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Menno Simons
Spiritual cousins of the Mennonites and Amish, the Hutterites live simply. By a way of life that is communal rather than individualistic, the Hutterites have rid themselves of poverty, homicide and anxiety about the future.

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o know Menno Simons was dangerous; to befriend
him, deadly. For sheltering Menno, Tjard Reynders was broken on the wheel.
A ferryman was executed for bearing Menno down the Meuse River. Surely
Menno Simons must have been a desperate criminal for mere accomplices
to receive such stiff sentences!
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Hardly!
His "crime" was to interpret the Scriptures differently from
his neighbors. He believed that only those who had reached an age to understand
their action should be baptized; that faith was worthless unless demonstrated
by works. For these two "heresies" a reward of 100 golden guilders
was placed on his head and he was harried from refuge to refuge through
Northwest Europe.
A Troubled Dutch Priest
Menno's early career did not suggest his later notoriety. Born in the
Netherlands a few years before Luther posted his famous Ninety-Five Theses,
he matured in an age of ferment. At his parents' wish he prepared for
the Roman Catholic priesthood. His studies grounded him in Greek and philosophy,
but not the Bible. That book he feared to open. Ordained when 28, he embarked
upon a routine of masses, infant baptism, services for the dead--not to
mention drinking, card-playing and other frivolities. But reformation
hovered in the air.
Outwardly conformed to his church, he struggled inwardly to believe that
bread and wine became Christ's literal body and blood. For two years he
was in torment of mind. Finally, fearfully, he opened the Bible to see
what it said. To his dismay he found no direct support for this doctrine
of transubstantiation. Now he was in deeper distress than ever. To deny
the doctrine of the church, he thought, was to incur sure damnation. Yet
if the Bible were God's Word . . . . In desperation he opened a forbidden
work by Luther. No man could be damned for violating the commands of men,
said Luther. Relief flooded Menno's soul. He decided he would trust the
scripture.
Comfort in Conformity
Still he did not break with the church. Not for ten more years would he
do that. Later he admitted that he had enjoyed comforts too much to make
the break. All the same he continued to read the Bible and acquired a
reputation as a good man and Bible preacher. But a new crisis was developing
within him.
In 1525 a Zurich group concluded infants should not be baptized. Called
Anabaptists (re-baptizers) they faced immediate persecution. The whole
of Europe, Catholic and Protestant Reformed, accepted infant baptism.
Sicke Freerks, an Anabaptist tailor, was beheaded for receiving re-baptism.
His martyrdom shook Menno. In Freerks he saw a man willing to die for
his faith. Menno pored over his Bible, studying baptism, and concluded
the Anabaptists were right; but he did not join them.
Anabaptist Excesses
This is not surprising. Many peasants interpreted freedom of conscience
as freedom from restraint. Under the cloak of Anabaptist ideas, they revolted,
seizing the city of Munster. After a cruel siege they were massacred.
Europe's rulers, fearing an uprising of the lower classes, hounded all
Anabaptists as insurrectionists.
Menno preached against the errors of the Anabaptist revolutionaries.
Yet he knew himself a hypocrite, without the strength of spirit to deter
others from joining violent sects. Tragedy finally precipitated his break
with Rome.
Taking a Stand
A group of radicals took up swords and occupied an old cloister where
they were eventually massacred by troops. Menno's conscience smote him.
These men were willing to die for a lie while he, Menno, would not suffer
for truth. He fell to his knees, pleading for forgiveness, and rose, determined
to preach unadulterated truth. For nine months he spoke boldly from his
pulpit before voluntarily resigning his priesthood.
Then for a year he lived in seclusion, studying the Bible, until brethren
begged him to shepherd them. After a severe struggle within himself, for
he guessed what he must suffer, he agreed. It was a fateful decision.
Decent Anabaptists from Northern Europe noted his common sense and turned
to him. He kept the movement from degenerating into fanatical cults. Traders
and tinkers took up his teaching and it spread.
