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Anabaptist Groups

Anabaptist Groups. Utopian Communities. William Kephart, Extraordinary Groups : The Sociology of Unconventional Lifestyles (1976). F. Tonnies.

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Anabaptist Groups

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  1. Anabaptist Groups

  2. Utopian Communities • William Kephart, Extraordinary Groups: The Sociology of Unconventional Lifestyles (1976)

  3. F. Tonnies • The question one must ask is how an institutionally complete Gemeinschaftculture can be maintained in the middle of a gesellschaft an industrialized, fast changing, society?

  4. 16th century European movements • Various groups at various times have been called Anabaptist, but the term is most commonly used to refer to the Anabaptists of 16th century Europe. • Today’s Anabaptists are descendants of the 16th century European movements.

  5. CHURCH vs. Sect • Denomination-Protestant vs. Catholic • Sects-Protestant-Presbyterian, Lutheran, Methodist, Baptist, United

  6. Protestant Sects • Franklin H. Little, The Origins of Sectarian Protestantism (New York: Beacons, 1964), • Also see Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism • Inner worldly asceticism

  7. Anabaptist.Sects • Amish, Hutterites, Mennonites, Church of the Brethren, Brethren in Christ, and other respective German Baptist variants) are the most common bodies referred to as Anabaptist Sects.

  8. AnaBaptist Sects • Rebelled against the Roman Catholic Church and began rebaptizing adults who had followed Jesus, but had unlawfully been 'baptized' as infants.

  9. Persecutions and migrations • Much of the historic Roman Catholic and Protestant literature has represented the Anabaptists as… • groups who “preached false doctrine” and led people into “apostasy”.

  10. Apostasy • Apostasy is the formal religious disaffiliation or abandonment or renunciation of one's religion, especially if the motive is deemed unworthy.

  11. Anabaptists • The name Anabaptist is derived from the Latin term anabaptista, or "one who baptizes over again."

  12. This name was given them in reference to the practice of re-baptizing converts who already had been baptized as infants. 

  13. Anabaptists required that baptismal candidates be able to make their own confessions of faith and so rejected baptism to infants.

  14. The early Anabaptists disliked the name Anabaptist, claiming that since infant baptism was null and void, re-baptism was in fact the first baptism for them

  15. Anabaptists the LUTHERAN doctrine of salvation by God's grace alone, and insisted that the believer's inward faith must be authenticated and supplemented by outward actions: believers must bear the cross of discipleship, thus participating in the process of becoming reconciled with God and creation.

  16. Switzerland • Anabaptism in Switzerland began as an offshoot of the church reforms instigated by Ulrich Zwingli. • A charismatic religious leader-invokes, awe and inspiration in his followers.

  17. As early as 1522 it became evident that Zwingli was on a path of reform preaching when he began to question or criticize such Catholic practices such as: • tithes, • the mass, • and infant baptism.

  18. Zwingli had gathered a group of reform-minded men around him, with whom he studied Classic literature and the Scriptures. • Thus, he founded a religious social movement.

  19. 16c Anabaptists • They were the predecessors of the modern-day Amish, Hutterites, and Mennonites, Puritans, Quakers, and Baptists.

  20. Pariah People • Faced with persecution in the sixteenth century, they began to migrate to northern Germany and found their way to Russia by the nineteenth century.

  21. Main Anabaptist Groups • The Hutterite Brethren have existed for 450 years and in one way or another have been persecuted throughout their history. • Mennonite origin spreads back to Anabaptism from Switzerland and the Netherlands.

  22. 3. The Amish are a branch of the Mennonites, the Mennonites are direct descendants of the Swiss Anabaptists.

  23. Three Pioneers of FaithCharismatic Authority • There are three names who stand out and are leaders of three movements that are directly linked to one another but have unique differences: •  (See Weber on Charismatic Authority)

  24. Leaders of Movements • Jacob Hutter (Hutterites) • Menno Simons (Mennonites) • Jacob Amman (Amish)

  25. Ana Baptist Theology • The Teachings of all these men were similar in three respects: • 1. separation of church and state • 2. adult baptism • 3. refusal to bear arms and take oaths

  26. Anabaptist practices • Total absorption into group life • Separate from Secular society • Inner worldly aceticism./

  27. Asceticism • They practice inner-world Asceticism in Weber’s notion but lack the Spirit of Capitalsim  • All of these groups lived a communal lifestyle. • They more or less reject modernization and capitalism, they believe in communalism.

