A BAPTIST
church was found in Augsburg, in 1525, where Hans Denck was
pastor. In this city Denck was exceedingly popular, so that in a
year or two the church numbered some eleven hundred members.
Urbanus Rhegius, who was minister in that city at the time, says
of the influence of Denck: "It increased like a canker, to the
grievous injury of many souls," Augsburg became a great Baptist
center.
Associated with Denck at Augsburg were Balthasar Hubmaier,
Ludwig Hatzer and Hans Hut. They all practiced immersion. Keller
in his life of Denck says:
The baptism
was performed by dipping under (untertauchen).
The men were in thus act naked, the women had a covering
(Keller, Em Apostel der Wiedertaufer, 112).
Schaff is
particular to relate that the four leaders of the Anabaptists of
Augsburg all practiced immersion. He says:
The
Anabaptist leaders Hubmaier, Derek, Hatzer, Hut, likewise
appeared in Augsburg, and gathered a congregation of eleven
hundred members. They had a general synod in 1527. They
baptized by immersion. Rhegius stirred up the magistrates
against them; the leaders were imprisoned and some were
executed (Schaff, History of the Christian Church, VI. 578).
Immersion was
the practice of the Baptists of Augsburg. There is the testimony
of a trusted eye-witness in the Augsburg Benedictine, Clemens
Sender. This old historian says of the Baptists of Augsburg:
In Augsburg
in the gardens of the houses in 1527, men and women,
servants and masters, rich and poor, more than eleven
hundred of them were rebaptized. They put on peculiar
garments in which to be baptized, for in their houses were
their baptisteries where there were always a number of
garments always prepared (Clemens Sender, Die Chronik, 186).
Sender thus
hears witness to the large number of persons immersed in
Augsburg. It has sometimes been claimed that the baptisms which
occurred among the Baptists in houses and cellars must have been
by sprinkling. They had especially prepared baptisteries in
their houses for immersions. When it was dangerous and
inconvenient to go to the rivers and streams for baptismal
purposes baptisteries were erected in private houses. This is
the testimony of an eye-witness. Hubmaier is moreover associated
with these immersions.
Wagenseil, a historian of Augsburg, says:
In the year
1527 the Anabaptists baptized none who did not believe with
them; and the candidates were not merely sprinkled, but they
were dipped under (Wagenseil, Geschichte der Stadt Augsburg,
1820).
Urbanus Rhegius
was likewise a witness to the practice of the Baptists of
Augsburg. He was a resident of the city at the time. He was a
learned man, a university student, honored by the Emperor
Maximilian and a follower of Luther. In 1528 two letters were
written by the Baptists of Augsburg. Rhegius answered these
letters (Zwen wunderful zam sendbrieff zweyer Wiedertauffer,
Augsburg, 1528). He discussed at length the position of the
Baptists on infant baptism in regard to the form of baptism
there is a picture on the title page that shows the Baptists in
the practice of immersion. There is a large expanse of water, an
ocean we judge by the appearance of a ship in the waters; and
these waters are full of Baptists, nude, and practicing
immersion. From one side of the stream the Baptists, in great
numbers, are tumbling into the waters. From the other side flows
a river which is washing the Baptists out of the sea into a
flaming fire. The baptismal waters of the Baptists become the
fires of hell, and there even stands one shaking a viper
into the fire, while gaping multitudes approve. This is a
prejudiced picture of their practice of immersion.
Instances are related, and details given, in regard to the
baptisms which took place in Augsburg. "The act of baptism,"
says Theodore Keim, in his article on Ludwig Hatzer, "was
administered in the River Lech, the men being naked, the women
wearing bathing trousers." He mentions the wife of the artist
Adolf Ducher "who during the absence of her husband in Vienna
three days in the Holy Week of 1527 opened her house, which was
favorably situated on the River Lech, for the purpose of
baptizing" (Jarbucker fur Deutsche Theologie, 278.
