Early Dissidents
Testimony Of Evervimus
Waldo’s Travels
Rise Of Beghards
Confession Of Their Faith
Denominational Views
Persecutions And Deaths
Walter Lollard
Increase Of Adherents
Ziska’s Defence
Numbers Of Waldenses
State Of Germany
Efforts Of Reform
Baptists Advocate Liberty
Picards Persecuted
Luther’s Conduct
Anabaptism, What?
Luther’s Conduct 2
Opposition To Baptists
Rise Of The Peasants
Luther’s Advice
Religious Liberty
Suspended
Disputes About Baptism
Baptists Persecuted
Luther’s Policy
Munster Revolution
Sufferings Of The
Baptists
Situation Of The Baptists
Menno Simon
No Paedobaptism In The
Bible
Menno A Minister
Baptist Churches Formed
Baptists Ancient And
Modern
Menno’s Efforts
Severe Discipline
Menno’s Death
Liberty Granted
Degeneracy And Numbers
Numbers
"As concerning this sect, we know
that everywhere it is spoken against." —Acts xxviii. 22.
1. THAT vast tract of land, called by the
Romans Germany, extended one way from the North Sea to the
banks of the Danube, and the other from Gaul to the Maeotick
lake. This immense tract of
forests and mountains, rivers, marshes, and plains, the
limits of which cannot be exactly defined, was inhabited by
a great number of different tribes, having a general
likeness, but divided into several nations, in different
degrees of civilization, and distinguished by different
names. They were a people of large stature, fair complexion,
blue eyes and red hair. At early ages they had a simple sort
of patriarchal worship; but this degenerated into idolatry,
and a savage character ensued. They sent out immense
multitudes on all sides to obtain settlements and support
for their rising posterity, so that Germany appears, at that
period, as a kind of storehouse of nations. It would be
impossible to enumerate the German tribes, they are THE
FATHERS of all Europe; for from this immense territory, as
from a hive, they swarmed and colonized, and overspread half
the 30 world.
In the life-time of our Redeemer, the Goths were enthusiasts
for liberty in their own forests. This love of freedom was
cherished in the migratory tribes, and was found to
characterize those Goths who took up their abode in Spain;
the descendants of which people inhabited the foot of the
Pyrenees and were afterwards called Vaudois.*
2. It is highly probable, that the gospel was
preached 60 to
these people by the apostles, since it is absolutely certain
that the Goths professed Christianity several centuries
before their kings became Catholics. They retained their
natural love of freedom, and consequently divided, at after
periods, into various religious sentiments, having no
national standard of faith, nor any legal civil coercion for
conscience. The catholics all
200 through this
early period, called them Anabaptists, heretics, and not
Christians.† In the third
250 century, the gospel was preached and churches
existed at cologne, Treves, Metz, and in other places,
o We have no means of knowing
whether the Novatianists in their itinerancy visited these
kingdoms or not. Those who represent the German tribes as
barbarous 320
at this period offer a cruel insult to the memory of a brave
and generous people, and contradict…
* Gib. Hist., vol. i. p. 317. Robins. Res.,
pp. 153, 154, 199, 315, 393.
† Robinson's Res., pp. 199, 315.
o Mosh. Hist., vol. i. p. 192.
Early
Dissidents
…those
historians who lived among them. In their religious
discipline, they considered soundness of faith essential to
409 the
ordinances, yet they tolerated all others in their religious
exercises. The Arian views at an early period had extensive
encouragement among the Gothic tribes.
Though the German nation was divided by
various denominations, yet they all agreed in one point.
They baptized none without previous instruction, but such
they baptized at any time. They also re-baptized all who had
been baptized among Catholics, before they could be received
into their churches; and for this reason were called
Anabaptists. These views on the ordinance embraced by the
Germans, regulated their conduct in their religious
societies wherever they formed a colony among other people;
as may be traced in Spain, Lombardy, Africa, Italy, and
France.* Mezeray, the French historian, says, the
Burgundians, a people of Germany who had received the
430 Christian
faith, visited France so early as 430, and obtained a
settlement at Vienne and Lyons.
3. The freedom of religious ordinances in
Germany being destroyed by Charles the Great, makes it
necessary that we should digress. Cyprian, Austin, and
Innocent used every means to comprehend all infants in the
Christian Church by baptism, on account of original sin; but
these proved successful only where the mental and moral
character was degenerated from apostolic simplicity. In
517, a canon was
made by seven bishops at Girona, in Spain, enjoining baptism
for babes if they would not suck their mother's breasts; and
in which…
* Id., pp. 99, 167, 199, 393.
…cases of danger, Gregory, the pope, allowed
one immersion 789
to be valid baptism. In 789, Charles the Great resolved to
subdue the Saxons or destroy them, unless they accepted of
life on the condition of professing the Christian religion
agreeably to the Roman ritual. On pain of death the Saxons,
with their infant offspring, were to receive baptism.
Germany in time was subdued, and religious liberty
destroyed. The king took an oath of fidelity of them and
received pledges for the fulfillment of his stipulations.*
In this way the religious privileges of these and other
nations were infringed on, and by these and similar means
Christianity under state patronage, made rapid progress for
ages, as detailed in the works of hierarchists. To make the
conversion of these people accord with the gospel record,
apostles were sent to them, but the Germans were exceedingly
jealous of such binaries commissioned ministers of religion.
These apostles of Rome preached up trine immersion, but said
nothing of infants. Success attended the imperial commands;
other kingdoms were visited in virtue of the same authority,
and converted from fear of the carnal weapon. The evidence
of their complete conversion was made apparent by their
baptism. Wooden tubs and other utensils were placed in the
open air, and the new converts with their children were
immersed naked into the profession of Christianity. This
indelicacy in the mode originated with the advocates of
minor baptism as already shown: it has never been practised
in Baptist communities. This mandate of Charles is the first
legal authority for infant baptism, † and we ask if the
mental character must not have…
* Mezeray's Fr. Hist., p. 103.
†Robins. Hist. Bap., pp. 268, 282,
&c.
…been exceedingly low, to enforce such terms
of denudation on the female portion of candidates? We
repudiate the charge, and leave the blot on those who were
guilty of the practice.*
4. The wilds and forests of Germany would
prove asylums to dissenters through the rise and assumption
of the man of sin. That Germany was inhabited by persons of
this description is evident, and that such persons must have
been very active in disseminating the truth becomes plain,
since it is recorded that the Baptist itinerant preachers,
could in their travels pass, during the ninth century,
850 through the
whole German empire, and lodge every night at the house of
one of their friends, † It is very probable these traveling
ministers were Paulicians or Faterines from Bulgaria or
Italy. They were termed by Catholics anabaptist preachers,
o Their sentiments of religion
are learned, and their views of the ordinances proved, from
their confession of faith, which asserts, "In the beginning
of Christianity there was no baptizing of children; and
their forefathers practised no such thing:" and "We do from
our hearts acknowledge that baptism is a washing, which is
performed with water, and doth hold
1024 out the
washing of the soul from sin."
S
In 1024, a company of men out of Italy visited and
traveled through whole provinces preaching the gospel, and
were exceedingly successful in enlightening many and drawing
them from the catholic cause. These disciples…
* Wall's Hist., vol. ii., p. 379, and Bap.
Mag., vol. i, p., 435, from Vossius.
† Mosh. Hist, vol. ii. p.
224. Twisk's Chro., lib. 13, p. 546. dark's Martyr, p. 76,
&c. Gillie's Historical Collection, vol. i. p. 32. Bap.
Mag., vol. i. p. 454.
o
Robins. Res., pp. 467, 513.
S
Meming in Meringus' His. of Bap., pt. 2, p. 738. Junius, p.
77.
Testimony
of Evervimus
….of Gundulphus have been referred to, where
we proved they disallowed of infant baptism.*
It is allowed by Mosheim, that many dissenters of the
Paulician character, in this century, led a wandering life
in Germany, where they were called Gazari, i. e.. Puritans.
These good men grounded their plea for religious freedom on
Scripture, and were called brethren and sisters of the free
Spirit, while their animated devotion gained them the name
of Beghards.† When this term first sprung up in Germany, it
was used to designate a person devout in prayer: at after
periods it was used to point out all those communities which
were distinct from Rome, and thus in time it was given to
persons who only had the garb of religion.o
Twisk, upon the 1100
year 110, asserts that the Waldenses did practice believers'
baptism, S We
have, under 1140
date 1140, a written by Evervimus, of
Stainfield, in the diocese of Cologne, in Germany, to
Bernard, Abbot of Clairval, wherein he speaks to the
following effect: There have been some heretics lately
discovered here which after conference, and not being able
to recover them, they were committed to the flames, which
they bore with astonishing patience, and even joy. Their
heresy is this: they say the church is among them, because
they only follow the steps of Christ, and continue in the
true imitation of the true apostolic life, not seeking the
things of the world, possessing neither house, lands, nor
any property, nor did he give his disciples leave to possess
anything. * * * We the poor of Christ, who have no certain
abode, fleeing from one city to…
* Jortins' Ecc. Rem., vol. v. p. 27.
†Ecc. Hist., vol. ii. p. 224,
&c.
o
Ecc. Hist. Cent. 13, c. 5,
S
40.
S
Chro. lib. 11, p. 423.
Waldo's
Travels
…another, like sheep in the midst of wolves,
do endure persecution with the apostles and martyrs. They
say much on the baptism of the Holy Ghost which they support
from scripture. They call themselves elect, and say, every
elect have power to baptize others whom they find worthy,
but they contemn our baptism * * * and give their ordinance
to those only who are come to age, as they do not believe in
infant baptism.* "I must," says the writer, "inform you
also, that those of them who have returned to our church,
tell us that they had great numbers of their persuasion
scattered almost everywhere; and as for those who were
burnt, they, in the defence they made of themselves, told us
that this heresy had been concealed from the time of the
martyrs; and that it had existed in Greece (among the
Paulicians) and other countries." Bernard was exceedingly
offended with these Baptists for deriding the Catholics
because they baptized infants, prayed for the dead, and
maintained a state of purgatory, &c.†
1170
5. The severity of the Pontiff's measures adopted against
Peter Waldo, constrained him to leave Lyons, with a valuable
portion of its inhabitants, for other kingdoms. For some
time he continued to publish the gospel with great success,
through Dauphiny, Picardy, and various parts of the German
states, concluding 1180
labor of twenty years in a province of Bohemia,
o At Salt and Lun, as before
observed, mention is made by Crantz of a colony of Waldenses
settling.
S The
followers of Waldo visited many kingdoms with the New
Testament translation, while some of…
* Allix's
Ch. Pied., c. 16, pp. 140—143.
†
Jones's Led, vol. ii. p. 247.
oLon.
Ency., Art. Reform.
S
Robins. Res., pp. 479, 527.
…this persuasion settled in the Netherlands.*
These emigrants, coming from Picardy into Bohemia and
Germany, were commonly called PICARDS by catholics and
historians. † Of their views on Justification we have
already enlarged in the Bohemian section. Wherever these
people went, they sowed the seeds of reformation. The
countenance and blessing of heaven attended their labors,
not only in the places where Waldo had labored, but in more
distant regions. In Alsace, and along the Rhine, these
doctrines spread extensively. Persecution ensued;
thirty-five citizens of Mentz were consumed to ashes in one
fire, in the city of Bingen, and eighteen in Mentz itself.
