Anabaptist theology
Template:Short description Template:Anabaptist vertical
Anabaptist theology, also known as Anabaptist doctrine, is a theological tradition reflecting the doctrine of the Anabaptist Churches. The major branches of Anabaptist Christianity (inclusive of Mennonites, Amish, Hutterites, Bruderhof, Schwarzenau Brethren, River Brethren and Apostolic Christians) agree on core doctrines but have nuances in practice. While the adherence to doctrine is important in Anabaptist Christianity, living righteously is stressed to a greater degree.
Important sources for Anabaptist doctrine are the Schleitheim Confession and the Dordrecht Confession of Faith, both of which have been held by many Anabaptist Churches throughout history.<ref name="Hershberger2001">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Hartzler2013">Template:Cite book</ref>
Daniel Kauffman, a bishop of the Mennonite Church, codified Anabaptist beliefs in the influential text Doctrines of the Bible, which continues to be widely used in catechesis.<ref name="Hartzler2013"/>
John S. Oyer states that the Old Order Amish have an implicit theology that can be found in their biblical hermeneutics, but take little interest in explicit, formal, and systematic theology. It is easier to find out about their implicit theology in talking with them than reading written documents.<ref>John S. Oyer: Is there an Amish Theology in Lydie Hege et Christoph Wiebe: Les Amish : origine et particularismes 1693-1993, The Amish : origin and characteristics 1693-1993, Ingersheim, 1996, pages 278-302.</ref> According to Oyer, their implicit theology is practical, not theoretical.<ref>John S. Oyer: Is there an Amish Theology in Lydie Hege et Christoph Wiebe: Les Amish : origine et particularismes 1693-1993, The Amish : origin and characteristics 1693-1993, Ingersheim, 1996, page 300.</ref> The most important written source of Amish theology, according to Oyer, is "1001 Questions and Answers on the Christian Life".<ref>1001 Questions and Answers on the Christian Life, written by 20 members of the Amish ministry and lay people in various communities, published by Pathway Publishers, Aylmer, Ontario and Lagrange, Indiana, 1992.</ref><ref>1001 Questions & Answers On The Christian Life at amishamerica.com.</ref>
The Hutterites possess an account of their belief written by Peter Riedemann (Rechenschafft unserer Religion, Leer und Glaubens) and theological tracts and letters by Hans Schlaffer, Leonhard Schiemer and Ambrosius Spittelmaier are extant.<ref>Ambrosius Spittelmaier at deutsche-biographie.de</ref>
Overview
From its inception, Anabaptist practice has sought to emulate early Christianity.<ref name="RedekopBeitzel2019">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Kraybill2010">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Hostetler1993">Template:Cite book</ref> A strong theme among Anabaptists has been practical discipleship that turns the believer into a model of righteousness in the here and now. In the 1545 Kempen Confession, the Anabaptist authors stated that, "... we wish nothing but to seek alone the salvation of our souls, and like Christ, seek the well-being of the souls and lives of all people. Today we wish to follow Christ in all righteousness until death."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> C. Arnold Snyder writes that:
In the Anabaptist understanding, Jesus Christ perfectly revealed, lived out, and marked the path back to God. Christians are disciples who have committed themselves to following Christ on that path, yielding to God’s will in all things as Jesus did, not claiming possessions for themselves, speaking the truth in all circumstances, humbly giving way in the face of evil power, living non-coercively, willing to suffer rather than inflict suffering on others. The visible ‘shape’ of Anabaptist spirituality is discipleship, the ‘following after Christ’ (Nachfolge Christi) in life.