Stuggart, 1856). At other times, as we have seen, baptisteries
were erected in the houses and cellars. Many details of these
immersions have recently been published from the original
records (Zur Gesehichte der Wiedertaufer in Oberssohaben, von
Dr. Friedrich Roth. In Zeitschrift des Historischen Vereins
fur, Schwaben und Neuberg. Augsburg, 1901).
Heath, who has written much on the history of the Baptists, and
has given particular study to the Continental Baptists, says of
these immersions in Augsburg that "this fact, which seems well
authenticated, would suggest that the mode was the same
throughout South Germany, Switzerland and, and the Tyrol; since
the Augsburg community was founded by the Walshuter Jacob Gross
and the Tyrolese Ferber. Moreover Augsburg appears to have been
the center most important for the Baptists of South
Germany"(Heath, Anabaptists, 94).
Strassburg was associated with Augsburg in the work of the
Baptists. Denck came to Strassburg in 1526 and rendered valuable
service there. Many of the most distinguished citizens joined
the Baptist church. Baptism, at this date, among the Baptists of
Strassburg was by dipping. Gerbert states that the baptisms
occurred at this time "before the Butcher's Gate, probably in a
branch of the Rhine" (Gerbert, Straasburgischen Sectenbewegung,
93). Bertel and Essinger declare that these immersions among the
Baptists were performed by a shoemaker (Rohrich, Die
Strassburguechen Wiedertaufer, In Zeitschrift fur die
historischen Theologie. 48. A- D. 186())
One of the best known Baptist preachers of those days was
Melchoir Hofmann. On account of his peculiar views of prophecy
he plunged himself and the Baptists into grief. His preaching
caused much excitement. At Emden he organized a Baptist church.
The probability
is that having connected himself with the Baptists of Strassburg
he practiced immersion exclusively. It has, however, been
confidently affirmed that Hofmann, on a visit to Emden,
practiced sprinkling; and by this rite three hundred persons in
the great church at Emden were baptized. Such a supposition,
however, is not based upon the facts in the case. It is a theory
established by guesses. He came, as has been stated, from
Strassburg. It is certain the Baptists of Strassburg practiced
immersion.
The claim that he practised sprinkling at Emden is based upon
the statement of a late German writer, who reached that
conclusion upon an inference. The inference was that since the
baptism took place in a church house and was performed in a
great tub therefore it was by sprinkling. Nothing is said in
Cornelius (Geschichte des Munsterischen Aufruhrs, II. 222); and
Hast (Geschichte des Wiedertaufers, 255) that a great tub was
used in the baptism, while Frederich Otto zur Linden describes
the baptism as taking place in the open air (Melchoir Hofmann
ein Prophet der Wiedertaufer, 236). Why a great tub should be
necessary for sprinkling has not yet been explained.
The baptism of converts in tubs was no unusual thing. Otho, in
the twelfth century, directs the Pomeranians to be immersed, and
this was accomplished in the open air in wooden tubs or troughs.
These tubs were let into the ground and filled with water. The
candidates were immersed in the tubs (Henrici Canisii, Vita
Ottonis. Inter Jacobi Basagii, II. vv. 60). This was in a
neighboring country to Emden.
Dr. Winkler made a study of these tubs and in an able article he
published the results of his studies. He says:
We can
prove from ecclesiology and from the testimony of Luther
himself that the pail or tub, such as Hoffmann used at Emden
(a large pail) was the baptismal font of the Western
Churches. There was even a certain sacredness connected with
it. We find In Luther's Table Talk (Bohn's ed. p.165)
the following incident. Dr. Menius asked Luther in what
manner a Jew should be baptized? The Doctor replied: You
must fill a large tub with water, and having divested a Jew
of his clothes, cover him with white garments. He must then
sit down in the tub and you must then baptize him quite
under the water. This garb, added Luther, was rendered the
more suitable from the circumstances that it was then, as
now, the custom to bury people in a white shroud, and
baptism, you know, is the emblem of our death.
