflicter. Doubly ironic is that many of the Reformers who enjoyed
their newly gained freedom from the Roman Catholic Church, likewise chose to be
the new Afflicters. The wanton slaughter of Anabaptists was severe, vitriolic,
and offered as entertainment in some locations; but still they grew in number,
and became even more resolute in their convictions and activities. European
nobility pronounced death to all Anabaptists at the Diet of Speyer in 1529, and
within a few years most of the original leaders met with violent deaths, but
still the movement grew and increased in strength. Täufenjager (baptist
hunters) were special groups that systematically and persistently tracked and
arrested these saints. History has witnessed few movements whose participants
were as obdurate as those of Anabaptism.

New Interpretations
nabaptism introduced a new form of worship service that was
distinctly emotional. Whereas liturgical services were historically generous in
ritual and pageantry before quiet worshipers, these new services were frequently
loud with participants shouting and dancing. Sermons were electrified with hopes
of heaven and terrors of hell. It is not over-simplification to describe them as
the 'holy rollers' of their day, because the emotional appeal was captivating to
congregations that were accustomed to sitting and watching. This was
interactive, new - revolutionary. Preaching styles contained energy. Most groups
expected Christ's immediate return. Anabaptists gave new interpretations to
historic traditions of the church, and invented a few new traditions of their
own. Their distrust of government was obvious, and they would not take oaths. A
few practiced what can only be described as combative pacifism. In other words,
they were willing to respond aggressively in the most vociferous manner without
actually becoming physical. One such person was Jacob Hutter who is recognized
as the founder of the Hutterites.
"Woe, woe! unto you, O ye Moravian rulers, who have sworn to that cruel
tyrant and enemy of God's truth, Ferdinand, to drive away his pious and
faithful servants. Woe! we say unto you, who fear that frail and mortal
man more than the living, omnipotent, and eternal God, and chase from
you, suddenly and inhumanly, the children of God, the afflicted widow,
the desolate orphan, and scatter them abroad...God, by the mouth of the
prophet proclaims that He will fearfully and terribly avenge the shedding
of innocent blood, and will not pass by such as fear not to pollute and
contaminate their hands therewith. Therefore, great slaughter, much misery
and anguish, sorrow and adversity, yea, everlasting groaning, pain and
torment are daily appointed you."
J.T. Van Braght, "Martyrology: Letters of Jakob Hutter," Vol I,
p. 151-153 R.J. Smithson, "The Anabaptists," London, 1935, p. 69-71
Also see "History of Civilization," Prentice-Hall, 1967, p. 481
 |
| Menno
Simons |
The great majority of Anabaptists were quiet and very
respectful. Everyday living was peaceful, simple, and demonstrably pious. They
emphasized community responsibility and economic egalitarianism. Most were
shocked by the activities of their own extremists who over took a city
government and tried to run it according to theological principles. Their
excessive abuses garnered the appellation: 'Mayhem in Munster,' and
unfortunately destined them to bare the stigma of a few radicals. After the
systematic execution of most leaders, their most inspirational figurehead was Menno Simons, a
Dutch-born Catholic priest and contemporary of Zwingli, Grebel, and Mantz. He
had many quiet doubts about church doctrines such as transubstantiation and
infant baptism. Following a careful study of the New Testament and Luther's
writings, he left the Catholic Church, adhering only to orthodox Christian
doctrines and excluding those beliefs not clearly articulated in the New
Testament. He strongly opposed the Mayhem in Munster, but was forced to go into
hiding for a year because of his offers of minor assistance to them . Simon's
followers later became known as Mennonites. Due to its grass-roots origin,
Anabaptism would heavily influence religious thought far beyond the century of
its birth, including the Schwarzenau Brethren who would rebaptize themselves in
the Eder River in 1708. Anabaptist beliefs and practices are so compelling and
attractive that it has endured, with minor changes, into the modern era.
- Fallen Church
- Beginning with Martin Luther and continuing with
most of the primary reformers (including the Anabaptists) is the doctrine of
a "fallen church," where a good and true earthly vessel of God had
slipped from its manifest purpose. Abuses of the clergy and the pope were
easily exposed, and reform became the vehicle whereby the reformers sought
to transport the church back to its original purity. This was another new
interpretation. If an entity has fallen, then it logically had a point of
time when it began to decline. Interestingly, the date at which each
reformer places the moment of its descent is remarkably different. Zwingli
opposed the rise and powerful ascendancy of the papacy and saw this as the
beginning of the fall. Luther accepted the papal state, but not its abuses.