The bishops of Mentz and Strasburg breathed nothing but
vengeance and slaughter against them, and at the latter
city, where Waldo himself is said to have narrowly escaped
apprehension, eighty persons were committed to the flames.
Multitudes died praising God, and in the confident hope of a
blessed resurrection. But the blood of the martyrs became
the seed of the church: and in Bulgaria, Croatia, Dalmatia,
and Hungary, churches were planted principally from the
labors of one Bartholomew, of Carcassonne, which societies
flourished throughout the thirteenth century.
o
6. Whatever injury the society sustained by
persecution, must have been in some measure repaired by a
corresponding class coming into Germany out of Italy in the
early 1210 part
of the thirteenth century. These
baptists, with others who had previously settled, became
known by the appellation of brethren of the free Spirit, or
Beghards. It was no uncommon thing, in those…
* Bap. Mag., vol. xiv., p. 51.
†Clark's Martyr, p. 76.
o Jones's Lect., vol. ii., p.
238.
…dark times, to reproach persons for their
devotional conduct, as Massalians, Euchites, Bogomites, and
Beghards, meaning "persons of prayer," which, in our view,
confers on such persons the need of praise. These accessions
from Italy, with numbers of the Albigenses who escaped the
sword and flames in Languedoc, taking refuge in Germany,
will account for the prominency of the Beghards in the
histories of those times, and the establishment of their
reputation at this period.* They first appeared as a
religious body so early as the eleventh century, probably
from the labors of those men already mentioned, 1025, out of
Italy; but came more particularly into reputation during
this century. "Their primitive establishment," says Mosheim,
"was undoubtedly the effect of virtuous dispositions and
upright intentions. A certain number of pious women, both
virgins and widows, in order to maintain their integrity,
and preserve their principles from the contagion of a
vicious and corrupt age, formed themselves into societies,
each of which had a fixed place of residence, and was under
the inspection and government of a female head. Here they
divided their time between exercises of devotion, and works
of honest industry; reserving to themselves the liberty of
entering into a state of matrimony, or quitting the
establishment, whenever they thought proper. All those who
made extraordinary professions of piety and devotion were
called Beguines. The first society of this kind, of which
any account exists, was formed in the
1226 beginning of
this country, and was followed by so many institutions of a
like nature in France, Germany, Flanders and Holland, that,
towards the middle…
*Mosh. Hist., vol. ii., p. 299, and
Robins. Res., p. 516.
Confession
of Their Faith
…of this century, there was scarcely a city
of any note which had not its beguinage or vineyard. Cant.
viii. 12. Ps. lxxx. 15. This example of the women was
followed by corresponding institutions for men, and these
pious persons were, in the style of the age, called Beghards
and Beguines, and, by a corruption of that term usual among
the Flemish and Dutch, Bogards; but from others, at an after
period, they were denominated Lollards. The hours not
appropriated to devotion among the Beguines, were employed
in weaving, embroidering, and other manual labors of various
kinds. The poor, the sick, and disabled among them, were
supported by the pious liberality of such opulent persons as
were friendly to the order. The same religious views and
purposes were adopted by the different establishments of men
and women.*
7. We shall now exhibit our claim to these
pious Waldenses, so far as it respects the ordinance. We own
their religious views are not fully known. They thought
Christianity wanted no comment but a pious walk; and they
professed their belief of that by being baptized, and their
love to Christ and one another by receiving the Lord's
Supper. † Jacob Merning says that he had, in the German
tongue, a confession of faith of the Baptists, called
Waldenses; which declared the absence of infant baptism in
the early churches of these people, that their forefathers
practised no such thing, and that people of this faith and
practice made a prodigious spread through Poland (yea,
Poland was filled with themo),
Lombardy, Germany, and…
* Mosh. Hist., vol. ii, p. 400, note, and De
Beghardis et Beguinabus Corn. Rob. Res., pp. 532. &c.
† Rob. Res., p. 527.
oId.
p. 557.
…Holland.* These people re-baptized such as
joined their churches, as the Waldenses had done in early
ages;† and though a law was made against the Picards for
re-baptizing, yet they suffered burning in the hand, and
banishment, rather than forego what they considered their
duty.o
Dr. Wall, who is a candid opponent, says, the Beghards were
also called Picards or Pighards. They spread themselves over
the great territory of Upper Germany; they abominated
popery; they chose their pastors from among married men;
they mutually called one another brother and sister; they
owned no other authority than the Scriptures; they slighted
all the doctors, both ancient and modem; their ministers
wore no garments to celebrate communion, nor do they use any
collection of prayers but the Lord's prayer; they believed
or owned little or nothing of the sacraments of the catholic
church; such as came over to their church must every one be
baptized anew in mere water; they believe that the bread and
wine do only, by some occult signs, represent the death of
Christ—that the sacrament was instituted by Christ to no
other purpose but to renew the memory of his passion, &c.
&c.
S In
this statement may be discovered a family likeness of those
churches in the south of France. Their renouncing worldly
possessions; their mode of living in large communities;
their distinction into perfect and imperfect classes; with
their allowed piety, support their claim of descent from the
early Vaudois. We may be permitted to admire the motive and
design of the institutors of such establishments, and
particularly the spirit which animated, guided, and bound
up…
*Meringus'
Hist. of Bap., pt. 2, p. 738, and upon Cent. 13, p. 737, and
Montantus, p. 86.
† Rob. Res., p. 506.
o
Id. p. 518.
S
Hist. of Inf. Bap., pt. 2, c. 7,
S
4, pp. 270-1.
Denominational
Views
…these societies in unity for centuries. The
object of its members must have been the restoring of
Christianity to its native simplicity, original purity, and
benign aspect. The seven concluding verses in the second of
Acts appear the rule of guidance in these communities. Their
extensive interests through the German empire accord with
the moving shoals of the Anabaptists in a future period.
8. These dissenting communities had their
respective schools, at which many of the nobility were
educated. Uladislaus II. was prevailed upon in 1140 to sign
an edict against the Vaudois or Picards; but the influence
of the nobles rose above the sovereign, and rendered the law
void.* In 1210 the dissenters had become so numerous and so
odious to the Catholic clergy, that Otho IV., at their
entreaty, granted an edict against them. A severer measure
was adopted by Frederick II., which extended over all the
imperial cities, in 1220; and, in the hands of the
inquisitors, entailed misery on the people. † The cruel
measures awakened in the lower orders of the people
retaliating feelings; these received the officers of the
pope with clubs, stones, daggers, and poison. The first
martyr 1228 was
friar Conrad, who was killed in Germany while he was
preaching against liberty in religion. No means had been
left untried to rid France of the Albigenses, which had been
so far successful as to destroy one million lives,
o While the pontiff was
devising means to free Gascony of a section of those
heretics, he and his conclave were suddenly alarmed by the
news, that the work of reform, which, according to his hope,
had been so often…
* Rob.
Res., p. 532.
† Rob. Res., p. 412, and see
above, sect. 6,
S
13—15.
o
P. Personius in Claude's Def. preface, p. 61. -Monthly
Review, Feb. 1815, p. 222. Simondi's Hist. of the Crusades:
passim.
Persecutions
and Deaths
…extinguished, had now made its appearance in
the very heart of Germany; and that the city of STETTIN was
infected by the same heretics who, as he fondly hoped, had
been extinguished in Languedoc. Gregory IX. lost no time in
addressing bulls to the bishops of Minden, of Lubeck, and of
Rachhasbourg in Styria, to induce them to preach up a
crusade against the heretics. In order to excite greater
horror against these sectaries, the pontiff represented to
the people, that "a hideoustode was presented at once to the
adoration and caresses of the initiated. The same being, who
was no other than the Devil, afterwards took successively
different forms, all equally revolting, and all offered to
the salutations of his worshippers.* Such were the
accusations the popes often exhibited against the Waldenses;
and coming from the lips of holiness and infallibility
itself, they could not fail of success. The fanatics took up
arms in crowds, under the conduct of the German bishops.
Those among the sectaries who were not in a condition to
carry arms, or who had not taken refuge in the strong
places, 1233
were first brought to judgment; and in the year 1233, "an
innumerable multitude of heretics was burned alive through
Germany; a still greater number was converted." The
crusading army and the inquisitors, to all appearance,
extinguished the heretical light. But such was the nature of
this pestilence, as the court called it, that, like water
which was dammed up in one place by inadequate mounds, it is
sure to break out in another.* Though Frederick II. had, in
the early part of his reign, gone into the cruel measures of
the pope, by not complying with his mandate, he now incurred
his holiness's…
* Jones's Led, v. ii. p. 398.
Walter
Lollard
…displeasure. The pope excommunicated
Frederick, incensed his own son to rebel against him,
nominated another emperor, and thus rent the empire in
twain. During the interdict, the churches were closed, the
bells silent, the dead unburied: the penalty fell upon those
who had no share in the offence.* Frederick wrote letters to
all the princes of Europe, exposing the ambition of the
pontiffs, and calling on all to take from the clergy the
treasures they had amassed. The sufferings to which
thousands were reduced in Germany, from this strife, were
dreadful; yet the pope was insensible to the reigning
misery. This state of affairs continued till the death of
Frederick, 1250. This affray between the emperor and the
pope relieved the sectaries from the cruel and oppressive
designs of their enemies, and afforded these people some
relief and opportunity to propagate their views. Their
increase becomes apparent,
1300 since it is
recorded, that in the beginning of the fourteenth century,
they existed in thousands; and, as observed, in Bohemia they
were considered as amounting to 80,000. Some of these
Picards, while traveling and propagating the truth, were
seized, and suffered; while persecution scattered others
into various provinces and kingdoms, whose efforts and
labors were apparent in the multitudes which arose at the
dawn of the reformation, in this empire. †
1315
9. A bold intrepid teacher was raised up among the
Beghards, or Picards, in 1315, in the person of WALTER
LOLLARD, who became an eminent barb or pastor among them,
and from whom the Waldenses were called Lollards,
o dark says, Lollard stirred up
the…
* Hallam's Middle Ages, vol. ii. pp. 240-3.
† Bishop Newton's Diss. On
he Prophec., vol. ii. p. 225.
oWall's Hist., vol. ii. p. 272.
…Albigenses by his powerful preaching,
converting many to the truth, and defending the faith of
these people.* Moreland asserts he was in great reputation
with the Waldenses, for having conveyed their doctrines into
England,† where they prevailed all over the kingdom,
o Mosheim remarks, that that
Walter was a Dutchman, and was a chief among the Beghards,
or brethren of the free Spirit.
He was a man of learning and of remarkable
eloquence, and famous for his writings.
S
Walter was in unity of views in doctrine and practice
with the Waldenses. || He was a laborious and successful
preacher among the Baptists who resided on the Rhine; but
his converts are said to have covered all England.
([
The Lollards rejected infant
1320 baptism as a
needless ceremony.** In 1320,
Walter Lollard was apprehended and burnt. In him the
Beghards on the Rhine lost their chief, leader, and
champion. His death was highly detrimental to their affairs,
but did not, however, ruin their cause; for it appears they
were supported by men of rank and great learning, and
continued their societies in many provinces of Germany.††
1330 10. About
1330, these people were grievously harassed and oppressed in
several parts of Ger many, by an inquisitor, named Eachard,
a Jacobin monk. After inflicting cruelties for a length of
time, with great severity, upon the Picards, he was induced
to investigate the causes and reasons of their separation
from the church of Rome. The force of truth ultimately
prevailed over…
* Martyr.,
p. 76.
†Hist., p. 30.
oAllix's
Ch. Pied., c. 22, p. 202.
