RenewedbyFaith
Active Member
That's a point I had thought about making, too, Floodnut. An Anabaptist literally is a person who was re-baptized out of Catholicism by a believer's baptism.
In that sense, anyone who was once Catholic can be an Anabaptist.
I don't think anyone can say there is a common or shared value among all Anabaptists. American Anabaptism is completely different than world Anabaptism.
One of the values that Wayne brought up is simple living, but European Anabaptists do not necessarily feel a commitment to simple living. That's one of the things that drove the Amish to America. They were being persecuted by their non-Amish Anabaptist brethren for maintaining a simple lifestyle for spiritual reasons.
And simple is a relative term, anyway. Is a three bedroom home more or less Anabaptist than a shack. Is a leather wallet more or less spiritual than a plastic bag for a wallet? Is chicken more or less spiritual than beans? These are the things people tend to obsess over when they talk about simple living, but it's really all just a matter of degrees. To a Caribbean Anabaptist, a three bedroom house is a luxury, but to an America Anabaptist, a three bedroom house is simple living. To an American Anabaptist, prime rib is a rich meal, but to an African Anabaptist, chicken is a rich meal. In Haiti, cat stew is served at celebrations or when an honored guest comes to visit. Around here, it's unthinkable to eat a house pet. Who really knows what simple living really is?
The Mennonites of Russia do not universally hold to the peace witness. Many Mennonites served in the Russian army because as religious people, most jobs were closed to them under the communists. They then reasoned that they were being servants of God by serving in the army of the God-annointed government and that it was better to serve in the army than to let the faith die out through starvation.
In China, where there is no choice but to serve in the military if you are called, Anabaptists compartmentalize their lives into "soul life" and " body life." The body serves in the army rather than be executed or die in a political prison, but the soul maintains a commitment to peace.
I personally wonder how many of us American Anabaptists do more than lip service to the fundamentals Wayne picked out anyway.
Do any of us practice all of them, is there any body of Anabaptists anywhere than adheres to their adamant practice, and if not, are we really hypocritical when we say, "You can't be an Anabaptist because you don't subscribe to this list of fundamental denominators?
I guess my point is that there is a wide spectrum of theological and spiritual doctrines among the Anabaptist groups. No list can capture what it means to be Anabaptist anymore than a list can capture what it means to human. It's too big of a picture to itemize in a bulleted list.
In that sense, anyone who was once Catholic can be an Anabaptist.
What is the essence, the shared value that would make a new believer, a convert out of Islam or Taoism an anabaptist?
I don't think anyone can say there is a common or shared value among all Anabaptists. American Anabaptism is completely different than world Anabaptism.
One of the values that Wayne brought up is simple living, but European Anabaptists do not necessarily feel a commitment to simple living. That's one of the things that drove the Amish to America. They were being persecuted by their non-Amish Anabaptist brethren for maintaining a simple lifestyle for spiritual reasons.
And simple is a relative term, anyway. Is a three bedroom home more or less Anabaptist than a shack. Is a leather wallet more or less spiritual than a plastic bag for a wallet? Is chicken more or less spiritual than beans? These are the things people tend to obsess over when they talk about simple living, but it's really all just a matter of degrees. To a Caribbean Anabaptist, a three bedroom house is a luxury, but to an America Anabaptist, a three bedroom house is simple living. To an American Anabaptist, prime rib is a rich meal, but to an African Anabaptist, chicken is a rich meal. In Haiti, cat stew is served at celebrations or when an honored guest comes to visit. Around here, it's unthinkable to eat a house pet. Who really knows what simple living really is?
The Mennonites of Russia do not universally hold to the peace witness. Many Mennonites served in the Russian army because as religious people, most jobs were closed to them under the communists. They then reasoned that they were being servants of God by serving in the army of the God-annointed government and that it was better to serve in the army than to let the faith die out through starvation.
In China, where there is no choice but to serve in the military if you are called, Anabaptists compartmentalize their lives into "soul life" and " body life." The body serves in the army rather than be executed or die in a political prison, but the soul maintains a commitment to peace.
I personally wonder how many of us American Anabaptists do more than lip service to the fundamentals Wayne picked out anyway.
Do any of us practice all of them, is there any body of Anabaptists anywhere than adheres to their adamant practice, and if not, are we really hypocritical when we say, "You can't be an Anabaptist because you don't subscribe to this list of fundamental denominators?
I guess my point is that there is a wide spectrum of theological and spiritual doctrines among the Anabaptist groups. No list can capture what it means to be Anabaptist anymore than a list can capture what it means to human. It's too big of a picture to itemize in a bulleted list.
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