Here Luther alludes to these immersions which are very
familiar to ecclesiologists. . . There is reason to believe
that the baptismal fonts in early Europe were tubs. The
ecclesiologist Poole (Structures, etc., of Churches, 45)
says: The first defined shape which the font assumed in
England is that of a circular tub-shaped vessel, some
probably of Saxon, many of them of the Norman date, as the
antique font of St. Martin's Church, at Canterbury. Knight
(Land We Live In. I. 261) says: "It is even supposed to have
been built by Christians of the Roman army, A. D. 187. It
was certainly one of the first ever made in England. It was
about three feet high and capacious within. It has no stand;
but rests upon the ground. The sculptures upon it are a sort
of ornamental interlacings in low relief. It closely
resembles the font delineated by the old illuminators in
representing the baptism of King Ethelbert, and it is
believed to be the first font in which the first of our
Christian kings was baptized."
Under this division, the tub fonts, Poole, an Episcopalian
antiquarian, groups the font of Castle Frome, Herefordshire,
that at Bride Kirk, in Cumberland, that at West Haddon, in
Northamptonshire, and that in Thorpe Emald, in
Leicestershire. And in regard to all of the ancient fonts of
England he says: The role of the Church of England, however
many the exceptions, and however accounted for, is to be
baptized by immersion; and for this the ancient fonts are
sufficiently capacious (Poole Structure, 59 note).
We learn from Bourasse, a Catholic archaeologist, that the
leaden font in the cathedral at Strassburg has a tub shape,
and so has the baptismal font at Espanburg, Diocese of
Beauvais. Both of these baptismal tubs are represented on
the plates of Bourasse's Dictionaire D'Archaologie Sacree.
At Notre Dame, in Rouen, the font was made in the form of a
coffin, with a covering of black wood. This sepulchral
figure was the symbolical translalation of the words of
Paul: We are buried with him by the Baptism into death (Dr.
Winkier, in The Alabama Baptist, 1875).
These
circumstantial details and the actual examples. given show that
the tubs were large enough for immersions, and that adults were
immersed in them.
It is not necessary to depend upon late German writers for the
original narrative of the baptizings of Hofmann at Emden. It may
be found in the writings of Obbe Philips. He says:
Among these
(German Baptists) there arose one Melchoir Hoffman He came
to Emden from the High German country, and publicly (in the
open air) baptized in the Church at Emden three hundred
persons, both burgher and peasant, master and servant. The
old count, to be sure, allowed this to he done, and it is
said that the count was himself disposed toward the same
faith (Philips, Bekentnisse, Bliji. Zur Linden, Hoffmann,
236).
Hackenroth adds:
As soon as
the civil authorities learned that Melchoir begann to
baptize (doopen, to dip) he and all those who
adhered to the sect, who allowed themselves to be baptized (doopen,
dipped) again, were banished out of East Friesland, and all
belonging to the sect were obliged to leave (Hackenroth,
652).
This is much
like other Pedobaptist accounts of sprinkling among Baptists,
the nearer the approach is made to the original sources, the
more certainly do the signs of sprinkling recede. Philips does
not mention the great tub; but he does declare that the baptism
was performed in the open. The possibility is that the preaching
took place in the church, and the baptism at some suitable place
for the immersion. There is no reference to affusion or anything
that would indicate that immersion was not the form of baptism
used on the occasion.
The direct testimony is at hand that Hofmann was, at this time,
practicing immersion. He had just come from East Friesland to
Emden; but in East Friesland he had been dipping converts
(Linden, Melchoir Hofmann, 283) - Keller speaks of this as
follows:
It appears
as if by the presence of Melchoir Rink, who, in 1524, dared
to attack, and gave the first thrust. In a remarkable manner
Rink dipped (tought) again in Friesland at the same
time with Hofmann in the year 1580. According to some
versions the same men had worked in common, from 1524 till
1539, in Sweden, Livonla, Holstein, etc. Both were furriers,
both from Swabia. The question needs a closer inquiry
whether we shall consider both of the Melchiors one or two
persons (Keller, Geschichte der Wiedertaufer, 127).