S
Hist., vol. ii. p. 509.
|| Gilly's Nar., p. 78.
([ Allix ubi sup.
**Lon.Ency., Art. Loll.
Collier's Eccl. Hist., vol. i. b. 7, p. 619.
†† Moth. Hist. ut sup.
Increase
of Adherents
…all his prejudices. His own conscience
attested that many of the errors and corruptions which they
charged on that apostate church really existed; and finding
himself unable to disprove the articles of their faith by
the Word of God, he confessed that truth had overcome him,
gave glory to God, and entered into the communion of the
Waldensian churches, which he had been engaged in
persecuting even to death. The news of his conversion
aroused the ire of the inquisitors. Emissaries were
dispatched in pursuit of him; he was at length apprehended
and conveyed to Heidelberg, where he was committed to the
flames.*
11. The Baptists who inhabited those cities
that lay On the Rhine, especially at Cologne, had
considerable accessions
1407 from the labors of John Huss, who, in 1407,
became a bold champion in the cause of truth. He taught the
same doctrines as Lollard and Wickliff; he was popular, and
his discourses were full of those truths charged on the
Anabaptists. John Huss, with Jerome, traveled and labored
for the interests of the Redeemer; consequently dissenters
were multiplied in the empire, by conversions and by
accessions from other kingdoms. These persons, reasoning on
the principles laid down by Huss and Jerome, on the
sufficiency of the Scriptures to guide them in the affairs
of the soul, entertained the same ideas of religion as the
old Vaudois did; and with their successors, the Beghards,
they became incorporated. They were indiscriminately called
Waldenses, or Picards; and they all, says Robinson,
re-baptized; but they entertained views
1416 widely
different on other subjects.† The deaths of Huss and Jerome,
accompanied with efforts…
*
Jones's Lect., vol. ii. p. 428.
† Resear., pp. 481, S13.
…on the part of the clergy to excite the
people to destroy heretics, awakened in these people a
conviction of their danger. They therefore formed the plan
of leaving Upper Germany for the lower parts of the empire;
but the vigorous opposition of their enemies, who learned
their design, prevented them realizing their concerted
object.* They were aroused now to defend their privileges.
The emperor Sigismund, a dissolute man, was devoted to the
clergy, and promised them uniformity in religion. The
nonconformists of all classes, throughout the empire, saw
all their religious and civil liberties at stake. John de
Trocznow, commonly called Ziska, from his having only one
eye, determined, as the last defence, to take arms, as
already stated. Having raised his standard, Ziska found
himself, in a few weeks, at the head of fifty thousand
troops. See Bohemia.
1457
12. In 1457, a great number of Waldenses were discovered
by inquisitors in the diocese of Eiston in Germany, who were
put to death. These sufferers confessed that they had among
them, in that district, twelve barbs or pastors, who labored
in the work of the ministry. It appears, from what
Trithemius relates, who lived at this time, that Germany was
full of Waldenses prior to the Reformation by Luther; for he
mentions it as a well-known fact, that so numerous were
they, that in traveling from Cologne to Milan, the whole
extent of Germany, they could lodge every night with persons
of their own profession; and that it was a custom among
them, to affix certain private marks to their signs and…
* Wall's Hist., pt. 2, p. 272. Mosh. Hist.,
vol. ii. p. 509.
Numbers
of Waldenses
…gates, whereby they might be known to each
other.* This is allowed by the best of our historians, and
conceded by Mosheim.† who asserts, "before the rise of
Luther or Calvin, there lay concealed, in almost all the
countries of Europe, particularly in Bohemia, Moravia,
Switzerland, and Germany, many persons who adhered
tenaciously to the doctrine of the Dutch Baptists, which the
Waldenses, Wickliffites, and Hussites had maintained, some
in a more disguised, and others in a more open and public
manner; viz. that the kingdom of Christ, or the visible
church he had established upon earth, was an assembly of
true and real saints, and ought therefore to be inaccessible
to the wicked and unrighteous, and also exempt from those
institutions which human prudence suggested, to oppose the
progress of iniquity, or to correct and reform
transgressors. This maxim is the true source of all the
peculiarities that are to be found in the religious doctrine
and discipline of the Baptists. It is evident that these
views were approved of by many before the dawn of the
reformation."
The emperor's opinion of the Picards, and his
physician's concurrence of their views and practice, being
nearer to apostolic precedent than any other religious sect,
has been already recorded. Their bitterest enemies, who were
eye-witnesses of their actions, say. They resembled the
ancient Donatists; their lives were blameless, but their
doctrine was heretical: their simplicity, innocence,
fidelity, and industry, are admirable; but their doctrines
are damnable.o
They made no figure in the world, says Voltaire; but they
laid open the dangerous truth which is implanted in every
breast, that mankind are all born equal.
S
* Danvers' Hist., p. 25.
† Ecc. Hist., vol. iii. p.
320.
o
Rob. Res., p. 566.
S
Rob. Bap., p. 484.
State
of Germany
1490
13. At the conclusion of the fifteenth century,
Germany was divided into sixteen circles, and
governed by sovereign princes, whose tyrannical oppression
would exceed belief, were they not well attested;
consequently the peasants or boors were slaves every where!
This state of oppression and beggary should be taken into
consideration by the censurers of those times and people.
The peasants had several times attempted in Germany, as
1491 in
Switzerland, to obtain their freedom.
In 1491, they aimed to recover their birth-right, but
failed. In 1502, another attempt proved alike abortive.*
The princes and ecclesiastics continued to be supreme
tyrants, rioting in luxury wrung from their respective
peasants. The ignorance of the priests was extreme. Numbers
of them could not read, and few had ever seen a Bible. Many,
on oath, declared they knew not that there was a New
Testament. These officers of religion held no intercourse
with the laity, and their manner of giving them instruction
was accompanied with a haughty superiority: "Ye that be lay
people, ye shall know,—that there be ten commandments," &c.,
&c.† Yet, this ignorant and lordly class was supported at an
enormous expense. The taxes of the state, the luxury of
princes, and the ponderous burden of tithes for the support
of the church were all produced by the labor of the
peasants; consequently, the situation, to a people, who,
from early times, had been distinguished by the love of
liberty, became insufferable.o
Besides, their present thraldom was increasingly felt, from
their witnessing and hearing the successful efforts of the…
* Rob. Res., p. 537, &c.
† Rob. Bap., p. 296.
o Mosh. Hist., vol. iii. p. 50,
note.
…peasants in Switzerland. Such was the
vassalage of Christendom at this period, to the church of
Rome, that the pontiff appeared to feel no apprehensions of
the general tranquility being disturbed.* The church was
made up of monsters, living in the most complicated crimes,
and the greater portion of the community had become
profoundly stupid.† Here is the climax of a state church!!!
14. The severity of the inquisitors, and the
watchful conduct of the state clergy, had occasioned the
detection and removal of every public champion of reforming
principles, almost as soon as he avowed his sentiments,
which is apparent in every part of history; and, were the
records collected, the account of those of the Baptist
persuasion, who have suffered martyrdom solely on the
account of religion, would make a large book.o
Under these successive losses, the Waldenses continued to
disseminate the truths of the gospel by means of all the
members of their community. The Baptists appear, through
successive ages, opposed to worldly greatness, and always at
variance with the secular maxims of securing success by
human learning and tithes of distinction; they moved
silently on, scattering in their walks the seeds of life.
The least mental attainment in the Christian brother among
them, was encouraged, and placed in requisition to the cause
of truth, which awakened anger and contempt among the state
clergy, for desecrating the holy order. Their societies were
consequently of a missionary cast, which proved an extensive
blessing to successive centuries. This view only will
account for their numbers in this and other empires and
kingdoms, through the…
* Jones's Lect, vol. ii. p. 503.
† Rob. Res., p. 301.
o Bayle's Diet. Anab. F.
…reign of the man of sin. Such was their
procedure down to the sixteenth century, when they perceived
several learned men, and also through their means, several
among the unlettered of the people, were beginning to expose
the darkness arising from error, superstition, and a lack of
religious knowledge. They lived less retired than they had
formerly done, and engaged to come forward with others, to
diffuse the light of a purer religious knowledge, and to
demolish the Romish superstition as much as it was in their
power.* They did not scruple to draw many over from the
Romish church in a very open way, incorporating them with
themselves by re-baptization. "This re-baptizing," said
Bishop Bossuet, "is an open declaration, that in the opinion
of the brethren, the Catholic church has lost baptism.†" To
further the work of reform, many of the brethren itinerated
through various districts, and were reproached with the name
of "the wandering Anabaptists."o
Among these Anabaptists, were Hetzer and Denck, who
published translations of parts of Scripture.
S
Multitudes of minds were by these means instructed in
the truths of the gospel, and many learned, enlightened, and
eloquent men only waited for some opening in Providence, to
advocate more fully and publicly, the gospel of Christ. ||
But, amidst all the sectaries of religion, and the teachers
of the gospel in Germany at this time, the Baptists best
understood the doctrine of religious liberty, to them,
therefore, the peasants turned then eyes for counsel ;([ and
to their immortal honor "be it recorded, that the Baptists
were always on the side of liberty. Under whatever
government they could realize…
* Mezeray's
Fr. Hist., p. 618.
† Rob. Hist. of Pap. p. 463.
oRob.
Res. p. 513.
S
M'Crie's Italy, p. 178.
|| Lon. Ency. vol. xviii. p.
669, Reform. Jones's Lect., vol.
ii. 511.
([Rob. Res., p. 545.
Baptists
Advocate Liberty
…this boon, whether Pagan, Saracen, or
Christian; domestic or foreign; that dynasty which would
guard their freedom, was their government. In this respect,
like the apostles, they paid no regard to its religion,
civil government was their object.* This might be traced in
all their migratory movements, from the Italian dissenters
to the Rhode Island settlement. †
1500
15. We have now detailed the history of the Puritans through
several nations, and under various names, and shall by these
records, have proved at the Reformation, That the Baptists'
has been the only Christian community which has stood since
the days of the apostles; and as a Christian society, which
has preserved pure the doctrines of the gospel through all
ages.o
These societies we shall find perpetuated in a few years,
under Menno Simon's fostering care; whose creed will speak
their affinity to the Vaudois, and though many, in claiming
relation to these people, have disputed some things in their
practice, none ever denied that they baptized only adults on
a profession of faith, before they received them into their
communion.
S
16. The sectaries or Picards, in itinerating,
had been successful in bringing persons of all classes over
to their views and community, from the Catholic church.
Their conduct in re-baptizing, awakened the anger of the
Catholic priesthood, and measures were proposed to stay the
growing 1510
evil. Consequently, in 1510, the clergy and bishops
prevailed on the sovereign to use means equal to the danger;
whereupon, an edict was made, that…
* Id. p.
641.
† Id. p. 311. Cox and Hoby's
Am. Bap., p. 444.
o
Bap. Mag., vol. xiii. p. 344, A. D., 1821.
S
Rob. Res., p. 508.
