Title: UNIV 1300003
1UNIV 1300-003
Romans 131-6 Everyone must submit himself to
the governing authorities, for there is no
authority except that which God has established.
The authorities that exist have been established
by God. Consequently, he who rebels against the
authority is rebelling against what God has
instituted, and those who do so will bring
judgment on themselves. For rulers hold no
terror for those who do right, but for those who
do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of
the one who is in authority? Then do what is
right and he will commend you. For he is Gods
servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be
afraid, for he does not bear the sword for
nothing. He is Gods servant, an agent of wrath
to bring punishment on the wrongdoer. Therefore,
it is necessary to submit to the authorities, not
only because of possible punishment but also
because of conscience. This is also why you pay
taxes, for the authorities are Gods servants,
who give their full time to governing. Give
everyone what you owe him if you owe taxes, pay
taxes if revenue, then revenue if respect, then
respect if honor, then honor.
2UNIV 1300-003
Matthew 533-37, 38-39, 43-45, 48 Again, you
have heard that it was said to the people long
ago Do not break your oath, but keep the oaths
you have made to the Lord. But I tell you, do
not swear at all either by heaven, for it is
Gods throne, or by the earth, for it is his
footstool or by Jerusalem, for it is the city of
the Great King. And do not swear by your head,
for you cannot make even one hair white or black.
Simply let your Yes be Yes, and your No,
No anything beyond this comes from the evil
one.
You have heard that it was said, Eye for eye,
tooth for tooth. But I tell you, do not resist
an evil person. If someone strikes you on the
right cheek, turn to him the other also. You
have heard that it was said, Love your neighbor
and hate your enemy. But I tell you Love your
enemies and pray for those who persecute you,
that you may be sons of your Father in heavenBe
perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is
perfect.
3UNIV 1300-003
- Anabaptism and Political Reality
The sword and oath in Swiss and
South German /
Austrian Anabaptism
- There was a multiplicity of opinions among the
Swiss and South German / Austrian Anabaptists on
the subject of the relationship of the individual
believer to the state. Examples (Snyder, pp.
258-9) - Sebastian Franks description of Anabaptists in
Strasbourg - Trial testimony of Nikolaus Guldin (1529)
- Writings of one Hans Marquart, July, 1532
- Felix Mantz prison testimony, Zurich, 1525
- Joerg Maler, Augsburg, April 1550
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- Anabaptism saw the church as composed of persons
who had freely chosen baptism as adults. The
Anabaptist church would never be a territorial
church. - Internal factors Anabaptisms defining principle
was adult baptism on confession of faith, meaning
that they were calling for uncoerced,
voluntarily-gathered believers churches
(Snyder, p. 260). For Anabaptism to have a
legitimate political space required that there be
rulers who would tolerate such churches within
their territories. - Anabaptist reform placed itself on the margins of
what was politically acceptable in the 16th
century by upholding its core principles. - The tension between Anabaptist principles and the
larger society could have pushed the movement
toward accommodation with civil society and
government or toward separation. Snyder points
out (p. 261) that the movement developed into
separation.
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- External factors The Holy Roman Empire, ruled
by Emperor Charles V from 1519-1558, was the
largest political territory into which Anabaptism
spread. - Charles V was from the House of Hapsburg which
ruled Austria and Spain. His brother, the
Archduke Ferdinand, ruled eastern Austrian lands
that had come to include Moravia and Bohemia. - Spanish administration of the Hapsburgs also
ruled the Netherlands, including modern
Luxembourg and Belgium. - Ottoman Turks had marched up the Danube River to
the gates of Vienna. The Turkish threat diverted
attention of the Hapsburgs and gave breathing
space to Protestant reforms. - Hapsburg attempts to stamp out evangelical
heresy were cruel and thorough. Archduke
Ferdinand was particularly effective in
suppressing Anabaptism.
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- Anabaptism survived only in places under marginal
imperial control, such as Moravia and the
northern Netherlands. - Anabaptists who persisted in their beliefs were
forced to migrate to escape persecution.
Moravia, Alsace, the Palatinate, Württemburg,
Hesse, the northern Netherlands, and the Baltic
coast became destinations for Anabaptist
refugees. - This pattern of migration in search of toleration
continued for some Anabaptist groups into the
20th century. Snyder lists examples (p. 265) of
Anabaptists later being welcomed into certain
territories but in the 16th century, space for
tolerant treatment (e.g., Moravia) was rare and
Anabaptism was forced to develop in an
openly-hostile political environment. (Snyder,
p. 265). - To be an Anabaptist in the 16th century meant
placing oneself on the margins of society. It
seems unsurprising that Anabaptism would come to
develop a separatist ethic.