So far as the
inquiry goes as to whether there were two Melchoirs or only one
is of no interest in this place. If there were two Melchoirs
then there were two preachers who practiced immersion; and if
the two names indicate the same person then there was one
Baptist who preached there practicing dipping. The form of
baptism is not in dispute. It stands as a recorded fact
that Melchoir Hofmann was dipping his converts in East Friesland
before he came to Emden. If he dipped in East Friesland, there
is no suggestion why he would have practiced sprinkling in
Emden.
Fortunately the
practice of Melchior; or Rink, as he was sometimes called, in
the form of baptism is not unknown. Justus Menius and F.
Myconius wrote, in 1530, a book against the Baptists. The name
of Rink is especially mentioned. Of the practice of the Baptists
these authors say:
First in
regard to baptism which is, that man upon the command of
Christ must be dipped into the water and lifted out again (inns
wasser eingetaucht). That is a symbol of the
forgiveness of Christ, though by nature a servant of sin and
a child of condemnation, now saved from death and the devil,
now eternally living under the grace of God as clearly shown
under the Gospel and promised through Christ in the entire
gospel in his own and he shall consider it his own for all
time to come. To such the meaning of baptism is declared in
its signification and to them all doubt will grow less
(Menius and Myconius, Der Wiedertaufer Lure vnd gehemnig.
Wittenberg, 1580).
These writers,
who were hostile to the Anabaptists, mention Rink, and bear
witness to the practice of dipping.
It was in the same year that Hofmann published his book, Die
Ordinanz Gottes, The Ordinance of God. The book may be found
in the Mennonite Library, at Amsterdam. In that book Hoffman
says:
Furthermore, it is commanded of the Lord to his messengers;
after they have thus taught, called and admonished the
people through the Word of God, they shall lead forth those
who have given themselves to the Lord out of the kingdom of
Satan and espoused them openly to Christ through the true
sign of the covenant, through the baptism, that thereupon
henceforth they completely put to death their own wills and
am a bride to her beloved bridegroom to be obedient in all
things. And thus also in these last times will the true
Apostolic Messengers gather together the chosen band, and
through the call of the Gospel and through the baptism
espouse and bind them to the Lord . . Christ as an example
for his own band permitted himself to he baptized by John
the Baptist, and was then led of the Spirit of God into the
wilderness, there to fast forty days and to suffer the
temptations of Satan, but true to his Father unto the end he
fought it through and overthrew Satan . . . But the sign of
the covenant is established alone for those old enough to
understand and for those who are of full age, and not one
letter in the Old and the New Testament alludes to the
infants. Woe unto those who willfully put lies instead of
the truth, and charge against God, what in eternity he has
not willed or commanded. God is the enemy of all liars and
no one of them has a part in the kingdom, but their
inheritance is the everlasting perdition. (Cramer and Pyfer
Bibliotheca Reformatoria Neerlandica, VI).
This extract
from Hofmann is fully in accord with immersion. All of the
allusions given above refer to immersion. The baptism of Jesus
in the river Jordan by John, the putting to death of the will
and the resurrection to a better life are symbolically set forth
by immersion. Such references are never in harmony with the
practice of sprinkling.
A dispassionate statement of the facts leads to the conclusion
that Hofmann practiced dipping.