…all the Picards, without distinction of sex,
age, or quality, should be slain.* The influence of some
noblemen prevailed for its suspension for eighteen months,
but the edict received the sanction of government at the end
of that term, yet interpositions of Providence prevented its
full execution. The threatening aspect of affairs in
Germany, suggested to the Picards the necessity of
emigrating, and Mosheim asserts, "that the German Baptists
PASSED in SHOALS into Holland and the Netherlands, and in
the course of time, amalgamated with the Dutch Baptists."†
17. "The drooping spirits of this people,"
says the same writer, "who had been dispersed through many
countries, and persecuted everywhere with the greatest
severity, were 1518 revived when they heard that Luther,
seconded by several persons of eminent piety, had
successfully attempted the reformation of the church,
o Consequently, several persons
with the views of the Baptists, made their appearance at the
same time, in different countries; this appears from a
variety of circumstances, especially from this striking one,
that all the Baptist ministers of any eminence, were, before
the Reformation, almost all, heads and leaders of particular
and separate sects, (or congregations.
S The Baptists
occasioned little publicity, and made little noise before
the Reformation, though the most prudent and rational part
of them considered it possible, by human wisdom, industry
and vigilance, to purify the Romish church from the
contagion of the wicked, provided the manners and spirit of
the primitive Christians could but recover their lost
dignity and luster; and seeing the…
*dark's Martyr., p. 127.
†EC.
Hist., c. 16, S 11, p. 336. These shoals accord with
Morell's 800,000 Waldenses.
o
Id. vol. iii. p. 321.
S
Id. p. 323.
Luther's
Conduct
…attempts of Luther, seconded by several
persons of eminent piety, proved so successful, they hoped
the happy period was arrived, in which the restoration of
Rome to purity was to be accomplished, under the divine
protection, by the labors and counsels of pious and eminent
men.*
18. Many religionists, at this period, as
Venner, in the days of Cromwell, were projectors of a new
state of things, others were in anticipation of an unspotted
and perfect church; while some, as we shall see, carried
their speculations into frenzied enthusiasm. † These views
had some encouragement from Luther and the reformers; for
every impartial and attentive observer of the rise and
progress of the Reformation, will ingenuously acknowledge,
that wisdom and prudence did not always attend the
transactions of those that were concerned in this glorious
cause; that many things were done with violence, temerity,
and precipitation.o
Luther had boldly stepped forward, and
1519 set tyranny
defiance. This was known, and was differently viewed by the
religionists throughout Europe, but more particularly
animated those who were addressed by Luther and his
associates. To further the great work, he published the New
Testament in German, wrote letters to the sovereigns of
Europe, broke with the pope, and propelled forward the work
of reformation. To these efforts, he added a work on
1520 Christian
liberty, in the German language, which was read with the
most astonishing avidity, and the contents were communicated
to those who could not read. In this work, Luther speaks of
what he calls…
*Ency. Brit. Anabap.
† Mosh. Hist., vol. iii. p. 232.
o Id. p. 102.
…spiritual liberty, that is, the freedom of
the spirit or mind, in matters of religion; and he assigns
the causes of bondage, to sins, laws, and mandates, which
naturally mean our sinful passions, the laws of magistrates,
and the canons of the church.* The pope denounced Luther,
and he nobly, on Dec. 10, 1520, had a pile of wood erected
without the walls of Wittemburgh, and there in the presence
of a prodigious multitude of all ranks and orders of people,
committed to the flames both the bull that had been
published against him, and the decretals and canons relating
to the pope's supreme jurisdiction. By this act, Luther
publicly declared to the world that he was no longer a
subject to the Roman pontiff; and the man who publicly
commits to the flames the code that contains the laws of his
sovereign, shows thereby, that he has no longer any respect
for his government, nor any design to submit to his
authority, † These zealous and decisive acts of the
reformer, however dignified, impressed the minds of men very
differently, and in the mind of the oppressed peasant, it
awakened a spirit of restless insubordination, which only
waited a suitable season to disclose the inward ferment.o
1521
The boldness of these measures occasioned Luther's being
called to Worms, by Charles V., where he boldly and nobly
pleaded his cause, but was condemned, and to prevent his
sustaining any injury, Frederick caused him to be arrested,
and conveyed privately to the Castle of Wartenberg, where he
divided his time between writing and hunting.
S
19. One benefit the scattered brethren
realized was, the…
* Rob. Res. p. 540.
†Mosh. Hist. vol. iii. p. 40.
oRob.
Res., p. 540.
S
Mosh, Hist., ut sup.
…translation at this period of the whole of
the New Testament by Luther, agreeably to their views, and
his and their sentiments concurred by his translating Matt.
iii. 1, "In those days came John the dipper."* Other parts
of his writings were in perfect accordance with this
sentiment, † So that Luther is charged with being the author
or father of the German dippers, since some of the Catholics
expressly declare they received their first ideas of it from
him.o
Also Moshovius says, that anabaptism was set on foot at
Wittemburgh in 1521, among the Reformers, by Nicholas
Pelargus, or Stork, who had companions with him of very
great learning, as Carolostadius, Melancthon, and others;
this, he says, was done while Luther was lurking in exile.
S In
pursuing this course, and practising only believers'
baptism, these reformers were consistent, as they
professedly took the Scriptures for their guidance. Luther's
views and writings supported such a procedure, since he
declared, "It cannot be proved by the Scriptures that infant
baptism was instituted by Christ, or began by the first
Christians after the apostles." Nearly all the reformers
expressed themselves in similar language about baptism;
besides, all the Puritans, whose support to the cause of
reform was desirable, held these views on the ordinance. The
reformers gave very considerable support to the Baptists in
these measures. || Luther had no great objection to the
Baptists in his early efforts. He encouraged the Muncer of
notoriety, who was a Baptist minister, and so highly
esteemed by Luther, as to be named his Absalom. Their united
efforts greatly increased persons of…
* Rob.
Hist. Bap. p. 442.
† Rob. Res., 542, and Booth's
Paedo. Exam.
oRob.
Res. p. 542.
S
Good and Greg. Cyclo. Anab., Ivimey's Hist., vol. i. p. 18.
|| Bumett's Reform., vol. ii.
p. 110.
…the Baptist persuasion. When the news
reached Luther, of Carlstadt re-baptizing, that Muncer had
won the hearts of the people, and that the reformation was
going 1522 on
in his absence, he on the 6th of March, 1522, flew like
lightning from his confinement, at the hazard of his life,
and without the advice of his patron, to put a stop to
Carolostadt's proceedings.* On his return to Wittemburgh, he
banished Carolostadt, Pelargus, More Didymus, and others,
and only received Melancthon again. †
20. When some of Luther's assistants went
into Bohemia and Moravia, they complained, that between
Baptists and papists they were very much straightened,
though they grew among them like lilies among thorns!o
The success and number of the Baptists "exasperated him to
the last degree;" and he became their enemy, notwithstanding
all he had said in favor of dipping (while he contended with
Catholics on the sufficiency of God's word); but now he
persecuted them under the name of re-dippers, re-baptizers,
or Anabaptists.
S One
thing troubled Luther, and he took no pains to conceal it;
that was a jealousy lest any competitor should step forward,
and put in execution that plan of reformation which he had
laid out: this was his foible; he fell out with Carolostadt,
he disliked Calvin, he found fault with Zuinglius, who were
all supported by great patrons, and he was angry beyond
measure with the Baptists. || His half measures, his
national system, his using the Roman liturgy, his
consubstantiation, his infant baptism, without Scripture or
example, were disliked by the Baptists—yea, the Picards or
Vaudois hated his system;([ and…
* Maclean
in Mosheim, vol. iii. p. 45, ch. 16,
S
18.
†Ivimey ut sup.
o
Rob. Res., p. 519.
S
Id. p. 542.
|| Id. p. 540.
([ Id. p. 541.
…he hated all other sects.* The violence of
Luther sunk his cause into that of a party. † The reformers
differed as widely among themselves about the ordinances, as
they did from others:o
and their spirit of contention subsided into acts of
persecution and reproach.
S But
Mosheim remarks, "there were certain sects and doctors
against whom the zeal, vigilance, and severity of Catholics,
Lutherans, and Calvinists were united. The objects of their
common aversion were the Anabaptists." To avoid the unhappy
consequences of such a formidable opposition, great numbers
retired into Poland, hoping to find a refuge—where they
formed congregations. ||
1522
21. It is at this period the term
Anabaptism was used among Christian brethren.([ The word, in
its strict sense, is expressive of the practice of those who
re-baptize such persons who came from one of their sects to
another; or, as often as any one is excluded from their
communion, and again baptized on being re-admitted into
their fellowship—as Cyprian and the church of Carthage
practised. If the party baptizing disallow the first
ceremony as unscriptural, the repetition of the act guided
by apostolic authority is not re-baptization, but Christian
Baptism. The word,' in a loose sense, has been in use from
the ascendancy of the church in 413, to distinguish those
who disavowed infant baptism, and consequently, not only
baptize persons on a confession of their faith, but baptize,
as it were, again those persons that were in infancy subject
to what they considered a pseudobaptism. The term was now
familiarized from Luther's dislike to the…
* Neal's
Hist. vol. i. p. 93.
† M'Crie's Italy, p. 176.
oCamp.
Lect., p. 445.
S
Rob. Bap., pp. 548, 554.
|| Mosh. Hist., pp. 3.
363, 293.
([ Good and Greg. Cyclo.
Anabap.
…Picards
or re-baptizers.* We have often used the word, not that we
approve it as expressive of our practice, but as conveying
the views of those who, by the word, intended fully to
describe, designate, and reproach the Baptists. A full
history of the people thus designated, is exceedingly
difficult to write;† since, as Mosheim admits, "the true
origin of the Baptist denomination, who espoused the
Mennonite views, and who acquired the stigma of Anabaptists,
by administering anew the rite of baptism to those who come
over to their community, is hid in the remote depths of
antiquity ."o
But baptism may be administered to persons who have received
a rite in some community without incurring Anabaptism; as,
First. When the subject has been
dipped before, he has been rightly instructed into the
essential truths of the gospel, as was the case with the
twelve disciples at Ephesus.
S
When Paul reached this city, he found disciples
baptized, who were ignorant of an important truth, revealed
by John for all candidates to believe: viz., "He shall
baptize you with the Holy Ghost," but these disciples had
heard…
* Ency. Brit. Anabap. Rob. Res.,
p. 517.
† Rob. Bap., p. 465.
o Ecc. Hist., vol. iii., p.
320. Their antiquity may be traced back, viz.:— 1450,
Picards or Waldenses, Wall's Hist., 2, 270.—1420, Hussites,
Crosby, vol. 1, pref. xxxiii. Ivimey, 1, 70.—1176, Waldo and
his followers, Jones's Lect., 2, 486.—1150, Waldenses and
Albigenses, Collier's G. Diet. Anab.— 1140, Amoldists, Facts
Op. to Fict, p. 46.—1135, Henricians, Wall's Hist., 2,
250.—1110, Petrobrussians, Wall, ib.—1049, Berengarians,
Facts, &c., p. 42. Mezeray, p. 229.—1025, Gundulphians,
Jortin's Rem., 5, p. 27.—945, Paterines, Jones's Lect., 2,
p. 254.—714, Vaudois in France and Spain, Rob. Res.,
242.—653, Paulicians, Gibbon's Hist., c. 54, and Alhx's
Pied., c. 15, 138.—311, Donatists, Mosh. Hist., 1, 302.—250,
Novatianists, Ency. Brit. Anab.—56, Ephesians, Acts xix. 2,
&c. Miln. Ch. Hist., C. 1, ch. 14.
S
That Paul baptized these twelve disciples, is most
expressly declared.— ED.