He did not disagree with its administrative structure, only the abuses of
power and influence from its leaders. The differences in time lines between
the primary reformers was minimal except for the Anabaptists who regarded
the fall to have started with the emperor Constantine who married state and
church together. This was the commencement of the rise of evil in the
church, and the beginning of the fall. Contrariwise, both Luther and Zwingli
admired this historical event. It was a crowning achievement for them.
A distinct teaching that came out of the
Anabaptist movement is the premise that the church should be an assembly of
believers having came through a regenerative experience. They understood the
New Testament to clearly teach a process of regeneration; which is, becoming
aware of one's sinfulness through the redemptive work of the Holy Spirit,
acknowledging the need of rescue from this situation, receiving salvation by
grace (unmerited love of God demonstrated through Christ's sacrifice), and
continuing spiritual renewal of the mind to become a witness of God's offer
of grace.
- Church going political
- The earliest form of Christianity describes
scattered house fellowships of believers who viewed the state as evil. They
boldly served one greater than Caesar, and unapologetically proclaimed Jesus
Christ as the Lord of their kingdom. New Testament writers made a clear
distinction between the church and the world. Apostle John stated: Love not the world, neither the things that are in the
world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him
- 1 John 2:15. When the church became espoused to the state under
Constantine, the Anabaptists saw an unrelenting series of compromises in
principles of faith. Although the Edit of Milan (313) only legalized
Christianity, the emperor Theodosius made it the state religion on February
20, 380, and required everyone to be baptized. This meant that all soldiers
where now Christians; a new twist for believers who previously desisted
military service because of their allegiance to a greater emperor.
Anabaptists saw this historical event as the beginning of a spiritually
injurious domino effect which progressively compromised spiritual principles
- century after century.
- Infant baptism imprison's the individual
- The joy of New Testament baptism through
repentance and conversion of adult believers had been lost in this practice
which originated in about the Fourth century. Anabaptists reserved their
strongest criticism for this practice, because they esteemed it to have
repudiated the foundation of salvation by grace. No longer did people have
the opportunity to turn from their evil ways and join a community of
believers through their own recognition of their sinfulness. Their lives and
destinies were imprisoned by the Church from near the moment of their birth.
Salvation lost its majesty. Grace became only a distant memory. It was no
longer a quality to be cherished, for it had become a regulated state of
existence. A challenge to the Church was equivalent to a challenge of one's
own eternity. This powerful hold on souls by the church was a theological
road block to understanding the very joy of the Christian experience.
Rebaptizing adult believers was therefore a political statement, an act of
dissent, or perhaps a medieval burning of one's draft card.
- Sacraments become weapons
- Originally, the church received the Sacraments
through a celebratory occasion that remembered the Lord's sacrifice. As the
church became political, so did the sacraments. Instead of being symbols of
a festive occasion, they were seen as a vehicle for maintaining power over
individuals by the church. Persons barred from receiving the Sacraments
became persons denied salvation. Objects of love became weapons of war. This
was a fundamental change in New Testament doctrine, for Anabaptists believed
that upon conversion, people should be released from bondage through the
church. Infant baptism and sacramental leverage obfuscated the opportunity
for freedom, by imprisoning a person under the captivity of an
ecclesiastical power. Early believers were a 'called out' assembly,
originating from the Greek word ekklesia (those called out). Medieval
believers were an imprisoned assembly held captive under the bondage of
church power. There was no opportunity for them to experience a 'calling
out' for the administration of the Sacraments was the churches method of
keeping them inside and under control.