7UNIV 1300-003
- Michael Sattler
- Adopted a literal reading of the New Testament
- Viewed the cosmos as divided into two separate
kingdoms, one ruled by Christ and the other by
Satan. Individual believers and their churches
were to separate from the worldly kingdom. - The example of the life of Jesus and the commands
given by Jesus to his followers as recorded in
the New Testament were normative for conduct of
the individual believer and the church. - Literal application of Jesus teachings in the
Sermon on the Mount led to the rejection of
participation in war and the rejection of
swearing of oaths as outlined in the Schleitheim
Articles. - The Christocentric literal interpretation of the
New Testament led for Sattler to a thoroughoing
separatism in relations of the individual
believer to the state.
8UNIV 1300-003
- Hans Denck
- Denck did not share the same literalist
interpretive framework as did Sattler. - Denck was less dogmatic than Sattler on the oath
he believed that calling God to witness for past
events was of a different nature than invoking
the name of God to solemnify a promise. The
former was permissible. - Denck had little interest in an ordinance
prohibiting oaths per se he was concerned with
the spirit of the text, which he believed had to
do more with telling the truth than whether one
used oaths or not. - Dencks spiritualized perspective (on the
spirit-letter continuum) led him to nonviolence
as the norm for Christians, although he came to
it by a path different from Sattler and was less
dogmatic.
9UNIV 1300-003
- Pilgram Marpeck
- Marpeck argued (like the Swiss Brethren) for two
kingdoms - Called for Christians to affirm their citizenship
in the heavenly kingdom to the exclusion of all
other loyalties. - Marpeck, however, did not reject government
service as evil in itself (as Sattler did)
Marpeck saw conflict between Christian confession
and government service when government service
required acts that ran contrary to the spirit of
Christ. - Marpeck illustrated this principle himself he
was not a theologian or a preacher by training,
but he was instead a civil engineer and served in
this capacity in both Strasbourg (from which he
was exiled in 1532) and Augsburg (where his
position as an Anabaptist elder was
toleratedwith occasional reprimands on the
recordbecause of the usefulness of his vocation
to the city).
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- Marpeck came to a position of foregoing violence
and coercion not because of a literal reading of
the New Testament but because of the rule of
Christ in the heart of the believer that lays out
a new manner of overcoming evil in this life. - Marpeck appears to not have had a consistent rule
concerning the swearing of oaths, other than the
rule of love (Snyder, p. 272).
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- Balthasar Hubmaier
- Rejected the strict ethic of Schleitheim of
doing what Jesus did - Argued that followers of Christ are still stuck
in this world and that they will not be free from
it as long as they live. - If Christians are incapable in this world of
imitating the life of Jesus, the appeal to Jesus
example becomes relativized. - Separation from this world is not only
ill-advised, it is impossible. - Jesus example cannot be binding on all persons
in all situations everyone should continue in
their proper offices, performing duties
consistent with those offices. - Harmonized Jesus teachings not to resist with
the ordering of the sword of government by noting
the personal focus of the first and the social
focus of the second.
12UNIV 1300-003
- Hans Hut
- Apocalyptic calendar
- Expectation that divine judgment would fall on
the ungodly. - Provisional pacifism Hut read history and
biblical texts through a dispensationalist lens,
believing that certain principles applied to the
particular era of history in which the believer
lived. - The individual Christians swords may be sheathed
for now, but at the proper time, the swords would
be unsheathed to take part in judgment. - The historical results of this kind of thinking
are clear enough in Anabaptist history, as much
of this kind of thinking was behind the
catastrophic events of Münster (although the
story of Münster belongs to the North German /
Dutch Anabaptist stream, not the South German
movement to which Hans Hut belonged).
13UNIV 1300-003
- Hutter and Riedemann
- Hans Huts missionary activity gave rise to the
communitarian Anabaptist movement in Moravia,
later to be led by Jacob Hutter and Peter
Riedemann. - Although Hut had criticized pacifist Anabaptists
who were legislating nonresistance and
prohibitions concerning the sword and the oath,
the communitarian Anabaptists of Moravia moved in
that direction due to the failure of Huts End
Time calculations and the necessity of
maintaining a disciplined community life in the
middle of a threatening political environment. - The communitarian movement became strongly
separatist and thoroughly nonresistant in the
manner of Schleitheim - The two-kingdoms polarity remains as a hallmark
of Hutterite communities. As noted on p. 279,
Riedemanns understanding of the church was
militantly separatist.