Moravia became an open field for the Baptists, and in that
country the work prospered marvelously. Balthasar Hubmaier, or
Hubnor, as he generally wrote his name, was the great apostle of
the Baptists of Moravia. He was truly a remarkable man and a
preacher of power. He had not the impulsiveness of Grebel, or
the brilliancy of Hatzer, or the eloquence of Denck; but for
calmness, soberness, logical clearness, and consistency,
absolute devotion to truth, and freedom from important errors,
he stands unrivaled by any man of the Reformation He
approximated truth slowly. This is notable in his rejection of
infant baptism. He had progressed so far that on January 16,
1525, he had doubts concerning infant baptism, and had a
dedicatory service for children instead of the baptismal rite;
but he still baptized children if the parents desired it. In the
meantime he became so violently opposed to infant baptism that
he broke the font which was used for that purpose (Muller,
Geschichte der Eidgenossen, VII. 12 Zurich, 1829). When this act
was followed by his book, Von dem christlischen der
Glaubigen it was apparent to all that he had become a
Baptist. He had, indeed, been baptized, with one hundred and ten
others, on Easter Day, by William Roubli, one of the Swiss
Baptists who had been pastor at Basel (Fusslin, Beytrage, I.
217).
His view of the form of baptism was also a growth. It is quite
certain that at the beginning of 1525 Hubmaier thought that
believers' baptism could be administered by pouring. In the book
mentioned above he said:
To
baptize In water is to pour over (ubergiessen)
the confessor of his sins external water,
according to the divine command, and to inscribe him in
the number of these separately upon his confession and
desire.
It is not
evident at the time that he had given the form of baptism any
consideration. He certainly wrote strongly in favor of
believer' baptism, and against infant baptism.
In April, 1525, at Waldshut, it being Easter, "there assembled a
strong party of adherents in that town," where Hubmaier "called
his followers together on Easter eve in the year 1525, and,
after having some water brought to him in a milk pail, solemnly
rebaptized three hundred persons" (Sohm, Geschichte der Stadt
pfarrie Waldshut ein Merkwurdeger, Beitrage zur Weidertaufer
Geschichte). At this date, April, 1525, Hubmier practised
pouring. At the same time he held foot-washing to be a Bible
ordinance. Only a brief period before this he was dedicating
children to the Lord and in the presence of obdurate parents he
christened the children. This was a formative period in his life
on the subject of baptism.
While Huhmaier was in Waldshut he probably began practicing
dipping. Dr. Paul Burckhard, a careful student of Baptist
affairs in Germany, says, "that it is also possible that in
Waldshut on the Rhine the people were baptized by Hubmaier in
the Rhine" (Letter to the author, March 28, 1900). Hubmaier was
found in 1527, in Augsburg, along with other Baptist leaders,
practicing immersion (Sender, Die Chronik, 186. Leipzig,
1894). He had advanced from the practice of pouring in 1525 to
that of immersion in 1527. This was no more sudden than many
other changes which took place with him. Indeed, it was no more
than could have been expected. Schaff, who is usually quite
accurate on such points, is certain that Hubmaier, in 1527,
practiced dipping.
Zwingli is a witness to the fact that Hubmaier practiced
immersion, He says:
He posed
like a fool in a carnival, who acts as though he is lifting
nothing but straw. His adherents, the bath fellows, are
geese who cackle in every direction, but do not know which
way to fly; but he himself, the Doctor is clothed in
magnificent apparel and, therefore, he considers it
unbecoming to wash little children, as he sys himself;
although it is not becoming in him, it is perfectly becoming
for Jesus Christ and the humble preachers of Zurich (Hosek,
Balthasar Hubmaier, ch. VI).
This was
November 6, 1526. He was the companion of "bath fellows." What
could be the meaning of this if Hubmaier did not practice
dipping? More than once Zwingli uses this term to describe
immersion among the Anabaptists.
There is another proof that in 1527 Hubmaier was an immersionist
Capito writing to Zwingli, November 27. 1527, says: "What I have
written lately concerning Balthasar on submersion, I have drawn
from, letters from Feneston and Vienna" (Zwingli, Opera, VIII.
112). Hubmaier had been writing upon and practicing dipping.
It is mentioned in another chapter where Farel, September 7,
1527, mentions Hubmaier, where he refers to baptism as dipping
in water (Keller, Die Reformation, 386 note). Keller says that
this defense of Hubmaier and Denck are not well known. It shows
from a contemporary that Hubmaier practiced dipping.