- Reform means starting over
- Whereas most 16th century reformers understood the
word reform to mean that a fallen church structure needed restoration to its
original purity, Anabaptists rejected the churches contemporary structure
because they believed that it had become too corrupt. Purity could only be
achieved by starting over. It was this concept which invited severe
persecution from the State Churches which saw its very existence in
jeopardy. Anabaptists were viciously dealt with by the main three church
denominations in league with their state-aligned officials, because they
were viewed as subversives. Luther and other reformers believed that abuses
by the church, such as the temporal authority of the pope or the immoral
excesses of the clergy should be corrected while still retaining the
historical legacy of the church structure. They viewed themselves as
protectors of the historically true church. If the medieval church structure
may be viewed as a wall of bricks, Luther wanted to realign and replace
those few bricks that would preserve the integrity of the wall. Anabaptists
saw these same bricks as indicative of a foundation that had shifted. Repair
meant changing the position of the foundation, no matter what happens to the
bricks. Not even mainline reformers could accept the magnitude or the
consequences of such radical change.

n summary, Anabaptism was a new movement that was perceived as a
radical departure from the established church, even by other reformers who
desired to restore and maintain a fallen structure. In civil matters,
Anabaptists rejected public office and would not serve in the military. Their
disdain for materialism also brought contempt from a weak but rising middle
class that was just discovering primitive capitalism. Persecution from many
sides was resolute throughout Europe because nobility, church officials, and
merchants viewed Anabaptism as a fundamental threat to their own destinies.
Thousands were drowned, tortured or burned at the stake, but martyrdom only
fortified their belief that suffering was a touchstone of their genuine
faithfulness to true Christianity. Drowning was often employed because
authorities thought it a befitting punishment for rebaptizers.
Anabaptism was a theological or academic reaction to
the church system. Because of its open challenge to both church and secular
(church influenced) government, it has been improperly viewed as a political
movement. Toleration for this fledgling movement came first in the Netherlands
where the Catholic priest Menno Simons had already renounced his allegiance to
Rome, but may have retained a closer adherence to the mainstream reform idea of
preserving church structure. Other havens gradually appeared when nobles
realized that most Anabaptists were hard working farmers and craftsmen who
quickly contributed to the local economy. Following the Thirty Years War that
left feudal economies in ruin, many were actually invited to settle in the
Palatinate district of Germany, in order to rebuild a war stricken landscape.
Hutterites also found refuge in Moravia. Numerous attempts were made to formally
record a basic consensus of Anabaptism by its followers. The most notable are
the Schleitheim Confession of 1527, named after the Swiss-Austrian border city
where early leaders seclusively met, and the 1632 Dutch Mennonite Dordrecht Confession, which is
principally followed by many Amish. Some intellectual disagreement remains over
the full effect of Anabaptism on the Schwarzenau Brethren (later Church of the
Brethren), however, a clear imprint of Anabaptism is visible when they initiated
their faith community through rebaptism of believing adults.
Modern devotees rarely perform rebaptisms because
their children are not first baptized as infants, therefore a re-baptism is not
possible. Youth generally receive baptism and membership when they reach that
uncertain age where they are able to understand and accept the gospel message
centered in the teachings of Christ. Anabaptists in the modern era are known for
their distinctive beliefs and cultural heritage - especially a Two Kingdom
theology. With little variance, they stress very closely the same doctrinal
positions as their 16th Century advocates, such as, but not limited to:
- Priesthood of all believers
- Separation of Church and State, with laws of God taking precedence
- Voluntary membership, unregulated by the state
- Baptism as a sign of a believers committment
- Nonviolence and Nonresistence
- Discipleship being central to understanding the teachings of Jesus Christ
- Separation from sinful and worldly pleasures

Additional Resources
Anabaptist
Story
Anabaptists
(Catholic Encyclopedia)
Anabaptist Vision
Anabaptists: Separate By Choice, Marginal By Force
Bibliography Of
Anabaptist - Mennonite Works
Character
Of The Anabaptists
Charisma
and History: The Case of Münster, Westphalia, 1534-1535
Collection of Titles
Compassion for the Enemy
Conrad Grebel
College
Dordrech
Confession
Foxe's Book Of Martyrs
Martyrs Mirror with
Commentary
Reformation
Radicals: The Anabaptists
Repudiation Of Anabaptism By The Dutch Ex-Anabaptist Leader Obbe
Philips
Schleitheim Confession
Secret of the Strength
What
It Means To Be Amish
Young Center for the
Study of Anabaptist and Pietist Groups
Zwingli,
Ulrich
Mennonite
A Brief
Guide to Information on Mennonites
Bibliography
Menno
Simons, History of
Present
at the Inception: Menno Simons and the Beginnings of Dutch Anabaptism
Relevance of
Menno Simons for Evangelical Christians
| European Origin | Brethren in America | 19th Century
| Brethren Groups | Genealogy | FAQS |
"For which of you,
intending to build a tower,
sitteth not down first, and "counteth the cost"
whether he have sufficient to finish it?"