Following after Christ in life will occur in three areas in which humanity is, by its nature, most particularly tempted not to be Christ-like: in the desire to claim ownership of possessions, in the temptation to lie and dissimulate, and in the temptation to coerce by using violence.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Bible
Early Anabaptists held a high view of the Bible and insisted on the necessity of it being interpreted with the aid of the living Christ within. Author C. Arnold Snyder describes their view in these words:
In terms of the authority of Scripture, for example, Anabaptists insisted that the Holy Spirit had to be active in the interpretation of the letter. So, for example, a spiritually enlightened peasant would be a more reliable interpreter of Scripture than was a professor of biblical languages who lacked the Spirit. All the same, with the exception of a few prophetic spiritualists, the Anabaptists read and interpreted the text of the Bible itself in a decidedly practical, non-theological way .... The Anabaptists could not agree that political authorities had any right to decide matters of biblical interpretation or decree matters of faith or practice for the church, thus challenging the close church-state relationship that had been taken for granted by the [Protestant] Reformers.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Anabaptists hold that the entire Bible is the word of God, while insisting that the New Testament is the rule of faith and practice for the Church.<ref name="Martin2022"/> Anabaptists Hans Denck and Ludwig Hätzer were responsible for the first translation of the Old Testament Prophets from Hebrew into the German language.
The Amish tradition of Anabaptist Christianity uses the Luther Bible, which contains the Old Testament, Apocrypha, and New Testament; Amish wedding ceremonies include "the retelling of the marriage of Tobias and Sarah in the Apocrypha".<ref name="Wesner">Template:Cite web</ref> The texts regarding the martyrdoms under Antiochus IV in the intertestamental section of the Bible (called the Apocrypha) containing 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees are held in high esteem by the Anabaptists, who faced persecution in their history.<ref name="deSilva2018">Template:Cite book</ref>
Christology
Christology addresses the person and work of Jesus Christ, relative to his divinity, humanity, and work of salvation. Anabaptist Christology "emphasize[s] the significance of Jesus as our moral example."<ref name="Choe2023">Template:Cite web</ref>
The 16th-century Anabaptists were orthodox Trinitarians accepting both the humanity and divinity of Jesus Christ and salvation through his death on the cross.Template:Citation needed
Menno Simons, the father of the Mennonite tradition of Anabaptism, concluded: "In the same manner the heavenly Seed, namely, the Word of God, was sown in Mary, and by her faith, being conceived in her by the Holy Ghost, became flesh, and was nurtured in her body; and thus it is called the fruit of her womb, that same as a natural fruit or offspring is called the fruit of its natural mother."Template:Citation needed
Soteriology
Generalities
While Anabaptism has a unique conceptualization of soteriology,Template:Sfn its soteriological doctrines share similarities with those of Arminianism in certain respects.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In particular, Mennonite soteriology has been historically consistent with Arminianism, whereas the doctrines of Calvinist soteriology have been rejected.Template:Sfn Moreover, Anabaptism seems to have influenced Jacobus Arminius.Template:Sfn At least, he was “sympathetic to the Anabaptist point of view, and Anabaptists were commonly in attendance on his preaching.”Template:Sfn
Human's condition and calling
Anabaptist doctrine teaches:<ref name="Martin2025"/> Template:Quotation
The Dunkard Brethren Church, an Anabaptist denomination of the Schwarzenau Brethren tradition, teaches that "Election is of the sovereign mercy of God, enabling us to believe the Word of God, through the Holy Spirit, so that we can choose a life of righteousness and service. (John 6:44; John 15:16; 1 Pet. 1:1-2; Col. 3:12; 1 Thess. 1:4-6; 2 Pet. 1:10)"<ref name="DBC2021"/>
Historically, certain Anabaptists, like Hut and Marpeck, rejected total depravity. Others, shared views akin to Arminians: Hubmaier, Schiemer, and Philips affirmed total depravity and believed in the restoration of human libertarian free will through prevenient grace communicated through the Gospel. Denck and Sattler maintained that God restores human free will through prevenient grace prior to exposure to the Gospel. Schiemer's perspective affirmed total depravity and the restoration of free will through prevenient grace given at birth and later experienced at the age of accountability.Template:Sfn
Conversion
Anabaptist doctrine teaches that "True faith entails a new birth, a spiritual regeneration by God's grace and power; 'believers' are those who have become the spiritual children of God."<ref name="Sheldrake2005">Template:Cite book</ref> The Dunkard Brethren Church, a Conservative Anabaptist denomination in the Schwarzenau Brethren tradition, defines this as follows:<ref name="DBC2021" /> Template:Quotation