  28. Hutterites • The Hutterite Brethren have existed for 450 years and in one way or another have been persecuted throughout their history.

  29. Hutterite Beliefs • They believe in adult Baptism • They refuse to take oaths or to bear arms • They believe in the right of the individual to worship as he saw fit.

  30. e. Civil government (i.e., "Caesar") belongs to the world. The believer, who belongs to God's kingdom, must not fill any office, nor hold any rank under government, which is to be passively obeyed.John 18:36; Romans 13:1-7

  31. F. Sinners or unfaithful ones are to be excommunicated, and excluded from the sacraments and from intercourse with believers unless they repent, according to 1 Corinthians 5:9–13and Matthew 18:1 se. •  But no force is to be used towards them.

  32. Hutterites • They grew as a movement by Jacob Hutter, an organizer in the area around Czechsolvkia, by 1600, the number of followers were as many as 25,000. • They lived outside the system…refused to pay taxes in Europe and Russia

  33. The Hutterite movement to North America, began 1873 after the Czarist government took away religious guarantee of freedom. • They immigrated on mass to the United State and Canada. Their first foundation was in South Dakota. In South Dakota they set up three different colonies.

  34. Anabaptists in Canada • The migration of various groups from Europe who may be considered heirs to the Anabaptist movement include Mennonites, Hutterites, Amish, and the Brethren (seeBRETHREN IN CHRIST), the latter originating in 1708 in Germany with indirect connections to the Anabaptist tradition.

  35. North America • Their experience in North America is mixed. There have been times of tolerance and intolerance towards the group. • For example, between the time of arrival and WWI, the group grew and prospered, from 400 to 1700 colonies.

  36. WWI however, brought special trouble. • Their refusal to sign up for service..made them contentious objectors and young Hutterite men were confined to guard houses.

  37. Their Economy • The Hutterites are unique in their questioning of capitalism.. We have a lot to learn from them:

  38. the Hutterites are not entreprenuers, the idea of buying low and selling high is against their religion.. • “the life of the merchant is a sinful business…As the nail stickth between the door and the hinge, so doth sin stick close between buying and selling”

  39. they are astute however, in business practices. • They understand market values. • They are frugal in their consumption practices, yet they do not hesitant to invest in the latest farm equipment.

  40. They exercise, a Protestant asceticism-they are frugal, self reliant, rational, methodical and industrious. • They lack the Spirit of Capitalism however..not individualistic, against avarice=greed.

  41. Anabaptist creed • Baptism is rational • Baptism requires faith • Children are innocent • Adult must profess their in Christ

  42. Mennonites • Mennonite origin spreads back to Anabaptism from Switzerland and the Netherlands.

  43. Faced with persecution in the sixteenth century, they began to migrate to northern Germany and found their way to Russia by the nineteenth century.

  44. In 1874, a large scale migration occurred due to further revocation of privileges.

  45. Mennonites quickly spread through the West in varying degrees of orthodoxy. • ie. Old Colony Mennonites are more conservative than General Conference Mennonites but not as conservative as the Old Order Mennonites in Ontario or the Amish.

  46. Mennonite Family Structure • In 1955, divorce among Mennnonites was unheard of but by 1977 there were some cases but very few.

  47. Family size has changed dramatically. • When Mennonites were farmers children were assets. But now, while they continue to have more than the national average.

  48. Among Old Colony Mennonites, it is still not unusual for families to have over a dozen kin living nearby. • However, among young Mennonite Families, the equalitarian family is emerging, typical of the modern nuclear family.

  49. Anabaptist practices • Total absorption into group life • Separate from Secular society • Other worldly aceticism./

  50. SUMMARY • Anabaptist groups are collectives that live outside of mainstream society through their religiousity. • Anabaptist practice inner world asceticism yet turn their back on capitalism.

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