Luke 14:28

| |
Anabaptism in 16th Century Europe
Written by Ronald J.
Gordon ~ Published April, 1998 ~ Last Updated, October, 2000 ©
This document may be reproduced for non-profit or educational
purposes only, with the
provisions that the entire document remain intact and full acknowledgement be
given to the author.
It is extracted from the European Origin of the
Church of the Brethren.
| "The Short Answer" - A movement
that repudiated ecclesiastical control through infant baptism and
sacramentalism, to attain radical discipleship to Christ by separation
from worldly enticements. ANA (Greek "again") baptists made
both a theological (to believers) and political (to authorities)
statement through the act of rebaptizing. Their illegal rebaptisms
were perceived by the government, in a similar manner to draft card burning
in the turbulent 1960s. Anabaptists were routinely hunted by
Täufenjager (baptist hunters) and executed through drownings
(mockingly called the third baptism) and as human torches. |
Challenge to the Reformers
 |
| Melanchthon
at Augsburg before Charles V |
he enthusiasm of the Reformers was finally given vent for expression
at the Diet of Augsburg in 1530, when the Emperor Charles V
required a formal presentation of specific justifications surrounding the
activities of the Reformers. Although Luther was barred from attending, his
friend Philipp Melanchthon and fellow professor in theology at Wittenberg,
brilliantly articulated the justifications for reform. So masterfully did he
enunciate the basic articles of faith undergirding reform that Lutherans still
regard the Augsburg Confession as one of their primary declarations of faith.
However, enthusiasm for reform was not limited to Germany, for just a few years
after Luther posted his church door arguments, Ulrich Zwingli had found himself
in trouble with a Catholic bishop in Zurich, Switzerland, over matters
pertaining to the observance of Lent. He had previously started a small cultural
study group of several men, especially including Conrad Grebel and Felix Mantz,
but their focus gradually turned more to biblical matters. Each was proficiently
skilled in Latin, Hebrew, and Greek; and they concluded from a scrupulous
examination of the New Testament that infant baptism was scripturally
groundless, that only believers with a mature comprehension of their decision
should receive baptism. After corresponding with Luther on numerous issues, he
gradually decided in 1522 to leave the priesthood. Zwingli believed that
ultimate authority in the church belongs in the local community of believers,
not a distant ecclesiastical body. In the Disputations of 1523, Zwingli sought
to become responsible under the cantonical government, which was a distinct
signal of his break with Rome. Subsequently, the city of Zurich removed
themselves from papal authority to become an evangelical city. Grebel and Mantz
were passionate about reform and wanted to actively pursue their new
conclusions, but Zwingli protested that it would incite an uproar and he
gradually began to distance himself from them. Three years later, in January of
1525, Zwingli disputed his former companions before the Great Council of Zurich,
in which the Council sided with him and declared Grebel and Mantz to be
radicals. Nevertheless, they were not deterred from pursuing their convictions,
and they soon gained the companionship of Georg Blaurock, a priest who shared
their theological views, and likewise eschewed the power of Rome. During one of
their meetings involving a spirited discussion of believer's baptism, Blaurock
requested to be "re-baptized" since he was first baptized as an
infant. Grebel baptized him, and Blaurock, in turn, baptized Grebel and Mantz.
Anabaptism was formally born on January 21, 1525. Additionally, it should be
noted that Conrad Grebel was a lay person - not an ordained priest, minister, or
the holder of an important ecclesiastical office. This is an interesting
departure from the normal caste of the Reformers.
Others soon joined their company and adult
"re-baptism" or ANA (Greek for 'again') BAPTISM was born, since each
follower was initially baptized as an infant.. Resistance from the state was
immediate with Felix Mantz being executed by drowning at Zurich, and fellow
companion Wolfgang Uliman, along with others were burned at the stake in Waldsee.