"The beginning of the Anabaptist path to salvation was thus marked not by a forensic understanding of salvation by 'faith alone', but by the entire process of repentance, self-denial, faith, rebirth and obedience. It was this process that was marked by the biblical sign of baptism."<ref name="Sheldrake2005"/> After becoming a believer, Anabaptist theology emphasizes "a faith that works."<ref name="Roth2004">Template:Cite web</ref>
Anabaptist denominations teach:<ref name="Batten2018">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Quotation Hans Denck wrote: Template:Quotation Obedience to Jesus and other New Testament teachings, loving one another and being at peace with others, and walking in holiness are seen as "earmarks of the saved."<ref> Template:Cite web</ref> Good works thus have an important role in the life of an Anabaptist believer,<ref name="Hauerwas2015"> Template:Cite book</ref> with the teaching "that faith without works is a dead faith" (cf. Template:Bibleverse) occupying a cornerstone in Anabaptist Christianity.<ref name="Janzen2009"> Template:Cite book</ref> Anabaptists do not teach faith and works—in the sense of two separate entities—are necessary for salvation, but rather that true faith will always produce good works. Balthasar Hubmaier wrote that "faith by itself alone is not worthy to be called faith, for there can be no true faith without the works of love."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Justification
Anabaptists "dismissed the Lutheran doctrine of justification, a dead faith as they called it, which was unable to produce Christian love and good works."<ref name="Brewer2021"> Template:Cite book</ref> Peter Riedemann wrote: Template:Quotation Template:Quotation Rather than a forensic justification that only gave a legal change of one's status before God, early Anabaptists taught that "justification begun a dynamic process by which the believer partook of the nature of Christ and was so enabled to live increasingly like Jesus."<ref> Template:Cite book</ref> Riedemann explained this ontological justification in these words:Template:Quotation
Preservation
Anabaptist theology traditionally teaches conditional security.Template:Sfn However, in the 20th century, particularly in North America, some Mennonites, have adopted the doctrine of eternal security.Template:Sfn
Loss of the Holy Spirit
The majority of Anabaptists have historically believed that a person can lose the Holy Spirit through willful sin and disobedience, as maintaining faith required an ongoing commitment to righteousness.Template:Sfn
However, the Lutheran Book of Concord claims that there were certain Anabaptists who taught that it was impossible for someone who had been justified to lose the Holy Spirit. The Concord condemned this view, asserting that those who have received the Holy Ghost may still fall from grace and depart from the divine favor of God.Template:Sfn
Ecclesiology
With respect to ecclesiology, Anabaptist theology "calls people to churches, where disciples of Christ strive together to deny the flesh and the world and to pattern themselves into the perfect image of their Master."<ref name="Anderson2019"/> The Church is "a vessel charged with delivering souls to the throne of God" and thus provides the faithful with guidelines, such as those concerning modesty.<ref name="Anderson2019">Template:Cite book</ref>
Non-resistance
Most Anabaptist hold that violence is wrong, as is supporting violence though personal actions such as joining the military. This would also include opposition to abortion and capital punishment (cf. consistent life ethic).<ref name="Swartz2016">Template:Cite web</ref> Conservative Anabaptist denominations, such as the Dunkard Brethren Church, teach:<ref name="DBC2021"/> Template:Quotation
In 1918, three Hutterite brothers, David, Joseph, and Michael Hofer, and Joseph's brother-in-law Jacob Wipf were imprisoned on Alcatraz for refusal to join the US military. Two of them, Joseph and Michael Hofer, died in late 1918 shortly after their transfer to a prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The Bruderhof is another Anabaptist church that is strongly pacifist, believing that personal property is a form of injustice.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
According to Harold S. Bender and several of his colleagues, the Anabaptists were "voluntaristic in religious choice, advocates of a church completely free from state influence, biblical literalists, non-participants in any government activity to avoid moral compromise, suffering servant disciples of Jesus who emphasized moral living and who were persecuted and martyred as Jesus had been, and restitutionists who tried to restore pre-Constantinian Christian primitivism".<ref name="sword" />
Schwertler Anabaptists, such as Balthasar Hubmaier, were not nonresistant and supported the government; they even encouraged involvement in government.<ref name="sword">Template:Br-separated entries</ref> In light of this, they were not accepted by the mainstream of the Anabaptists as being true adherents of the faith.