Luther's
Conduct
…nothing of the Holy Ghost, consequently here
was a departure from John's views, and apparent ignorance of
the Author of every sanctifying process. Scriptural views of
baptism, and a knowledge of the Author of our salvation
being essential to a right receiving baptism, led Paul to
instruct these disciples, and then again baptize them.*
Secondly. When repentance and faith,
the indispensable prerequisites, have not been exercised by
the subject, Matt. iii. 8—when the conscience has not chosen
the duty, 1 Pet. hi. 21—and where a personal profession of
faith has not existed, the service is unacceptable to God.
Heb. xi. 6. Rom. xiv. 23.
Thirdly. When the ordinance, in its
administration, does not bear the same analogy to its
primitive design and resemblance of Christ's death and
resurrection, as those did administered by the apostles,
Rom. vi. 4, 1 Cor. xv. 29, it is then another baptism, and
not a New Testament ordinance, since its analogy to
Scripture language is lost.
Fourthly. When, from a multiplicity of
ceremonies, the original design is obscured, and it ceases
to make manifest the disciples of Christ, John i. 31, and
the cleansing properties of his work, Acts xxii. 16, it
ceases to be Christ's appointment. The earliest dissenters
were guided by this view, and yet were not Anabaptists.
In this practice, two motives are apparent in
the conduct of re-baptizers: first, right instruction; and,
secondly, purity of communion. The first view led different
bodies of early professors to re-baptize those who came over
to their communion, from parties whose creed was not in
accordance with their own: and the second, from a desire to
maintain…
* Miln. Ch. Hist, C. 1, ch. 14.
…purity of communion, regulated many early
churches. We know unauthorized rites and ceremonies were
early adopted by many churches. To free the mind of the
candidate from those human rites, and to maintain the
ordinance in its native and simple aspect, occasioned early
dissenters to require those who came to join them from other
churches, to submit to the ordinance in the way they
administered it.*
22. Of all the teachers of religion in
Germany at this period, the Baptists best understood the
doctrine of civil and religious liberty: to them, therefore,
the oppressed Boors, as has been observed, looked for
counsel. The tyranny of the Catholics and Lutherans was
equal in every thing, except extent. Luther never pretended
to dissent from the church, he only proposed to disown the
pope: but in this partial conduct and mope-eyed device, all
could not see with him. Among the Baptists, one of the most
eminent was Thomas Muncer, of Mulhausen, in Thuringia. He
had been a priest, but became a disciple of Luther, and a
favorite with the reformed. This dear son Luther named his
Absalom; and the people so highly approved of him, as to
call him Luther's Curate. He appears to have itinerated and
labored principally in Saxony. While Luther was hunting,
writing, and regaling himself with princes, Muncer was
preaching in the country, and surveying the condition of
their tenants. He saw their miserable bondage; and that,
from Luther's plan of reform, there was no probability of
freedom flowing to the people. He (Luther) only intended to
free the priests -from obedience to the pope, and to enable
the officers of the state to tyrannize over the…
* Robins. Res., p. 212. Jones's Ecc. Led,
vol. i., p. 410.
…people in the name of civil magistrates.
Muncer saw this fallacy, and remonstrated against it. Luther
broke loose from his recluse, and dealt severely with those
who dared in his absence to advance the cause differently to
his plan. With Carolostadt he was severe, but Muncer was
banished for his crime of remonstrance. Muncer now traveled
into various parts, preaching doctrines highly acceptable to
the lower orders. He settled at Mulhausen, and was there
when the peasants rose. It is very probable he now embraced
fully the sentiments of the Baptists, seeing his instruction
to this people was much on the nature of religious liberty,
and illustrative of the errors of Catholicism and
Lutheranism, which he represents as carrying things to the
extreme, without embracing the liberty purchased by the
death of Christ. His instructions conveyed, that a Christian
church ought to consist of virtuous persons, and not, as
Luther taught, to include whole parishes. On these
*principles he formed a church, A. D. 1523, and advised the
members of it to make use of retirement, meditation, and
prayer; to consider the several points of religion for
themselves. The peasants relished his doctrine, and repaired
to Mulhausen in vast numbers, to be instructed and comforted
by Muncer.*
Here was Muncer's crime; and, as Voltaire
remarks, "Luther had been successful in stirring up the
princes, nobles, and magistrates of Germany against the pope
and bishops: Muncer stirred up the peasants against them. He
and his companions went about addressing themselves to the
inhabitants of the country villages in Suabia, Misnia,
Thuringia, and Franconia. They laid open that…
* Robins. Res., pp. 546-8; and Marsh's
Michaelis, vol. iv., p. 542, &c.
…dangerous truth, which is implanted in every
breast, that all men are born equal; saying, that if the
popes had treated the princes like their subjects, the
princes had treated the common people like beasts."*
23. What Luther had said and censured about
the pope's usurpation, he now practiced himself towards
these good men. Carolostadt he followed from place to place,
and got him expelled wherever he settled. Thomas Muncer was
driven in like manner, with others, against whom Luther set
himself, in writing to princes, and publishing, by which he
disturbed society, and stigmatized them as image-breakers
and sacramentarians, or Anabaptists.† On hearing of Muncer's
success, he wrote to the magistrates of Mulhausen, to advise
them to require Muncer to give an account of his call; and
if he could not prove that he acted under human authority,
then to insist on his proving his call from Cod by working a
miracle!!! Lord, what is man! The magistrates and monks
complied with this Lutheran bull, but the people considered
this a refinement on cruelty, especially as coming from a
man whom both the Roman court and the diet of the empire had
loaded with curses, for no other crime than that of which he
accused his brother.
The people now resented the insult; they
expelled from the city Luther's monkish allies; and the
magistrates elected new senators, of whom Muncer was one! To
him, as their only friend, the peasants looked for relief
under oppression.o
24. The tones of authority assumed by Luther,
and his magisterial conduct towards those who differed from
him,…
* Robins. Res., p. 551.
† Id. p. 543, &c.
o
Id. p. 548.
…made it evident that he would be head of the
reformers.* He and his colleagues had now to dispute their
way with hosts of Baptists all over Germany, Saxony,
Thuringia, Switzerland, and other kingdoms, for several
years, † Conferences on baptism were held in different
kingdoms, which continued from 1516 to 1527.o
The support which the Baptists had from Luther's writings
made the reformers' efforts of little effect. At Zurich, the
senate warned the people to desist from the practice of
re-baptizing, but all their warnings were vain. These
efforts to check the increase of Baptists being ineffectual,
carnal measures were 1522
treated. The first edict against Anabaptism was published at
Zurich, 1522, in which there was a penalty of a silver mark
set upon all such as should suffer themselves to be
re-baptized, or should withhold baptism from their children.
And it was further declared, that those who openly opposed
this order should be yet more severely treated.
S This
being insufficient to check immersion, the senate decreed,
like Honorius, 413, that all persons who professed
Anabaptism, or harbored the professors of the doctrine,
should be punished with death by drowning. || It had been
death to refuse baptism, and now it was death to be
baptized; such is the weathercock certainty of state
religion.([ In defiance of this law, the Baptists persevered
in their regular discipline: and some ministers of learned
celebrity realized the severity of the sentence. Many
Baptists were drowned…
* Robins.
Res., p. 542
† Wall's Hist., pt. 2, p 269
Ref., vol, and Danvers Hist, p. 307.
S
Ger. Brandt’s Hist.
Ref vol. ,. B. 2 p. 57.
|| Miln. Ch. Hist., C. 16,
ch. 16. Neal-s Hist, vol. v., p. 127.
([ Rob. Bap., 426.
Opposition
to Baptists
…and burnt.* These severe measures, which
continued for years, had the consent of the reformers, which
injured greatly the Lutheran cause. † It was the cruel
policy of papacy inflicted by brethren. Wherever the
Baptists settled, Luther played the part of a universal
bishop, and wrote to princes and senates to engage them to
expel such dangerous men; but it was their refusing to own
his authority, and admit his exposition of the Scriptures,
which led him to preach and publish books against them,
taxing them with disturbing the peace,
o We have recorded that the
Baptists were the common objects of aversion to Catholics,
Lutherans, and Calvinists, whose united zeal was directed to
their destruction. So deeply were the prejudices interwoven
with the state party, that the knights on oath were to
declare their abhorrence of Anabaptism.
S The
sentiments of these people, and which were so disliked by
statesmen, clergy, and reformers, may be stated under five
views, viz.: "A love of civil liberty in opposition to
magisterial dominion; an affirmation of the sufficiency and
simplicity of revelation, in opposition to scholastic
theology; a zeal for self-government, in opposition to
clerical authority; a requisition of the reasonable service
of a personal profession of Christianity rising out of man's
own convictions, in opposition to the practice of force on
infants—the whole of which they deem superstition or
enthusiasm; and the indispensable necessity of virtue in
every individual member of a Christian church, in
distinction from all speculative creeds, all rites and
ceremonies, and parochial divisions." || These views—to…
* Milner,
Brandt ut sup. Ivimey's Hist., vol. i. p. 17.
†Rob. Res., p. 543.
o
Ib.
S
Mosh. 3, 362.
|| Robins. Bap., p. 482.
Rise
of the Peasants
…the statesman, were adverse to his line of
policy with his peasants; to the clergy, they were
offensive, since it placed every man on a level with the
priesthood, and sanctioned one to instruct another; to the
reformers they were objectionable, since they broke the
national tie, and allowed all persons equal liberty to
think, choose and act in the affaires of the soul: thus
these sentiments were the aversion of all. An edict issued
by Frederick, at a later period, shows how unpalatable these
views were. His majesty expressed his astonishment at the
number of Anabaptists, and his horror at the principal error
which they embraced, which was, that according to the
express declaration of the holy Scriptures (1 Cor. vii. 23),
they were to submit to no human authority. He adds that his
conscience compelled him to proscribe them, and accordingly
he banished them from his dominions on pain of death.*
"This
maxim is a true source of the peculiarities of the
Baptists," says Mosheim, "that the visible church was
exempted from all those institutions which human prudence
suggested:" but this view of religion, the state and the
reformed could not receive. †
25. During the contentions and disputations
of the 1524
reformers and others, the peasants of Suabia groaned in
1524, under their hard servitude, and resolved to seize the
first opportunity to get free. In the November following,
they revolted. The news flew all over Germany, and awakened
restless feeling in the plebeians throughout the empire. The
lords of the soil and the gentry entered into a confederacy,
and agreed to suppress them; and Furstenberg, in the name of
the confederates…
* Rob. Res., p. 525.
†Ecc. Hist., vol. iii. pp. 320, 327.
Luther's
Advice
…rates, went to inquire into their
grievances. They informed him they were Catholics, that they
had not risen on any religious account, and that they
required nothing but a release from their intolerable
secular oppressions, under which they had long groaned, and
which they neither could nor would any longer bear. Others
required relief from 1525
the oppression of abbots. The ensuing spring offered to
others, who had more reason to complain than the preceding
boors, an opportunity to leave their work, and such
assembled in different provinces to the amount of three
hundred thousand men. The doctrine of liberty had been
advocated by all the reformers, while pointing out the
usurped claims of the pope; but none understood or carried
out this liberty into practice but the Baptists,
consequently all eyes were, in this crisis, directed to
Muncer, who now drew up a memorial expressive of their
grievances, and which was presented to their lords, and
dispersed all over Germany. It consists of twelve articles,
on civil and religious liberty. It is allowed to be a
master-piece of the kind, and Voltaire says, "A LYCURGUS
WOULD HAVE SIGNED IT."