Zwingli turned from the movement and began to write and teach with zeal,
bordering on fanaticism, that Anabaptism was false and intolerable. He later
imprisoned Anabaptists in the tower of Zurich, allowing men and women to die
until the last, enduring the stench as their dead were not removed from among
them. As the early church thrived during periods of state persecution, so also
would Anabaptism grow and spread throughout Europe. An old truth was being
validated once again; "Turmoil from without spreads a movement while
turmoil from within destroys it." Protestant refugees would soon find a
haven in the independent French Swiss city of Geneva where Jean Cauvin, known
better in the Latin form of Calvin would soon turn Geneva into a Protestant
Rome. He was educated as a lawyer and created a faith system with logic that
gave it strong conviction. The rigor and depth of Calvinism would spread
as far as Scotland where it was promulgated by the illustrious preacher and
organizer John Knox.
These dedicated recipients of persecution and death
from the European church-state alliance of the Catholic and Lutheran churches
were the most resolute product of the Reformation. They did not pause with
Luther or Calvin, but sought to change the dual hand of church and state
forever. "No exercise of force in religion" was their proclamation.
During this time, citizens were forced to belong to the religion of their
district, and in times of war or domestic unrest, changes in nobility and their
religious disposition could be frequent. Anabaptism was properly a grass-roots
movement by disaffected commoners who did not find early leadership in any
personage of significant notoriety such as Luther or Calvin. For this reason,
Anabaptists did not win intellectual respectability as the larger reform
movements whose figureheads were men of education who produced thoughtfully
reasoned arguments that were persuasive to thinking minds. Disunited groups of
Anabaptists were not privileged with many leaders of academic proficiency,
certainly because their fundamental appeal was more to emotional practicality
than intellect. Possibly due to the precedent setting activities of the major
Reformers who challenged the authority of the Roman Catholic Church with the
Bible itself, and especially since Luther translated Holy Writ into German, the
scriptures were no longer the exclusive property of bishops. Interpretation now
enjoyed a wider audience. The great majority of Anabaptists were peaceful,
constructive, and in some ways nearly ascetic. They adhered to strict ethical
standards, avoidance of immorality, and fundamentally believed that faith was
something to be 'demonstrated' through daily activity. Regretfully due to their
social origin and radicalism, they were regarded as extremists and their
excesses stayed in the public mind. For example, in the 1530's, one group of
Anabaptists under the leadership of John of Leyden gained control of the German
city of Munster where they attempted to institute a government that repulsed
even the sympathetic. They pushed the doctrine of justification by faith to an
extreme form of anarchism, i.e., people determining law according to conscience
instead of a written code. The "mayhem in Munster" disallowed private
property, class distinctions, and permitted a few to engage in polygamy. They
had disturbed an established order that was astonished at their radical
fanaticism and decided to crush them - at any cost.
Anabaptism gave new meaning to spiritual living. It
was an intense experience. Opponent of the movement Sebastian Franek wrote in
1531: "They soon gained a large following, and baptized thousands,
drawing to themselves many sincere souls who had a zeal for God ... They
increased so rapidly that the world feared an uprising by them though I have
learned that this fear had no justification whatsoever" (Chronica, Zeitbuch
und Geschichtbibel). Heinrich Bullinger, successor to Zwingli's writes: "Anabaptism
spread with such speed that there was reason to fear that the majority of the
common people would unite with this sect" (Augsburgs Reformationsgeschichte).
Zwingli himself became so alarmed at the strength of the movement and the
heartfelt convictions of it's adherents that he soon considered his own
conflicts and theological skirmishes with Catholicism to be child's play
(Letter of Zwingli to Vadian, May 28, 1525).
The dual hand of church and state released its
severest form of tyranny on the Anabaptists. The Rhine Valley during the mid
1500's witnessed nightly torches of burning saints. They were mocked and scorned
by angry crowds as they were led to their executions. It is ironic that the very
entity that suffered the initial pain of affliction in the Roman arena now
became the Afflicter. Doubly ironic is that many of the Reformers who enjoyed
their newly gained freedom from the Roman Catholic Church, likewise chose to be
the new Afflicters. The wanton slaughter of Anabaptists was severe, vitriolic,
and offered as entertainment in some locations; but still they grew in number,
and became even more resolute in their convictions and activities. European
nobility pronounced death to all Anabaptists at the Diet of Speyer in 1529, and
within a few years most of the original leaders met with violent deaths, but
still the movement grew and increased in strength. Täufenjager (baptist
hunters) were special groups that systematically and persistently tracked and
arrested these saints. History has witnessed few movements whose participants
were as obdurate as those of Anabaptism.