Forgiveness
Anabaptist doctrine stresses practicing forgiveness.<ref name="TMN2010"/> For example, in instances where drivers of automobiles get into accidents with horse-drawn buggies resulting in the deaths of Old Order Amish people, among other situations, their families forgive the perpetrator.<ref name="TMN2010"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In cases of accidents, Old Order Amish often are contacted by lawyers who encourage them to file lawsuits; the Old Order Amish reject these overtures as being in conflict with their Christian religious beliefs, holding that "We don't believe in taking advantage of someone and taking their money".<ref name="TMN2010">Template:Cite web</ref> Reflecting the principles of peace and nonresistance, Anabaptist religious beliefs do not permit the filing of lawsuits (cf. Template:Bibleverse).<ref name="Caniglia2015">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="TW2021">Template:Cite web</ref> Representatives of the Old Order Amish community have said that they "would rather be short on the money" than file a lawsuit.<ref name="Caniglia2015"/>
Church discipline
Template:Further The Anabaptists practiced church discipline before any of the Reformers adopted it. Reformer Martin Bucer was influenced by them to introduce discipline into the church in Strassburg, though the attempt was not successful. Bucer convinced John Calvin of the idea, and he established church discipline in Geneva. Calvin read the Schleitheim Confession in 1544 and concluded, "these unfortunate and ungrateful people have learned this teaching and some other correct views from us." Calvin was only 18 years old and still a Catholic when the Schleitheim Confession was formed in 1527.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Modest apparel
Anabaptist Christianity stresses the importance of modesty, with traditional Anabaptist communities practicing this in the form of plain dress. This practice is a reflection of the Anabaptist doctrine of the nonconformity to the world, which is derived from Template:Bibleverse.<ref name="Kauffman1898">Template:Cite book</ref> The influential Mennonite bishop Daniel Kauffman, who codified the Anabaptist theological text Manual of Bible Doctrines, explains that there are two categories of humans: "(1) those that follow the 'lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life'—the world; (2) those that take Christ as their foundation, and allow their lives to be governed by principles of right—the body of Christ. The simple admonition of our text to those that constitute the body of Christ is, 'Do not allow yourself to become like the world.'"<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> The transformation spoken of in Romans 12:2, according to Kauffman, involves this concept: "Whenever there is a change of mind, there is a change in all things subject to the mind."<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> Furthermore, Template:Bibleverse references being "unspotted from the world", which Daniel Kauffman references to explain the reason behind the wearing of plain dress by adherents of Old Order Anabaptist and Conservative Anabaptist communities:<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> Template:Quotation Anabaptist Christian denominations that observe the wearing of plain dress, such as the Schwarzenau Brethren Anabaptists, do so because Jesus “condemned anxious thought for raiment” in Template:Bibleverse and Template:Bibleverse.<ref name="Winger1919">Template:Cite book</ref> They teach that the wearing of plain dress (without adornment) is scripturally commanded in Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse, and Template:Bibleverse,<ref name="Winger1919"/> in addition to being taught by the early Church Fathers.<ref name="Winger1919"/> Indeed, in the early Christian manual Paedagogus, the injunction for clothing to extend past the knees was enjoined.<ref name="Steinberg2020">Template:Cite book</ref> With the adjective kosmios (κόσμιος) meaning "modest", Template:Bibleverse uses the Greek word catastola katastolé (καταστολῇ) for the apparel suitable for Christian females, and for this reason, women belonging to Conservative Anabaptist denominations often wear a cape dress with a headcovering; for example, ladies who are members of the Charity Christian Fellowship wear the cape dress with an opaque hanging veil as the denomination teaches that "the sisters are to wear a double layered garment as the Greek word 'catastola' describes."<ref name="Scott1996">Template:Cite book</ref>
