
Contents
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1 Modern Theologies 1 Modern Theologies
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2 Origins 2 Origins
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3 Theological Characteristics 3 Theological Characteristics
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3.1 Baptism 3.1 Baptism
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3.2 Community and discipline 3.2 Community and discipline
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3.3 Discipleship 3.3 Discipleship
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3.4 Peace, love of enemies, and suffering 3.4 Peace, love of enemies, and suffering
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3.5 Ordinances 3.5 Ordinances
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3.6 Christology 3.6 Christology
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3.7 Eschatology 3.7 Eschatology
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4 Conclusion 4 Conclusion
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Bibliography Bibliography
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25 Early Modern Anabaptist Theologies
Get accessJeff Bach is the Director of the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College, where he teaches courses on the history of Anabaptist and Pietist groups.
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Published:10 September 2015
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Abstract
The Anabaptist movement emerged in multiple locations in Switzerland, Austria, Germany, and the Netherlands beginning in 1525, with multiple leaders. Adult baptism was one characteristic originally common to all Anabaptist groups. Most Anabaptists emphasized the importance of the gathered, visible church with congregational discipline, while a few prioritized inward individual spiritual experience. Most Anabaptists were pacifists, with only a few exceptions. Three groups survived into the seventeenth century: the Swiss Brethren, the Mennonites in the Netherlands and northern Germany, and the communal Hutterites in Moravia. They were pacifists and were Christocentric and Biblicist in grounding their faith and following Christ’s teachings.
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