New Interpretations
nabaptism introduced a new form of worship service that was
distinctly emotional. Whereas liturgical services were historically generous in
ritual and pageantry before quiet worshipers, these new services were frequently
loud with participants shouting and dancing. Sermons were electrified with hopes
of heaven and terrors of hell. It is not over-simplification to describe them as
the 'holy rollers' of their day, because the emotional appeal was captivating to
congregations that were accustomed to sitting and watching. This was
interactive, new - revolutionary. Preaching styles contained energy. Most groups
expected Christ's immediate return. Anabaptists gave new interpretations to
historic traditions of the church, and invented a few new traditions of their
own. Their distrust of government was obvious, and they would not take oaths. A
few practiced what can only be described as combative pacifism. In other words,
they were willing to respond aggressively in the most vociferous manner without
actually becoming physical. One such person was Jacob Hutter who is recognized
as the founder of the Hutterites.
"Woe, woe! unto you, O ye Moravian rulers, who have sworn to that cruel
tyrant and enemy of God's truth, Ferdinand, to drive away his pious and
faithful servants. Woe! we say unto you, who fear that frail and mortal
man more than the living, omnipotent, and eternal God, and chase from
you, suddenly and inhumanly, the children of God, the afflicted widow,
the desolate orphan, and scatter them abroad...God, by the mouth of the
prophet proclaims that He will fearfully and terribly avenge the shedding
of innocent blood, and will not pass by such as fear not to pollute and
contaminate their hands therewith. Therefore, great slaughter, much misery
and anguish, sorrow and adversity, yea, everlasting groaning, pain and
torment are daily appointed you."
J.T. Van Braght, "Martyrology: Letters of Jakob Hutter," Vol I,
p. 151-153 R.J. Smithson, "The Anabaptists," London, 1935, p. 69-71
Also see "History of Civilization," Prentice-Hall, 1967, p. 481
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| Menno
Simons |
The great majority of Anabaptists were quiet and very
respectful. Everyday living was peaceful, simple, and demonstrably pious. They
emphasized community responsibility and economic egalitarianism. Most were
shocked by the activities of their own extremists who over took a city
government and tried to run it according to theological principles. Their
excessive abuses garnered the appellation: 'Mayhem in Munster,' and
unfortunately destined them to bare the stigma of a few radicals. After the
systematic execution of most leaders, their most inspirational figurehead was Menno Simons, a
Dutch-born Catholic priest and contemporary of Zwingli, Grebel, and Mantz. He
had many quiet doubts about church doctrines such as transubstantiation and
infant baptism. Following a careful study of the New Testament and Luther's
writings, he left the Catholic Church, adhering only to orthodox Christian
doctrines and excluding those beliefs not clearly articulated in the New
Testament. He strongly opposed the Mayhem in Munster, but was forced to go into
hiding for a year because of his offers of minor assistance to them . Simon's
followers later became known as Mennonites. Due to its grass-roots origin,
Anabaptism would heavily influence religious thought far beyond the century of
its birth, including the Schwarzenau Brethren who would rebaptize themselves in
the Eder River in 1708. Anabaptist beliefs and practices are so compelling and
attractive that it has endured, with minor changes, into the modern era.
- Fallen Church
- Beginning with Martin Luther and continuing with
most of the primary reformers (including the Anabaptists) is the doctrine of
a "fallen church," where a good and true earthly vessel of God had
slipped from its manifest purpose. Abuses of the clergy and the pope were
easily exposed, and reform became the vehicle whereby the reformers sought
to transport the church back to its original purity. This was another new
interpretation. If an entity has fallen, then it logically had a point of
time when it began to decline. Interestingly, the date at which each
reformer places the moment of its descent is remarkably different. Zwingli
opposed the rise and powerful ascendancy of the papacy and saw this as the
beginning of the fall. Luther accepted the papal state, but not its abuses.