Ordinances
The Anabaptist view of the ordinances is generally one of being a remembrance, or a exterior sign/symbol of inward spiritual realities. This view can be summed up with the following statement taken from the 1577 Waterlander Confession. Even though this was written concerning the Lord's Supper, the concept applies to the other ordinances:
We confess concerning the Supper of the Lord, that it is a sign of divine grace, a seal of the eternal covenant of God, a visible ordinance or ceremony, instituted by Jesus Christ in the congregation of God. It was instituted with bread and wine, the bread broken in remembrance of the death of Christ, the wine received in remembrance of the pouring out of his blood. In receiving it, believing Christian members search themselves to find the true essence to which the Lord’s Supper does point.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
These exterior ordinances, when practiced in conjunction with the inward realities, "brought one into conformity with the truth of Jesus Christ, whose life, crucifixion, death, and resurrection had so fundamentally altered all of humanity and creation that human beings were now capable of works of loving obedience that revealed the indwelling presence of God in Christ in all people."<ref name="Volf2001"> Template:Cite book</ref>
In Anabaptist churches of the Conservative Mennonite tradition, seven ordinances are taught, including "baptism, the Lord's Supper, footwashing, marriage, anointing with oil, the holy kiss, and the veiling of women."<ref name="Hartzler2013"/>
Within the Anabaptist churches of the Schwarzenau Brethren tradition and the River Brethren tradition, the Lovefeast is observed, which includes the ordinances of the holy kiss, footwashing and communion, in addition to the sharing of a communal meal.<ref name="AMN1993">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Baptism
Template:Main The Anabaptist view of baptism is one of its outstanding features. In their view, baptism was reserved for repentant believers who were aware that their sins had been forgiven, not unknowing infants. In this view they defied both the Roman Catholic Church and the Protestant Reformers. In addition, Anabaptists rejected all Roman Catholic and Magisterial Protestant (Lutheran, Anglican and Reformed) baptism as invalid. They therefore re-baptized those whom they regarded as not having received any Christian initiation at all, and claimed that their baptism after profession of faith was the recipient's first legitimate baptism. Reportedly, one of the first adult baptisms of the Reformation was publicly performed in Zürich, Switzerland, in January 1525.<ref>Note: It can be argued, according to the Martyrs Mirror, that Believer's Baptism has always existed, since the time of Jesus and the Apostles.</ref> According to the Schleitheim Confession (1527):
Baptism shall be given to all those who have learned repentance and amendment of life, and who believe truly that their sins are taken away by Christ, and to all those who walk in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, and wish to be buried with Him in death, so that they may be resurrected with Him and to all those who with this significance request it (baptism) of us and demand it for themselves. This excludes all infant baptism, the highest and chief abomination of the Pope. In this you have the foundation and testimony of the apostles. Matt. 28, Mark 16, Acts 2, 8, 16, 19.
The Dordrecht Confession (1632) states,
Concerning baptism we confess that all penitent believers, who, through faith, regeneration, and the renewing of the Holy Ghost, are made one with God, and are written in heaven, must, upon such Scriptural confession of faith, and renewing of life, be baptized with water, in the most worthy name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, according to the command of Christ, and the teaching, example, and practice of the apostles, to the burying of their sins, and thus be incorporated into the communion of the saints; henceforth to learn to observe all things which the Son of God has taught, left, and commanded His disciples.