These tenets, which all persons now
professedly love, arc still held forth in the views and
writings of Pasdobaptists of these times, as the damnable
anabaptistical errors; but where dwelt the advocate of real
liberty, and where could this boon of paradise have been
found, if there had been no Anabaptists? This was the head
and front of their offending, and on this ground alone they
were everywhere spoken against. In this instrument there is
no heretic but a tyrant, nothing proposed to be hated but
the feudal system, and liberty is the only orthodoxy. This
memorial, when compared with the creed of Ausburg, will
create…
Religious
Liberty Suspended
…feelings of reverence in the Collator for
the mild justice of Muncer and his memorialists! It is the
doom of the poor to be aspersed,
Prov. xiv. 20. At the close of the memorial, the peasants
appealed to Luther. He told them the princes deserved
dethroning, yet their tumults were seditious, and that they
had been seduced by false teachers: that it was foolish to
put all mankind upon a level, and that Abraham had slaves.
He wrote to the princes, and taxed them with having caused
all the present ills by their excess of tyranny, and accuses
them for saying that his doctrine had been the cause of all
this disturbance, threatening them with all the vengeance of
heaven if they persisted in their tyranny and cruelty. The
third publication was addressed to both princes and
peasants, advising both parties to settle their disputes,
and be at peace, for the public good of Germany. These
advices being disregarded, he drew up a fourth, addressed to
the princes, in which he conjures them to unite all their
force to suppress sedition, and to destroy all who resisted
government, i. e., oppression and slavery. These oppressed
men were consequently met by their lords with a sword,
instead of redress; being defeated, they were slaughtered
and reproached, the invariable result and concomitants of
defeat; Muncer, their friend and chief, was put to death.*
26. All men condemned Luther for these
murdering proposals, but in order to relieve himself, he
made the devoted people the scape goat; he and his
colleagues imputed the crimes of the empire to the
Anabaptists, and so escaped!!! From the breaking out of the
rustic war, the empire continued to be in an unsettled
state. "The first…
* Mosh.
Hist, iii. p. 51,
S
22.
…rising," says Sleiden, "was among persons of
the papist communion, the tumults did not originate on the
subject of religion, but from secular exactions.* Religious
liberty had been limited by many from Luther's work, which
caused many to seek both civil and religious freedom, † The
twelve articles, expressive of their grievances, which Magna
Charta they had not power to enforce, "comprehended," says
Osiander, "persons of all persuasions."o
Had Muncer succeeded in procuring liberty for the German
peasants, ten thousand tongues would have celebrated his
praise in different ages, devotions would have been rendered
to him as to Titus. Flaminius and many historians would have
vied to crown his memory with unfading honors. The site of
such an achievement would have been equalled only by
Runnymede, and its honors more permanent and glorious than
those of Nasby Held. All this occurred ten years before the
affair of Munster. It was not therefore an affair about
baptism, but the feudal system: it was not water, it was
government that was the question, and the Baptists had the
glory of first setting the reformed an example of getting
rid of tyranny. S
The routed and scattered remains of this vast body of men
sowed, in the different provinces, the seeds of discontent,
which, after keeping the empire in a feverish state for some
years, ultimately led to some redress. Many new projectors
were among this people, as to the nature and extent of
Christ's kingdom, which ideal projects were carried out so
far in succeeding years by some, as to bespeak delirium in
its advocates.
* Danvers'
Hist., p. 322 from Guodolius.
† Ib. from Spanheim.
o
Ib.
S
Rob. Res., p. 544, &c.
Disputes
About Baptism
1526
27. Disputations on the subject of baptism continued through
this and the ensuing year: and the system of drowning those
the reformers could not convert was still in prevalent use.
The reformers' influence and reflection on the Baptists,
with the Catholic hatred, made the situation of our brethren
very critical, independent of the iron bondage many endured
under their lords. From the views of the Baptists held on
civil and religious liberty, and the memorial of the
peasants' grievances being drawn up by one of that body, and
approved by all; which memorial struck at the root of the
lords' tyranny, occasioned great jealousy in the minds of
princes, 1527
and occasioned their attention and displeasure to be
constantly directed towards them.
Some emigrated to England, where their circumstances
were not 1529
improved. Erasmus said of this people (1529), "The
Anabaptists (in Switzerland), although they are very
numerous, have no church in their possession. These persons
are worthy of greater commendation than others, on account
of the harmlessness of their lives.
1532 But they are
oppressed by all other sects."
When Frederick, in 1532, conferred privileges on
1533 the German
protestants, he excepted the Baptists. In 1533, a reward of
twelve guilders was promised to any person who should
apprehend any anabaptistical teacher, and all harboring them
was forbidden.* "They were," says Dr. Robertson, "this year,
1534, watched so closely by the magistrates as to find it
necessary to emigrate into other quarters."† Their
religious…
* Mezeray's Fr. Hist., p. 597. Brandt's Hist.
of the Reform., vol. i. p. 60.
† Hist. of Charles V., b. 5, p. 73.
Baptists
Persecuted
…liberties
being destroyed, their views under the greatest reproach,
their lives and property liable to injury, before Munster
affray, will show their critical situation, and account for
their succumbing conduct to the reformers at this period. It
only wanted some local commotion to involve such suspected
subjects in ruin. The brethren in different parts had sent
to the reformers, desiring their countenance and support.
Erasmus genteelly declined. Luther did not like them; he
reproached them with anabaptism. They made the best apology
they could, admitting they had always re-baptized such as
joined their churches, but they said, so had Cyprian in
early ages. Learned men were to confer with them on this
point. This year seems
1533 to have been taken up in forming a more
unreserved intercourse between the brethren and the
reformers. By intercourse and compromise, and a negociation
of some years, and after a vast deal of trouble, a
conjunction was effected. Some of these societies had
altered and amended their creed eight times in a quarter of
a century, and now with the last edition presented to
Luther, they confessed they had studied the subject of
church government and discipline more diligently, in which
also they had been assisted by some eminent divines, they
had concluded with the reformers, that there was no need to
re-baptize, and they had now left off the practice, and
moreover had unanimously agreed never to re-baptize in
future, nor ever, with Luther and his friends, to call
re-baptization baptism, but ANA-BAPTISM.* Thus what the
Moravian and other brethren long sought for, they at length
obtained,—a comprehension in the establishment.
To…
*Robins. Res., p. 506.
…their creed which had been so frequently
improved, the last of which met the reformers' approbation,
Luther wrote a reface; observing, that he had formerly been
prejudiced against the brethren called Picards though he had
always admired their aptness in the Scriptures. He admitted
they had not the advantage of learned languages, and had
expressed themselves obscurely, the confession, however, (of
his colleagues' amending), was such a learned performance,
that it had no need of his recommendation! It is evident
Luther brought many of the old Baptists to his terms, while
every circumstance in the empire combined to force these
people under Luther's wing, or out of his
1535 jurisdiction.
The imperial edict was published, the bells were rung, and
the reproach of Picardism or Anabaptism was professedly
rolled away from these conformists, and our only surprise is
to find such multitudes in succeeding years not
comprehended. "Their quiet became carnal security, their
liberty glided into licentiousness, and," says Comenius,
"the pious wept."* The year previous to this conjunction,
Calvin appeared as a public teacher, and his views of truth,
on being known, were preferred, and found to be more in
accordance with the Baptists' views than Luther's;
consequently "many of the Waldenses, or Sacramentarians,"
says Merezay, "united with the reformed church."† It is easy
to perceive the vestibule to these national churches was
Paedobaptism.
28. The city of Munster, in Westphalia,
became the site of great tumult and disorder. One Bernard
Rotman, a Paedobaptist minister of the Luthem persuasion,
assisted by other ministers of the reformation, began the…
*Id. p. 507.
† Fr. Hist. p. 597.
…disturbances at Munster in opposing the
Papists (1532).* Spanheim and Osiander say, that the first
stir in this city of Munster was about the protestant
religion, when the synod and ministers opposed the papists
with arms, before any Anabaptist came.† While things were in
a confused state in this city, many persons of a fanatical
character came into Munster. "They gave out that they were
messengers from heaven invested with a divine commission to
lay the foundations of a new government, a holy and
spiritual empire, and to destroy and overturn all temporal
rule and authority, all human and political institutions."
Confusion and uproar immediately prevailed in Munster. These
frenzied people began to erect a new republic, calling it
the New Jerusalem. Now what must have been the state of this
city, previous to these madmen's arrival? Would a few
fanatics have destroyed the order of a well-governed civic
body? The subversion of Munster by so few frenzied
individuals, proves its previous perversion by some
tumultuous proceedings. Venner's rebellion is in close
affinity with this affair, yet London was easily rescued
from similar disorders.o
The Bishop of Munster, assisted
1535 by German
princes, besieged the city in 1535, when the enthusiastics
were all subdued, taken, and put to death in the most
terrible and ignominious manner. This disorderly and
outrageous conduct of a handful of Anabaptists with others,
drew upon the whole body, who was previously under ban,
heavy marks of displeasure from the greatest part of the
European princes. S
Cassander, a papist, declares that many Anabaptists
in…
* Mosh.
Hist. C. 16, p. 2,
S
7, note q, by Machine. Ivimey's Hist., vol. i., p. 16, from
Budneus.
† Danvers' Hist., p. 324.
oIvimey's
History, vol. i., p. 306—313.
S
Mosh. Hist., vol. iii., p. 78.
Sufferings
of the Baptists
…Germany did resist and oppose the opinions
and practices of those at Munster, and taught the contrary
doctrine.* Nevertheless, as they were, to a man, for civil
and religious freedom, and at the same time opposed to
Luther's articles, the severest laws were enacted against
them the second time, in consequence of which, the innocent
and guilty were alike involved in the same terrible fate,
and prodigious numbers were devoted to death in the most
dreadful 1536
form.† In almost all the countries of Europe, an unspeakable
number of Baptists preferred death in its worst forms, says
Mosheim, to a retraction of their sentiments. Neither the
view of the flames that were kindled to consume them, nor
the ignominy of the gibbet, nor the terrors of the sword,
could shake their invincible constancy, or make them abandon
tenets that appeared dearer to them than life and all its
enjoyments.o
"It is true, indeed," says the same writer, "that many
Baptists suffered death, not on account of their being
considered rebellious subjects, but merely because they were
judged to be incurable heretics; for in this century, the
error of limiting the administration of baptism to adult
persons only, and the practice of re-baptizing such as had
received that sacrament in a state of infancy, were looked
upon as most flagitious and intolerable heresies. Those who
had no other marks of peculiarity than their…
* Ivimey's Hist., vol. i., p. 309.
† Mosh. Hist., vol. iii., p. 79.
oId. p. 326. "And when they
shall have finished their testimony, the beast shall kill
them—and the same hour a tenth part of the city fell," Rev.
xi. 7—13. It is rather remarkable that, while these
witnesses were suffering in every province from Catholics,
Lutherans, and Calvinists, in the same hour or period Henry
VIII., by an act, 1536, separated England, the tenth part of
the pope's dominion, from his authority.
…administering baptism to the adult, and
their excluding the unrighteous from the external communion
of the church, ought to have met with milder treatment."*
Many of those who followed, he wiser class of Baptists, nay,
some who adhered to the most extravagant factions, were men
of upright intentions and sincere piety, who were seduced
into fanaticism by their ignorance and simplicity on the one
hand, and by a laudable desire of reforming the corrupt
state of religion on the other. †
29. While the terrors of death, in the most
awful forms, were presented to the view of this people, and
numbers of them were executed every day, without any
distinction being made between the innocent and the guilty,
those who…
* Mosh. Hist., vol. iii., pp. 326-7.