He did not disagree with its administrative structure, only the abuses of
power and influence from its leaders. The differences in time lines between
the primary reformers was minimal except for the Anabaptists who regarded
the fall to have started with the emperor Constantine who married state and
church together. This was the commencement of the rise of evil in the
church, and the beginning of the fall. Contrariwise, both Luther and Zwingli
admired this historical event. It was a crowning achievement for them.
A distinct teaching that came out of the
Anabaptist movement is the premise that the church should be an assembly of
believers having came through a regenerative experience. They understood the
New Testament to clearly teach a process of regeneration; which is, becoming
aware of one's sinfulness through the redemptive work of the Holy Spirit,
acknowledging the need of rescue from this situation, receiving salvation by
grace (unmerited love of God demonstrated through Christ's sacrifice), and
continuing spiritual renewal of the mind to become a witness of God's offer
of grace.
- Church going political
- The earliest form of Christianity describes
scattered house fellowships of believers who viewed the state as evil. They
boldly served one greater than Caesar, and unapologetically proclaimed Jesus
Christ as the Lord of their kingdom. New Testament writers made a clear
distinction between the church and the world. Apostle John stated: Love not the world, neither the things that are in the
world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him
- 1 John 2:15. When the church became espoused to the state under
Constantine, the Anabaptists saw an unrelenting series of compromises in
principles of faith. Although the Edit of Milan (313) only legalized
Christianity, the emperor Theodosius made it the state religion on February
20, 380, and required everyone to be baptized. This meant that all soldiers
where now Christians; a new twist for believers who previously desisted
military service because of their allegiance to a greater emperor.
Anabaptists saw this historical event as the beginning of a spiritually
injurious domino effect which progressively compromised spiritual principles
- century after century.
- Infant baptism imprison's the individual
- The joy of New Testament baptism through
repentance and conversion of adult believers had been lost in this practice
which originated in about the Fourth century. Anabaptists reserved their
strongest criticism for this practice, because they esteemed it to have
repudiated the foundation of salvation by grace. No longer did people have
the opportunity to turn from their evil ways and join a community of
believers through their own recognition of their sinfulness. Their lives and
destinies were imprisoned by the Church from near the moment of their birth.
Salvation lost its majesty. Grace became only a distant memory. It was no
longer a quality to be cherished, for it had become a regulated state of
existence. A challenge to the Church was equivalent to a challenge of one's
own eternity. This powerful hold on souls by the church was a theological
road block to understanding the very joy of the Christian experience.
Rebaptizing adult believers was therefore a political statement, an act of
dissent, or perhaps a medieval burning of one's draft card.
- Sacraments become weapons
- Originally, the church received the Sacraments
through a celebratory occasion that remembered the Lord's sacrifice. As the
church became political, so did the sacraments. Instead of being symbols of
a festive occasion, they were seen as a vehicle for maintaining power over
individuals by the church. Persons barred from receiving the Sacraments
became persons denied salvation. Objects of love became weapons of war. This
was a fundamental change in New Testament doctrine, for Anabaptists believed
that upon conversion, people should be released from bondage through the
church. Infant baptism and sacramental leverage obfuscated the opportunity
for freedom, by imprisoning a person under the captivity of an
ecclesiastical power. Early believers were a 'called out' assembly,
originating from the Greek word ekklesia (those called out). Medieval
believers were an imprisoned assembly held captive under the bondage of
church power. There was no opportunity for them to experience a 'calling
out' for the administration of the Sacraments was the churches method of
keeping them inside and under control.
- Reform means starting over
- Whereas most 16th century reformers understood the
word reform to mean that a fallen church structure needed restoration to its
original purity, Anabaptists rejected the churches contemporary structure
because they believed that it had become too corrupt. Purity could only be
achieved by starting over. It was this concept which invited severe
persecution from the State Churches which saw its very existence in
jeopardy. Anabaptists were viciously dealt with by the main three church
denominations in league with their state-aligned officials, because they
were viewed as subversives. Luther and other reformers believed that abuses
by the church, such as the temporal authority of the pope or the immoral
excesses of the clergy should be corrected while still retaining the
historical legacy of the church structure. They viewed themselves as
protectors of the historically true church. If the medieval church structure
may be viewed as a wall of bricks, Luther wanted to realign and replace
those few bricks that would preserve the integrity of the wall. Anabaptists
saw these same bricks as indicative of a foundation that had shifted. Repair
meant changing the position of the foundation, no matter what happens to the
bricks. Not even mainline reformers could accept the magnitude or the
consequences of such radical change.