The concept of believers' baptism drew the main attention of 16th-century Continental Anabaptists, but the mode was also an issue. The majority appear to have taught and practiced baptism by pouring, while a minority practiced baptism by immersion. The writings of Menno Simons seem at times to promote immersion as the proper mode, but his practice was by pouring. Bernhard Rothmann argued for immersion in his Bekentnisse, and Pilgram Marpeck copied this idea into his Vermanung, but weakened the position by accepting pouring or sprinkling as an alternate mode. The mode of baptism was debated by the Hutterites and the Polish Brethren around the turn of the 17th century, and the arguments for immersion by Polish leader Christoph Ostorodt were incorporated into the Racovian Confession of Faith in 1604. Servetus made a strong case for immersion. The Mennonites, Swiss Brethren, South German Anabaptists, and Hutterites were not as concerned about mode, and, while not rejecting immersion, found pouring much more practical and believed it to be the Scriptural mode. As such, Anabaptist denominations such as the Mennonites, Amish and Hutterites use pouring as the mode to administer believer's baptism, whereas Anabaptists of the Schwarzenau Brethren, River Brethren and Apostolic Christian traditions baptize by immersion.<ref name="KurianDay2017">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="2010Kraybill">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="NoltLoewen2010">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Brackney2012">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="ACCA2022"/> In the practice of the Apostolic Christian Church, after a seeker receives believer's baptism: Template:Quotation
Holy Kiss
Anabaptists greet one another with a holy kiss (especially during the Lovefeast), in obedience to the injunctions in the New Testament in Template:Bibleverse-nb, Template:Bibleverse-nb, Template:Bibleverse-nb, Template:Bibleverse-nb, and Template:Bibleverse-nb.<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> This Apostolic ordinance was enjoined by the early Church Fathers, such as Tertullian who wrote that before leaving a house, Christians are to give the Holy Kiss and say "peace to this house"; the Holy Kiss was exchanged during worship as well.<ref name="Stutzman2011">Template:Cite book</ref> Mennonite theologian and bishop Daniel Kauffman taught that the Anabaptist ordinance of the Holy Kiss was emphasized five times in the Bible by the Apostles, who "aimed to teach their followers the way to attain to the highest degree of Christian perfection, and hence felt called upon to teach every thing that tended to accomplish this result."<ref name="Kauffman1898"/>
Footwashing
Many Anabaptist communities, with the Hutterites being a notable exception, practice footwashing in obedience of Jesus' command in Template:Bibleverse for those who follow him "to wash one another's feet".<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> After the death of the apostles or the end of the Apostolic Age, the practice was continued.<ref name="FahlbuschLochmanBromileyMbitiPelikanBarrettVischer1999">Template:Cite book</ref>
Mennonite theologian J. C. Wenger stated that “There is no exegetical consideration against the observance of feet washing, for example, which would not also bear against the observance of baptism.”<ref name="Martin2022">Template:Cite web</ref>
Lord's Supper
In the early Anabaptist Schleitheim Confession, breaking of bread is the term used for the Lord's Supper, also known as communion or eucharist. A Short Confession of Faith, articulated by the early Anabaptist theologian Hans de Ries, articulated the belief in the real spiritual presence of Christ in the Lord's Supper:<ref name="Grace2015">Template:Cite journal</ref> Template:Quotation In Anabaptism, the corporate nature (fellowship, unity) of participation is emphasized to a greater degree than other Christian denominations. Pilgram Marpeck wrote, "As members of one body, we proclaim the death of Christ and bodily union attained by untainted brotherly love." Marpeck further wrote, "The true meaning of communion is mystified and obscured by the word sacrament." In connection with the Lord's supper, many Anabaptists stress the rite of feet washing. Anabaptists do not as much emphasize the presence of Jesus in the eucharistic elements themselves, but the "mystery of communion with the living Christ in his Supper [that] comes into being by the power of the Spirit, dwelling in and working through the collected members of Christ's Body".<ref name="Snyder2006">Template:Cite web</ref> As such, in celebrations of Holy Communion, "Anabaptist congregations looked to the living Christ in their hearts and in their midst, who transformed members and elements together into a mysterious communion, creating his Body in many members, ground like grains and crushed like grapes, into one bread and one drink."<ref name="Snyder2006"/>
Anabaptism sees itself as emulating the practice of early Christianity, and in the present-day, a number of Anabaptist congregations have affirmed a theology of the real presence (such as the Chambersburg Christian Fellowship).<ref name="Pettegree2000">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Martin">Template:Cite web</ref>
Marriage