† Id. 325. A combination of
circumstances led to this unhappy affair. An anxious and
laudable desire for the extension of Christ's kingdom was
evident before the name of Luther was known. The wiser sort
of Baptists tried to effect this by human prudence (Ency.
Brit.). The groaning condition of the rustics led them to
cherish every sound of liberty; and some, in their frenzied
enthusiasm, carried out their views to a new Jerusalem state
of things, and Munster fanatics involved our denomination in
disrepute. Pasdobaptists dwell on the plenitude of the sin,
to divert the mind from the originators of the affray, and
by blackening the Baptists, they leave a happy comparison
for the excesses of their favorites. Had no Baptists been
mixed up in this affair, no such people would have been
allowed to exist at the time; but the incredible numbers of
our persuasion rendered it impossible for any commotion to
take place about religion in these provinces, without
involving the continental Baptists. This affair at Munster
is often repeated and recorded; but one reason is evident,
it is the only slur which stands against the denomination!
If repartees were allowable, we could pay our accusers with
compound interest, by inquiring, Who martyred our early
brethren, the Donatists, the Paulicians, Albigenses? Who cut
off the ears and virilia of the French clergy? Who planned
Venner's rebellion? &c. &c. &c. Ans. Paidobaptists!!! Do
they repudiate these things? So do Baptists the single
affair of Munster. See preface to Crosby's History of the
Baptists.
Situation
of the Baptists
…escaped the severity of the sword were found
in the most discouraging situations that can well be
imagined. On the one hand, they saw with sorrow all their
hopes of liberty blasted by the ravages of Munster; and, on
the other, they were filled with the most anxious
apprehensions of the perils that threatened them on all
sides. In this critical situation, they derived much comfort
and assistance from the counsels and zeal of MENNO SIMON.*
30. It is now evident, that many persons of
the Baptist persuasion and views existed on the Continent
long before the affair of Munster blackened their
escutcheon; and the characters of these people have awakened
admiration in men of distinguished parts, and who have left
testimonies of their piety, which may be brought into
comparison with any denomination of the present age. Among
their admirers may be found the names of Commenius,
Scultetus, Beza, Cloppenberg, Cassandar, † Erasmus, Heyden,
Hoornbeck, Cocceius, and Cardinal Hossius. The latter says,
"If the truth of religion were to be judged of by the
readiness and cheerfulness which a man of any sect slows in
suffering, then the opinions and persuasions of no sect can
be truer or surer than those of the ANABAPTISTS; since there
have been none for these twelve hundred years past have been
more grievously punished."
S Father
Gretzer and Professor Limborch we have quoted in the
Waldensian section.
* Mosh.
Hist., C. 16, s. iii., p. 2,
S
7.
† Danvers' Hist., pp. 508—12.
o Cardinal Hossius was chairman
at the council of Trent. His acquaintance with history is
indisputable. This statement of the Baptists' sufferings
1200 years, from 1570, carries our denomination back to 370,
the very year in which we have the first record of a child's
baptism. So that our witnessing and suffering are coeval.
S
Bap. Mag., vol. x., p. 401, and vol. xviii., p. 278, from
Brant's History.
Menno
Simon
31. The venerable MENNO SIMON was born at
Witmarsum in Friesland, A. D. 1496. His education was such
as was generally adopted in that age with persons designed
to be priests. He entered the church in the character of a
minister in 1524. He had no acquaintance with the sacred
volume at this time; nor would he touch it, lest he should
be seduced by its doctrines. At the end of three years, on
celebrating mass, he entertained some scruples about
transubstantiation: but attributed the impression to the
devil. No moral change was yet effected: he spent his time
in dissipating amusements; yet he was not easy in his mind.
He resolved, from the perturbed state of his thoughts, to
peruse the New Testament. In reading this volume, his mind
became enlightened; and, with the aid of Luther's writings,
he saw the errors of popery. Menno was generally respected;
and all at once became a gospel preacher, without the charge
of heresy or fanaticism. This is accounted for, by his being
courted by the world, and still continuing in alliance with
it. Among the thousands that suffered death for anabaptism,
was one Sicke Snyden, who was beheaded at Lewarden. The
constancy of this man to his views of believers' baptism,
preferring even an ignominious death to renouncing his
sentiments, led Menno to inquire into the subject of
baptism. Menno could not find infant baptism in the Bible;
and, on consulting a minister of that persuasion, a
concession was made, that it had no foundation in the Bible.
Not willing to yield, he consulted other celebrated
reformers; but all these he found to be at variance, as to
the grounds of the practice;*…
* Austin and his coadjutors, in the infant
rite, washed the child, to remove the stain of original sin.
(Wall's Hist., pt. 1, c. 15.) Austin had never heard of any
Christian who did not give it on this ground. (Id. p. 503.)
And Wall asserts Calvin only disturbed this foundation (pt.
2, p. 165, &c.); but faith was required in the candidate. So
the ancients asserted children had the faith of the
sacraments;—the Papists said that they had the faith of the
church (Danv. Hist., p. 183); the Lutherans affirm, that
children had a proper and peculiar faith, to entitle them to
baptism (Id. 147); that baptism is necessary to salvation;
that God's grace is conferred thereby (Confess. Id.
146);—Calvinists affirm, they have no faith, but ought to be
baptized by virtue of the faith of the parent in covenant
(Id. 147);—the English church baptizes on a promised faith,
supported by a vow of the sponsors; Mr. Richard Baxter, a
Presbyterian, says they have a justifying faith (Danv.
Hist., p. 184); while others practise it from the promise
made to a believing parent, though John denied baptism to
the children of that promise. (Matt. iii. 9.) Some confer
the right from the holiness of the seed; and thus deny the
universal corruption or man. (Ep. ii. 3.) Others bestow it
from the covenant of
circumcision; yet these give the right to females, but
withhold it from servants, and make every parent of such
practice a federal head to a covenant; so as to be equal
with Abraham and equal with Christ. Such are a few of the
Proteus forms of this national bond.
No
Paedobaptism in the Bible
…consequently he became confirmed, that the
Baptists were suffering for truth's sake. In studying the
word, convictions of sinfulness and of his lost condition
became deepened; and he found God required sincerity and
decision. He now sought new spiritual friends, and found
some, with whom he at first privately associated, but
afterwards became one of their community. Menno was baptized
by immersion; as he confessed that "we shall find no other
baptism besides dipping in water, which is acceptable to
God, and maintained in his word."*
* This view is supported by Luther
and Calvin. Luther says that in times past it was thus, that
the sacrament of baptism was administered to none, except it
were to those that acknowledged and confessed their faith,
and knew how to rehearse the same; and that it was necessary
to be done, because the sacrament was constituted externally
to be used, that the faith be confessed and made known to
the church. (De Sacrament, torn. iii. p. 168.) Calvin
observes, "Because Christ requires teaching before
baptizing, and will have believers only admitted to baptism,
baptism does not seem to be rightly administered, except
faith precede." In Harm. Evang. Com. Matt. xxviii. 19.
1536
After passing a year in studying and writing with this
small but faithful band of Christians, he received an
unexpected call from a church of similar faith and practice.
He felt the difficulty of deciding: he was conscious of
inability and ignorance; and the times were exceedingly
difficult, since deaths were presented, in the most awful
forms all around, to all persons of the Baptist persuasion;
yet the excellency of the people who had invited him had
some consideration. After prayer and meditation, he saw it
was his duty, in the face of every danger, to accept their
invitation. He labored hard, endured great trials and
privations, the times compelling him often to remove from
one province to another with his wife and family. But
wherever he went, his ministry was very remarkably blessed.*
32. Menno drew up his plan of doctrine and
practice entirely from the Scriptures, and threw it into the
form of catechisms. His system was of a milder nature than
had been adopted by the perfect class of ancient Baptists.
He retained, indeed, all those doctrines commonly received
among them, in relation to the baptism of infants, the
millennium, the exclusion of the magistrate from the
Christian assemblies, the abolition of war, the prohibition
of oaths, and the vanity as well as the pernicious effects
of human science. † Their churches are founded on this
principle, that practical piety is the essence of religion,
and that the surest and most infallible mark of a true
church is the sancity of its members. It is at least…
* Bap.
Mag., vol. x. p. 381. 1818.
†Mosh. Hist., vol. iii. p.
320,
S
9.
Baptist
Churches Formed
…certain, says Mosheim, that this principle
was always and universally adopted by the Baptists.* They
admit none to the sacrament of baptism but persons that are
come to the full age of reason. They re-baptize such persons
as had that rite in a state of infancy; since the best and
wisest of the Mennonites maintain, with their ancestors,
that the baptism of infants is destitute of validity: they
therefore refuse the term of Anabaptists, as inapplicable to
their views.† It was in 1536, under Menno, that the
scattered community of Baptists were formed into a regular
body and church order, separate from all Dutch and German
Protestants, who at that time had not been formed into one
body by any bonds of unity. Some of the perfectionists he
reclaimed to order, and others he excluded. He now purified
also the religious doctrines of these people.o
As in the early, so among these modern Baptists, two classes
are found, at a later period distinguished by the terms of
rigid and moderate. The former class observe, with the most
religious accuracy, veneration and precision, the ancient
doctrine, discipline, and precepts of the purer Baptists.
The latter are more conformed to
Protestant
churches. S
33. The Mennonite Baptists consider
themselves as the real successors to the Waldenses, and to
be the genuine churches of Christ. It is apparent the gospel
was introduced into the Netherlands, Flanders, &c., during
the eleventh century, by some disciples of Gundulphus, who
were arrested while on their visit of mercy. In 1181 the
persecuted Waldenses sought refuge in the Netherlands,…
* Hist. ib. S 13.
†Id. vol. iii. 318, note.
oBap.
Mag., vol. xiii. p. 344.
S
Mosh. Hist., vol. iii'. p. 335.
Baptists
Ancient and Modern
…bringing with them Waldo's translation of
the New Testament. In the ensuing year, some of these people
suffered death for rejecting infant baptism.* The churches
formed at this early period were branches from the great
body of Albigensian and Waldensian Antipaedobaptists,† which
were preserved through successive ages, retaining much of
their original character and creed. They are said to have
lived as peaceable inhabitants, particularly in Flanders,
Holland, and Zealand; interfering neither with church nor
state affairs. Their manner of life was simple and
exemplary. They, like their ancestors in the valleys, sought
to regulate their conduct by Christ's sermon on the mount,
o When the Mennonites assert
that they are descended from the Waldenses, Petrobrussians,
and other ancient sects, who are usually considered as
witnesses of the truth, in the times of universal darkness
and superstition, they are not entirely mistaken, says
Mosheim; for before Luther and Calvin, there lay concealed,
in almost all the countries of Europe, many persons (a
multitude of minds prepared to receive reforming doctrines,
and many learned, enlightened, and eloquent men, to advocate
its claims S),
who adhered tenaciously to the doctrines of the Dutch
Baptists. ||
1536
34. So soon as Menno had formed his society, and rose,
as a parent, to reform and patronize the Baptists, those who
abstained religiously, as…
* Bap. Mag., vol. xiv. p. 55, note. Jones's
Lect., vol. ii. p. 428.
† See the works of Herman
Schyn, Mehrning, D. T. Twiscke, T. V. Braght,&c. Reiner con
haeeret, civ. Hossius'works,. 212. Hist. Mennon, by Schyn,
in Bap. Mag., vol. xiv. p. 51. Mr. Gan in Bap. Mag., vol.
xiii. p. 429.
o
Bap. Mag., vol. xiv. p. 50, &c.
