Do you have a source? Some of the Calvinist statements seem odd.
Leonhard Dax's Encounter With Calvinism, 1567/68.
Mennonite Quarterly Review, 49 (4), 284-334, by Leonard Gross. Translated, of course. It was not originally in English
The interrorgation was recorded by Dax himself while in prison. He may have skewed things, but the details of the enounters give enough detail to convince me that this is a fairly accurate representation of what was said at the interrogation events (things like the fact that the Calvinist's reasons are given with just as much detail as Dax's responses or that in several places, Dax does not actually answer or address questions asked by his Calvinist interrogator).
This is surely not a quote. Perhaps that's the way the author regarded it, but it is implausible that anyone would say this.
No quotes were used in my post. Those were my summarizations of many pages of dialogue. The first summary was a general summary of the situation in which Dax was imprisoned and threatened with death. The Calvinist supported his actions by saying that he had the authority and power by God to subject people like Dax to imprisonment and perhaps death because they are Anabaptist. Here are two actual quotes from him:
Calvinist:
"You, Leonhard, have been arrested on account of Anabaptism."
"The government is ordained of God zealously to proclaim from God's Word what is right and good. And when they have ascertained this from God's Word, they should by means of their office of government, do away with false worship and hold and impel their subjects and the church to proper worship."
This, of course, is completely contrary to the Anabaptist perspective, in which no true Christian can impel or force others by means of governmental power toward proper Christian behavior.
Given that Calvinists sent people around the world to establish Calvinist churches, this seems an unlikely view.
Here are a few actual quotes:
Calvinist:
"Since appointing ministers in all lands and churches is exclusively an apostolic function, it seems to be nothing but an earthly ambition and human presumption [of yours]."
"You should prove that you and your church have the power and authority to institute churches in all lands and thus to preach in public, like the apostles."
"You assert that the present-day church has the authority and right to do what the apostolic church did. To this I reply that the apostles ordained no one to preach everywhere and establish churches, for that is only God's work; but they ordained certain servants at certain places. This proves that it was solely the task of the apostles to establish churches everywhere, and not the task of other church servants. Therefore, the present church does not have the power and authority to establish and ordain servants in all the lands."
"It remains established that no one has the power to preach in all the world or to send out preachers, but God alone. Other congregations only have the power to choose ministers for themselves, and these ministers are to lead their own congregations and not run to others without a proper call (by proper call, he means "by God himself" since the Calvinist argues elsewhere that what distinguishes an apostle from others is the call by God himself). You must therefore show by means of the Holy Scriptures or with examples from the early church that your church in Moravia or you yourself have the power to send public ministers here and establish churches even if your church were the true catholic church and apostolic church, which I do not grant."
Can you imagine anyone saying this? I can't.
What I gave in that post were summaries of lengthy arguments. The Calvinist's argument was that god never ordained a community of goods among the church, that what we see in scripture was special to that time and circumstance, and that all Christians may keep and enjoy their property so long as they do not misuse it. These were the theological justifications he gave for his church's disparity of wealth and possessions compared to the Hutterites, who shared all things in common.
Any Calvinist saying this would be very confused, since "impartation of God's grace" is the Catholic view, which is certainly not accepted by Calvinists.
Here are a few quotes from the Calvinist:
"In the Old Testament, God revealed that it was his will that his grace and mercy, which he promised them—to children as well as adults—be sealed and confirmed with the sign of the convenant. This will which he revealed in the Old Testament did not change in the New.”
“The new birth is not only acknowledging sin, hating it or desisting from it, and loving truth and righteousness, but also having manifested pardon and forgiveness of sins for the sake of the bitter suffering and death of our Lord Jesus Christ. The elect infants have this merit just as well as the adults, otherwise they could not enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, they as well as adults should receive the seal of the new birth, since they are included in the new birth. This is even clearer in the Acts of the Apostles, where he compares our children with the Jewish children insofar as the covenant of grace and its seal is concerned. Now Jewish children in the Old Testament were sealed by the seal of the covenant in their infancy, wherefore our children should also receive the assurance or seal of the covenant, which is baptism, in their infancy.”
“Who then should be baptised? Those who are in the covenant of the grace of God, or the others who are not in it?”
“Since the children of believers are in the covenant of the grace of God, they should be baptised.”