Both the Bible and the teachings of the Church Fathers shape Anabaptist theology on the permanence of marriage.<ref name="Taylor2008">Template:Cite web</ref> Mennonite bishop and theologian Daniel Kauffman wrote in Doctrines of the Bible that "The ordinance [of marriage] is for the maintenance and purity of the human family (Mark 10:2-12).<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> The teaching in the Church Polity of the Dunkard Brethren Church, a Conservative Anabaptist denomination in the Schwarzenau Brethren tradition, is reflective of Anabaptist theology regarding marriage:<ref name="DBC2021"/> Template:Quotation Anabaptist denominations, such as the Mennonite Christian Fellowship, teach the "sinfulness of remarriage following divorce".<ref name="Anderson2012">Template:Cite web</ref> The Biblical Mennonite Alliance holds that divorced and remarried persons are living in adultery and are therefore in "an ongoing state of sin that can only be truly forgiven when divorced and remarried persons separate."<ref name="Roth2022">Template:Cite web</ref>
Headcovering for women

Anabaptist Christianity traditionally calls for the wearing of a headcovering by women in obedience to Template:Bibleverse. A Conservative Anabaptist publication titled The Significance of the Christian Woman's Veiling, authored by Merle Ruth, teaches with regard to the continual wearing of the headcovering by believing women, that it is:<ref name="Ruth2022">Template:Cite book</ref> Template:Quotation Anabaptist expositor Daniel Willis, cites the Early Church Father John Chrysostom's explication of Saint Paul's teaching in 1 Corinthians 11 as the basis for continual headcovering (during worship and in public) among women, particularly Saint Paul's assertions regarding the angels and that women being unveiled is dishonourable so by consequence, Christian women should cover their heads with a veil continually:<ref name="Willis2022">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Quotation
Anointing with oil
Anabaptists observe the ordinance of anointing of the sick in obedience to Template:Bibleverse.<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> In a compendium of Anabaptist doctrine, Daniel Kauffman stated:<ref name="Kauffman1898"/> Template:Quotation
The Church Polity of the Dunkard Brethren Church, a Conservative Anabaptist denomination in the Schwarzenau Brethren tradition, teaches:<ref name="DBC2021"/> Template:Quotation
Lord's Day
Anabaptists hold that the Lord's Day should be commemorated through the attendance of church services, along with works of mercy such as "witnessing for God in one of many ways, visiting someone who is sick or discouraged, widows, orphans, or older people, spending time with the family, studying some subject of interest in the Bible that some are wondering about, reading upbuilding literature, etc."<ref name="Wenger2022">Template:Cite web</ref> In the view of Anabaptist Christianity, "worldly entertainment that would draw our minds away from Christ would be a poor way to commemorate His resurrection".<ref name="Wenger2022"/> The Statement of Faith and Practice of Salem Amish Mennonite Church, a Conservative Mennonite congregation in the Beachy Amish Mennonite tradition, is reflective of traditional Anabaptist teaching on the Lord's Day: Template:Quotation The Church Polity of the Dunkard Brethren Church, a Conservative Anabaptist denomination in the Schwarzenau Brethren tradition, teaches that "The First Day of the week is the Christian Sabbath and is to be kept as a day of rest and worship. (Matt. 28:1; Acts 20:7; John 20:1; Mark 16:2)"<ref name="DBC2021">Template:Cite book</ref>
See also
Notes and references
Citations
Bibliography
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite web
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
Further reading
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- John S. Oyer: Is there an Amish Theology, in Lydie Hege et Christoph Wiebe: Les Amish : origine et particularismes 1693–1993, The Amish : origin and characteristics 1693–1993, Ingersheim, 1996, pages 278–302.
- 1001 Questions and Answers on the Christian Life, written by 20 members of the Amish ministry and lay people in various communities, published by Pathway Publishers, Aylmer, Ontario and Lagrange, Indiana, 1992.
- John D. Rempel: Lords Supper In Anabaptism; A Study In The Christology Of Balthasar Hubmaier, Pilgram Marpeck, And Dirk Philips, Toronto, 1986.
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Robert J. Friedmann: The Theology of Anabaptism: An Interpretation, (Studies in Anabaptist and Mennonite History), Harrisonburg, Virginia, 1973.
- William Klassen: Covenant and Community: the Life and Writing of Pilgram Marpeck, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1968.
- Rollin S. Armour: Anabaptist Baptism: A Representative Study, Scottdale, Pennsylvania, 1966.
- Template:Cite book
- Franklin H. Littell: The Anabaptist View of the Church, Philadelphia, 1952.
External links
- Topical articles on Anabaptist doctrine - Pilgrim Mennonite Conference
- Topical Articles about Anabaptist theology - Bible Helps Publications
- The Radical Reformation: Resources
- Pilgrim Ministry: Anabaptist church directory
- Theology of Martyrdom at Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online
- Mennonite Theology at Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online