14UNIV 1300-003
The Sword and the Oath in Melchiorite Anabaptism
- Melchior Hoffman
- Hoffman was converted to Anabaptism in 1529 in
Strasbourg where there were four options for
Anabaptist relations to the larger society - Separatism (Swiss Brethren)
- Moderate separatism (Marpeck)
- Spiritualist option (Denck)
- Apocalyptic option (Hut)
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- Hoffman was attracted to the latter two
(spiritualism, after Denck, and apocalypticism,
after Hut). He especially viewed history and
scripture through apocalyptic lenses. - Disagreed with the premise of Schleitheim that
placed governing outside the perfection of
Christ and believed that rulers would play a
role in his End Time scheme. - The office of ruler was divinely ordained (and
thus open to Christians), but governments and
rulers had to choose to work on the side of light
or the side of darkness. - Hoffman believed in his End Times scenario that
godly leaders would help lead the process of
punishing the ungodly and preparing the way for
the return of Christ.
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- Hoffmans political ethic allowed both pacifist
and crusading interpretations. Hoffman
emphasized divine initiative and denied that the
elect would take the sword themselves, but he
nevertheless allowed that Christians could be
given the sword as rulers. - Hoffman came to the position that oaths should
not be sworn, although not through the same
literalist process as Schleitheim. (See sidebar
4, p. 287)
- Bernard Rothmann (reformer of Münster)
- Dispensationalist outlook (p. 289)
- Believed that in this third and final age that
Old Testament injunctions concerning Gods
judgment and vengeance on the ungodly were to be
applied literally. See sidebar (6) on p. 291. - Rothmann believed that faithful Christians
themselves were to take up the sword in
preparation for the return of Christ instead of
waiting for God to initiate cleansing (possibly
through the agency of godly rulers, as allowed
by Hoffman).
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- Menno Simons
- Rejected the dispensationalist approach to
biblical interpretation - Read the scriptures from a Christocentric
perspective, which led to a relativizing of the
Old Testament in light of the New. - In imitation of the example of Jesus, Christians
are to fight their enemies with only the same
weapons as Jesus employedwhich does not
include violence. - Menno Simons, however, did not echo Schleitheim
concerning rulers being ipso facto outside the
perfection of Christ and allowed the possibility
of Christian rules (against Schleitheim and
Riedemann) - Menno Simons apparently became convinced only
gradually that oath-taking should be forbidden to
Christians. He pleaded that rulers accept yes
or no in place of oaths for Christians out of
deference to the Christians being obedient to
the commands of Jesus.
18UNIV 1300-003
- David Joris
- Explained the collapse of Münster that they tried
to achieve a physical restitution without having
achieved a spiritual restitution. - Joris teachings contained a vengeful theme (see
sidebars 14 and 15, p. 298). His teachings
appeared to hint at the swords being wielded by
the righteous to chastise the ungodly. - Joris, however, moved more toward spiritualism
from 1539 onward. He became convinced of his own
prophetic authority as the third David, and
insisted that all events of real significance
would happen spiritually and in the hearts of
believers, not in the political or social realm.
Events in the latter realm became unimportant as
long as they did not affect the inner person. - Joris taught that judges and commanders were
free to do what they willed as long as they did
not hinder Christians or the Gospel.
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- David Joris and Menno Simons at cross purposes
- Menno Simons and David Joris, both baptized by
Obbe Philips, agreed on certain Anabaptist
fundamentals. - They differed, however, in their interpretations
and their sources of inspiration. - Menno Simons saw Christ as the standard for all
things everything must be measured by the
example of Jesus. - Joris believed that Menno Simons was bound to
legalism and judging by external appearances he
claimed that obedience to the inner, spiritual
Christ was the true obedience and that he had the
prophetic gift to express the thoughts of God. - Menno Simons, by contrast, rejected any notion of
his being a prophetor any notion that David
Joris was a prophet or the third David, as
Joris had claimed.
20UNIV 1300-003
- Conclusions
- There was diversity of views among the early
Anabaptists concerning the proper response to
civil society and government. The views of
Schleitheim were normative for the Swiss
Brethren, for the most part, but were not
necessarily shared by other Anabaptist groups.
Given the spontaneous nature of the movement,
this sort of diversity was understandable. - The ongoing Anabaptist traditions of the Swiss
Brethren, Mennonites, and Hutterites did
eventually reach a pacifist and separatist
consensus. - All three traditions adopted a Christocentric
hermeneutic focused on the life and words of
Jesus and saw in these concrete guidance for
life. All three traditions came to the
conclusion that the sword of government and civic
oaths were forbidden to Christians. - This consensus came about by the end of the 16th
century, but only after a long period of chaos,
confusion, and even bloodshed.