S
Lon. Ency., vol.xviii. p. 669. Jones's Lect., vol. ii. p.
511.
|| Mosh. Hist., vol. iii. p.
320, S2. Bap. Mag., vol. xiv. pp. 50-54.
Menno's
Efforts
…many of this ancient people did, from all
acts of violence and sedition, following the pious examples
of the ancient Waldenses, Henricians, Petrobrussians,
Hussites, and Wickliffites, adopted the doctrine and
discipline of this apostolic man: all which will be allowed,
says Mosheim, without hesitation.* Shoals of Baptists, who
had 1540 hither
to resided in Germany, now left their native country, and
passed into Holland and the Netherlands, to enjoy, their
religious privileges. † The success of Menno awakened the
displeasure of the state parties; and in 1543 the emperor
offered a reward for his apprehension; but a watchful and
interposing Providence always opened a way of escape. In
these harassing times, Menno found a refuge and patron in
the lord of Fresenberg and Lubeck, to whose territories
great numbers of the Baptists repaired. Churches were
formed, and pastors were settled over them, and here Menno
carried some of his plans into execution, by erecting a
printing press, and defending the denomination against the
reproaches of their enemies.o
To preserve a spirit of union and concord in a body composed
by such a motley multitude of dissonant members, required
more than human powers; and Menno neither had, nor pretended
to have, supernatural succors.
S
The sanctity of character aimed at by the old Baptist
interests among "the perfect class," from the earliest days,
and the imitation of them by the Mennonites in discipline,
1552 occasioned
some divisions among this people. A warm contest, concerning
excommunication, was excited by several Baptists. These
brethren carried…
* Hist.
vol. iii. p. 333, note.
† Id. vol. iii. p. 336,
S 11.
oBap.
Mag., vol. x. p. 361. 1818.
S
Mosh. EC. Hist., vol.
iii. pp. 333-4.
…the discipline of excommunication to an
undue rigor. Their austerity went into the social ties (1
Cor. vii. 5), which was opposed by many of the community;
and now two visible sections formed the body of the Dutch
Baptists. Menno employed his most vigorous efforts to heal
these divisions, and to restore peace and concord in the
community; but when he perceived his attempts were vain, he
conducted himself in such a manner as he thought the most
proper to maintain his credit and influence among both
parties. Perhaps Menno acted in the wisest way for the
interest at large, though the propriety of his conduct in
this affair has been questioned. The parties were now
distinguished by the terms of rigid and moderate. The rigid
live in Flanders, and are called Flandrians, or Flemingians;
the moderate reside in Holland, and are termed
Waterlandians.*
1555
35. No sooner had the enthusiasm among these brethren
subsided, than all the members of the different sects agreed
to draw the whole system of their religious doctrine from
the holy Scriptures; consequently, they drew up confessions,
in which their views of religion were expressed, in phrases
of holy writ. "These confessions," observes Mosheim, "prove
as great a uniformity among the Mennonites, in relation to
the great and fundamental doctrine of religion, as can be
pretended to by any other Christian community." †
About this period, a severe decree was issued against
the Baptists. In this instrument it was forbidden to unite
with them. 1560
in 1560, this prohibition was put in force in
Hamburgh, with this further injunction, "that…
*Id. p. 336.
† Mosh. EC. Hist., vol. iii. p. 336.
Menno's
Death
…no re-baptized persons should be taken into
employment, or exercise any profession." Notwithstanding
these severe measures, they increased, though some were
driven into different provinces, as was Menno. It is said of
these persecuted people this year, "that most of them do
show signs of a pious disposition;" "and it seems to be
rather by mistake," says Dr. Wall, "than by any willful
wickedness, that they have departed from the true sense of
the Scripture, and the uniform agreement of the (catholic)
church. They seem worthy rather of pity and due information,
than of persecution or being undone."* Their steadfast piety
and consistent conversation, created respect among those
clergy who were strict Lutherans; these made a public
declaration of "their most heartfelt regard (or the
Baptists, and of their affection for them as their
much-beloved brethren." These Christian spirits increased
considerably in the middle of the sixteenth century. And at
this period some were numbered among them, who were learned
and pious.† Their increase is illustrative of "the more they
afflicted them, the more they multiplied and grew." Menno
continued to labor with indefatigable
1561 industry
until the ensuing Jan. 15, 1561, when he died at
Wustenfelde, and was buried in his own garden.
o "Menno had," says Dr.
Mosheim, "the inestimable advantage of a natural and
persuasive eloquence. He appears to have been a man of
probity, pliable and obsequious in his commerce with persons
of all ranks and characters, and extremely zealous in
promoting practical religion and virtue, which he
recommended by his…
*Hist. of Inf. Bap. pt. 2. p. 275.
† Bap. Mag., vol. xiv. p. 58.
o Ib. vol. x. p. 361.
Liberty
Granted
…example as well as his precepts. During the
space of twenty-five years, he traveled from one country to
another, with his wife and children, exercising his ministry
under pressures and calamities of various kinds, that
succeeded each other without intermission, and constantly
exposed to the dangers of falling a victim to the severity
of the laws. East and West Friesland, together with the
province of Groningen, were first visited by this zealous
apostle of the Baptists; from thence, he directed his course
into Holland, Gelderland, Brabant, and Westphalia,
continuing it through the German provinces that lie on the
coast of the Baltic sea, and penetrated so far as Livonia.
In all these places, his ministrations were attended with
remarkable success, and added to his denomination a
prodigious number of
'proselytes.*
36. The severity of the enemy's measures
compelled Menno, with others, to migrate the year before his
death. 1568 It
is very Enable some of his afflicted brethren visited
England about the same time.† Those who continued in the
Netherlands became very numerous, and realized at length
liberty for religious worship.o
This…
* Hist.
vol. iii. p. 330,
S
8.
† Fuller's Ch. Hist., C. 16,
p. 164.
o
Wall's Hist., pt. 2, p, 286. Bap. Mag., vol. xv. p. 389.
Mosh. Hist., iii. 346. At this period, 1577, Socinus visited
Poland. (Rob. Res., p. 603.) He found all the Baptist
churches strict on the terms of their communion. He
disapproved of the narrowness of their policy, and showed
them the innocency of mental error, and the necessity of a
wider charity. He succeeded to commune without immersion,
and infant baptism, with every other pernicious error,
ensued to all the churches in this kingdom. This is the
first record of mixed fellowship in Baptist churches. The
general Baptist churches in England, pursuing the same open
system, realized corresponding results.
Where are our large city interests, which formerly
assembled in Pinner's Hall, Collier's Rents, Petticoat Lane,
Currier's Hall,
Bridewell Lane? Where are the many interests, once Baptists;
leaving the Pseudo-Presbyterians, as Trowbridge and others?
Let us come to within fifteen miles of my domicile; who has
Newport Pagnell, Old Bedford, Wollaston, Maiden, Cotton End,
&c., who from being allowed to mix at the table, are now
striving to subvert Keysoe and Thurleigh interests? We say,
these interests are now under the control of independent
ministers with their endowments and pecuniary resources; and
other interests are, from the same constitution, in a
regular way for transmigration! See Reasons for Strict
Communion, by the Author. Verbum sapienti sat est.
…liberty granted to the Baptists in Holland
would point out to the suffering brethren under Elizabeth's
iron hand a suitable and providential asylum from English
ignorance and tyranny; consequently, we find several
Englishmen of note, and a congregation of our countrymen
enjoying the advantages, at the conclusion of this century.
Among those who realized this boon was a Mr. Smith. He had
1592 been a
disciple of Robert Brown, and was associated with him in
1592. Being harassed by the English High Commission Court,
he removed to 1606
Holland with others, and settled at Amsterdam, in 1606.
Here a division took place, Mr. S. differing with his
brethren on infant baptism. He settled at LEY with some
brethren, where it is said he baptized himself.* His
Arminian views might have prevented his uniting with the
Mennonites. While in Holland he published a work on infant
baptism.† (See English Baptists.) The liberty realized by
our brethren in Holland allowed. in time a difference of
opinion to arise on the mode of baptism,
o Some of the Mennonites
introduced pouring, and pleaded that it virtually contained
baptism;
S while
the…
*
NOTE.—This has been satisfactorily proven to have been a
mistake. It was only a supposition at best.—ED.
† Crosby's Hist., vol. i. pp.
3 and 265.
o
Bap. Mag., vol. xv. p. 398. I
S
Rob. Bap., p. 549.
Degeneracy
and Numbers
…greater part retained dipping, and were
called immergenten.*
37. The visits of the English established a
slight correspondence between the brethren of our
denomination, and the severity of Elizabeth's measures
having exiled all Dissenting ministers, they found it
necessary to send "to Holland for a regular administration
of believers' baptism, as other denominations had for
ordinations." † Hearing that regular descendant Waldensian
ministers were to be found in the Netherlands, they deputed
Mr. Blount, who understood the Dutch language, to visit
Amsterdam. He was kindly received by the church in that
city, and their 1633
Pastor, Mr. John Batte. On his return, he baptized Mr.
Samuel Blacklock, a minister, and these baptized the rest of
the company, fifty-three in number.o
The Socinians, with their pernicious charity, infected and
1658 divided
these remaining Mennonite churches,
S
and on their ejection from Poland, they flowed
into this region of liberty, and impregnated the waters of
the sanctuary with the wormwood of their doctrines;||
consequently, the Mennonites, to a great extent, have
departed in various respects from the principles and maxims
of their ancestors, and their primitive austerity and purity
is greatly diminished, especially among the Waterlandians
and Germans. Their opulence
relaxed their 1750 severities, and they now, with others,
enjoy the sweets of this life, and are as censurable as any
Christian community.([ From the ascendency of a rational
religion and love of the world, divisions arose in the…
*Bap. Mag.,
vol. 15, p. 390.
† Neal's Hist., vol. i. p.
308
o
Ivimey's Hist., vol. i. p. 143.
S
Lon. Ency., Art.
Collegiates.
|| Wall's Hist., vol. ii. p.
278.
([ Mosh. Hist., vol. iii. p.
341.
Numbers
…seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, which
present the interests at this period in a humbling aspect.
The gold is become dim! Those who retain the name, and we
hope, 1820 the
piety of their ancestors, are calculated, says Mr. Ward, at
30,000.*
38. We have thus endeavored, though
feebly, to trace, in all ages of the Christian church, the
footsteps of the flock. Emotions of a mixed nature have
arisen within our bosoms, during our progress in this beaten
path. Yet the unquestionable piety of the people, whose
lives we have essayed to delineate; their consistent purity
and integrity; their ardent and evident attachment to the
laws of Zion; their firm and steadfast conduct in upholding
truth; their open, bold, and consistent manner of
witnessing, through successive ages, for the Redeemer, in
the midst of surrounding darkness, wretchedness, vice,
danger, and death; have so far raised our admiration and
gratitude, that our pleasures, in our mental travels, have
far exceeded our grief’s. Their perpetual preservation
through so many ages, in the face of every opposition which
could be raised by men or devils, is a pleasing feature of
the veracity of THAT BEING, on the truth of whose word our
hope is supported. Let us devoutly adore Him for the display
of such care and tenderness towards these people, while our
gratitude should be additionally enlivened, if He has
permitted us to have a name—a place among the successors of
such followers of the Lamb!
* Bap. Mag., vol. xii. 99, and vol. xiii. p.
392.