Another contemporary bears witness that in the last days of his
life Huhmaier practiced dipping. This is John Fabricius, the
learned Roman Catholic writer. In his book against Hubmaier,
1528, he says:
Their
leader and founder was a certain doctor Balthasar, who,
though he used to write that he was the "mountain of peace,"
was an incessant recusant of wars and rebellions, he was, I
say, a man of such lofty spirit that he boasted that in his
learning he excelled and by far surpassed all the
Zwinglians, Oecolampadius, and even Luther himself. He was
not satisfied because that in Germany in many towns, and
above all under the renowned house of Austria be incited
horrible tumults and for a long time among the Ligurians, he
denied an oath the delusion of rebaptism. He also condemned
it, and under a curse he publicly asserted it. Immediately
in Moravia the usage of the universal church having been
repudiated he treasonably relapsed into the same heresy of
the Catabaptists (dippers) as a dog does to his vomit, and
the baptism of children having been rejected, he decreed
that only old men, drybones, and almost toothless, ought to
be baptized, or dipped, in the sacred fountain, concerning
this thing he wrote books and tracts surely not a few, and
this new and detestable abuse produced new conspiracies of
the people, illicit unions in love, and other crimes of this
kind almost limitless (Fabricus, Aversus Doctorum
Balthasarum Pacimontanum).
Hubmaier is
himself a witness to the practice of immersion. In an early book
he refers to baptism as a pouring; in later books he refers to
it as performed in water. In one of the passages against
his enemies who called him an Anabaptist he pithily answers:
"Water is not baptism, else the whole Danube were baptism, and
the fishermen and boatmen would be daily baptized."
One of his books has the title: The Form of Baptism in Water. In
another of his books, Von der Briederlichen straff , he
gives an explanation of the celebrated passage in the sixteenth
of Matthew. He not only says that baptism is a dipping but he
explains the passage to refer to the ordinary congregation of
believers, The passage is as follows:
He
commanded her to use them faithfully, according to his Word,
when he said to Peter, Thou art a stone, and on this rock,
meaning his public and uninterrupted confession that Jesus
was the Christ, the Son of the living God, I will build my
church (he had just spoken of them as Christian churches),
my company, my congregation, and the gates, of hell shalt
not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the keys
of the kingdom of heaven. Verily, I my unto you, whatsoever
ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and
whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in
heaven. In saying "to thee," Christ sets forth the unity of
the churches, as saying, "ye" he implies that many shall be
assembled in this unity of the faith and Christian love. It
was after the glorious resurrection that Christ committed
the power of the keys to the church, bidding them preach the
Gospel and thus gather a congregation of believers, and
afterwards baptize them in water, and with the first key
open the door of the Christian Church and admit them for the
remission of sins (Hosek, Balthasar Hubmaier, ch. IX).
Hubmaier always
denied that he was an Anabaptist or that he practiced
Anabaptism. He claimed that he practiced the baptism of
believers, since infant baptism was no baptism at all.
The Baptists of Moravia were not a unit on the form of baptism
as they were not a unit on other things. There was published in
the year 1545 a Confession of Faith, which was drawn up by Peter
Riedermann who died in Pruzga, Hungary, December 1, 1556. In the
section referring to the administration of baptism Riedermann
says:
Then the
baptizer commands the candidate to humble himself with
bended knees before God and his church, and take pure water
and pour it upon him, and say, I baptize thee in the name of
the Father, Son and Holy Spirit (Mittheillungen aus dem
Antiquariate, I. 309).
This was not
the position of all of the Moravian Baptists. This may have been
a private statement of Riedermann. How far the Baptists of
Moravia agreed with him is not known. But Erhard, who was an
eye-witness, wrote: "Would that Diogenes might see your baptism
and make sport of your washings. You will sometimes be called
Trito-Baptists, when you are immersed in the Strygian Lake"
(Armitage, History of the Baptists, 381).
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