Menno a Hunted Outlaw
Charles V offered 100 guilders for Menno's capture, forbade the reading
of his works, and made it illegal to aid or shelter him. Menno's followers
were to be arrested. Criminals were offered pardon if only they would
betray him.
Menno lived on the run, unable to find in all the country a hut "in
which my poor wife and our little children could be put up in safety for
a year or two." Two of his three children died before him. Friends
were slain. Men he had succored turned against him over doctrinal differences.
In spite of these woes, Menno continued to lead his people. He wrote
simple books to meet their spiritual needs. Unlike others who bore the
name Anabaptist, his followers remained law abiding. Eventually the authorities
saw the distinction and named his followers Mennonites.
Menno's wife died. He became crippled, hobbling with a crutch. Yet he
labored for Christ, urging others to repent and lead pure lives. He renounced
war, called for separation of church and state, and pleaded for freedom
of conscience. All people must accept Christ's sovereignty and the church
must be a faithful witness for Christ.
Menno died in 1561, having eluded capture to the end. Not a great theologian,
he was nonetheless a man of powerful influence, for he lived as he preached.
Authorities largely agree he steered the Dutch and nearby German Anabaptists
from fanaticism and disintegration. His ideas survive with the Mennonites,
Amish and Hutterites, and influenced other Protestants such as the Baptists.
In HIS OWN WORDS: MENNO Simons on the NEW BIRTH
Do you suppose, dear friends, that the new birth consists of nothing
but in that which the miserable world hitherto has thought that it consists
in, namely, to be plunged into the water; or in the saying, "I baptize
thee in the name of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost"?
No, dear brother, no. The new birth consists, verily, not in water nor
in words; but it is the heavenly, living, and quickening power of God
in our hearts which flows forth from God, and which by the preaching of
the divine Word, if we accept it by faith, quickens, renews, pierces,
and converts our hearts, so that we are changed and converted from unbelief
to faith, from unrighteousness to righteousness, from evil to good, from
carnality to spirituality, from the earthly to the heavenly, from the
wicked nature of Adam to the good nature of Jesus Christ.
Baptists and Anabaptists: What's the Difference?
They are two separate and distinct movements but share some common convictions
such as the rejection of infant baptism and separation of church and state.
The Anabaptists had their beginnings in the early 1520s in Zurich, Switzerland,
as a splinter group from Zwingli's reform movement there. The modern Baptists
began in England in 1609 under John Smyth (c. 1554-1612). Some of them
sought refuge in Holland in their early years and came into direct contact
with Anabaptists there, and these Baptists were no doubt influenced by
them to some degree. However the two movements remain distinct to this
day.
Fascinating Facts
- Anabaptists and Mennonites offered such powerful witness at their
executions that these were increasingly carried on in secret with the
martyrs gagged. Since some managed to free their tongues a clamp was
placed over their tongue and the tip burned so it could not slip back
through the vise.
- Because Mennonites stressed that one's life must show the results
of one's conversion, many descendants, lacking the original fire, became
legalistic.
- Baron Bartholomew von Ahlefeldt of Denmark, deeply impressed by Mennonite
faith under persecution, opened his lands to their refugees. When the
King of Denmark urged him to expel them, he refused. Menno was one of
those who took refuge on the baron's lands.
- One of the radicals killed at the Old Cloister was Peter Simons, believed
to have been Menno's brother. This would help explain the soul-shaking
effect the massacre had on Menno.
- Menno's last years were troubled by the question of shunning (excommunication)
on which he urged moderation. Deep divisions threatened the Mennonites.
So troubled was Menno, he said only God's grace prevented him from losing
his reason. "There is nothing on earth I love so much as the church;
yet just in respect to her I must suffer this great sorrow."
- Menno held semipublic debates with Reformed and Lutheran leaders and
also wrote books showing in what particulars his beliefs differed from
theirs.
- About 30 of Menno Simons' writings survive as well as several letters.
His books include Christian Baptism, The True Christian Faith, and The
Cross of the Saints. One 10-page work bears the haunting title: A
Pathetic Supplication to All Magistrates and pleads for kindness
toward his persecuted people.
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