n summary, Anabaptism was a new movement that was perceived as a
radical departure from the established church, even by other reformers who
desired to restore and maintain a fallen structure. In civil matters,
Anabaptists rejected public office and would not serve in the military. Their
disdain for materialism also brought contempt from a weak but rising middle
class that was just discovering primitive capitalism. Persecution from many
sides was resolute throughout Europe because nobility, church officials, and
merchants viewed Anabaptism as a fundamental threat to their own destinies.
Thousands were drowned, tortured or burned at the stake, but martyrdom only
fortified their belief that suffering was a touchstone of their genuine
faithfulness to true Christianity. Drowning was often employed because
authorities thought it a befitting punishment for rebaptizers.
Anabaptism was a theological or academic reaction to
the church system. Because of its open challenge to both church and secular
(church influenced) government, it has been improperly viewed as a political
movement. Toleration for this fledgling movement came first in the Netherlands
where the Catholic priest Menno Simons had already renounced his allegiance to
Rome, but may have retained a closer adherence to the mainstream reform idea of
preserving church structure. Other havens gradually appeared when nobles
realized that most Anabaptists were hard working farmers and craftsmen who
quickly contributed to the local economy. Following the Thirty Years War that
left feudal economies in ruin, many were actually invited to settle in the
Palatinate district of Germany, in order to rebuild a war stricken landscape.
Hutterites also found refuge in Moravia. Numerous attempts were made to formally
record a basic consensus of Anabaptism by its followers. The most notable are
the Schleitheim Confession of 1527, named after the Swiss-Austrian border city
where early leaders seclusively met, and the 1632 Dutch Mennonite Dordrecht Confession, which is
principally followed by many Amish. Some intellectual disagreement remains over
the full effect of Anabaptism on the Schwarzenau Brethren (later Church of the
Brethren), however, a clear imprint of Anabaptism is visible when they initiated
their faith community through rebaptism of believing adults.
Modern devotees rarely perform rebaptisms because
their children are not first baptized as infants, therefore a re-baptism is not
possible. Youth generally receive baptism and membership when they reach that
uncertain age where they are able to understand and accept the gospel message
centered in the teachings of Christ. Anabaptists in the modern era are known for
their distinctive beliefs and cultural heritage - especially a Two Kingdom
theology. With little variance, they stress very closely the same doctrinal
positions as their 16th Century advocates, such as, but not limited to:
- Priesthood of all believers
- Separation of Church and State, with laws of God taking precedence
- Voluntary membership, unregulated by the state
- Baptism as a sign of a believers committment
- Nonviolence and Nonresistence
- Discipleship being central to understanding the teachings of Jesus Christ
- Separation from sinful and worldly pleasures

Additional Resources
Anabaptist
Story
Anabaptists
(Catholic Encyclopedia)
Anabaptist Vision
Anabaptists: Separate By Choice, Marginal By Force
Bibliography Of
Anabaptist - Mennonite Works
Character
Of The Anabaptists
Charisma
and History: The Case of Münster, Westphalia, 1534-1535
Collection of Titles
Compassion for the Enemy
Conrad Grebel
College
Dordrech
Confession
Foxe's Book Of Martyrs
Martyrs Mirror with
Commentary
Reformation
Radicals: The Anabaptists
Repudiation Of Anabaptism By The Dutch Ex-Anabaptist Leader Obbe
Philips
Schleitheim Confession
Secret of the Strength
What
It Means To Be Amish
Young Center for the
Study of Anabaptist and Pietist Groups
Zwingli,
Ulrich
Mennonite
A Brief
Guide to Information on Mennonites
Bibliography
Menno
Simons, History of
Present
at the Inception: Menno Simons and the Beginnings of Dutch Anabaptism
Relevance of
Menno Simons for Evangelical Christians
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"For which of you,
intending to build a tower,
sitteth not down first, and "counteth the cost"
whether he have sufficient to finish it?"
Luke 14:28

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