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Washing
each other's feet in Switzerland as a gesture of humility.
The Radicals. The story of the Anabaptists is one of the most painful yet exhilarating sagas of history. The world wasn't ready for their message, and they weren't prepared to compromise. A gripping film shown worldwide in theatres.

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ow Swiss Reformed Christians and Anabaptists
Repented Together to Address an Historic Rupture
The years between 1520 and1550 were some of
the most tumultuous in history. The course of Western civilization was
dramatically altered. During this period, the Swiss Reformation exploded
and sent forth waves that eventually reached much of the world, including
a profound influence on the development of America. The first key center
for Swiss reform was the city of Zurich under its brilliant and colorful
leader and pastor Ulrich Zwingli. His sermons were geared to the common
person and so emotionally moving that one hearer said he "felt as if lifted
up by the hair and suspended in space."
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Zwingli had searched the Scriptures and questioned major teachings of
the church of the Middle Ages. He rapidly instituted sweeping reforms
in the early 1520s. The accepted ways and world views of the day were challenged
and changed. Inevitably, conflict erupted.
A major crisis for Zwingli developed from among his most gifted students.
They rejected infant baptism as unbiblical and rebaptized themselves as
adults. For this they were called "Anabaptists." The city council held
public debate and rejected their views. The Anabaptists were ordered to
conform or get out.
But they would neither submit nor leave. So on January 5, 1527, the city
Council drowned Anabaptist leader Felix Manz. "Against the waters of baptism
he sinned," they said, "so by water shall he die." He was only the first
of this new movement to be killed. A wave of persecution against the Anabaptists
ensued that lasted for generations, and it came from all directions‚--
Catholics, Lutherans, Reformed, all considered them deviant and unwelcome.
But the Anabaptist movement, despite losing many of its best leaders
to persecution, survived and spread. In America, Mennonites and Amish
are among their most well known descendants.
Now a remarkable chapter in Christian history is unfolding as almost
500 years after the first rupture, the descendants of both the persecutors
and the persecuted are seeking reconciliation and restored fellowship.
In the process they are learning from one another. We present here the
first-hand experience and reflections of one who has been part of the
reconciliation process. Pastor Charles A. Ness, a neighbor of ours here
at Christian History Institute, has kept us informed about this extraordinary
process. Here are his observations on what is happening, along with his
thoughts on what it means for him and his fellow Mennonites.
From Pastor Ness: Our Painful Past
A conference held May 1-4, 2003, in Winterthur, Switzerland, called "Heal
Our Land," was a time of reconciliation for our churches. During the Reformation
in the 16th century, there was a division between the State Reformed church
in Switzerland and a group known as the Anabaptists. Some of the issues
involved baptism of adults rather than children, separation of church
and state, love to all people, including enemies, and the authority of
Scripture. As a result the state church persecuted thousands of Anabaptists
by torture and martyrdom. Many of them fled the country, and some later
settled in America, where they became known as Mennonites and Amish.
A Swiss Reformed pastor for thirty years has carried a burden for reconciliation
between these two groups. Geri Keller, founder of a parachurch ministry
called Stiftung Schleife, organized the conference. There were many Anabaptists
who attended from Switzerland, Germany, France, Austria, Belgium and other
parts of Europe, as well as Canada. The Swiss Reformed church was represented
by approximately forty Reformed pastors and many lay people, who joined
together for the four-day conference. Forty Amish from Montana and Idaho
and seventeen Mennonites from the Lancaster and Franconia, PA areas were
invited to participate in the conference. My wife Janet and I attended,
representing Mennonites from the Franconia Mennonite Conference area.
The total number of persons attending the conference exceeded 800.
Both Sides Repented
It is hard to put into words how the Lord moved in the conference. Emotions
ranged from weeping to laughter in the times of confession and celebration.
Speakers representing the State Reformed church acknowledged the wrongs
done to the Anabaptists and asked for forgiveness. The Anabaptists repented
of attitudes toward the State Church and sought freedom from the effects
that the persecution has had on us. That the time was right for reconciliation
was confirmed by the powerful presence of the Lord upon the conference.
It did seem that the hearts of the fathers (Reformed Church) and sons
(Anabaptist) were being reconciled.
It was more than just talk, however, since there were times when symbols
spoke louder than words. Thirty Reformed pastors, dressed in their clerical
robes, publicly washed the feet of every Amish person who attended. These
same pastors later knelt down on stage before the American Mennonite and
Amish leaders and tearfully asked for and received a verbal affirmation
of forgiveness from every Anabaptist leader and his wife. The Church Council
President of the Grossmünster Church in Zurich, where Zwingli had
been pastor and where many of the first Anabaptists were found guilty
by the church and were executed, read a statement of apology to the Amish
group. Following his apology, for the first time in history, an Anabaptist
Amish Bishop, Bishop Ben Girod preached from the Reformed church pulpit
in the Grossmünster.
Inward Pain, But Then Release
A joint service was held in the State Church in Baretswil, with the pastor
acknowledging the wrongs done to the Anabaptists and the Mennonite leaders
praying prayers of blessing over him and the church. Baretswil is the
town near the "Anabaptist Cave," where early Anabaptists met in secret
to worship. This was especially meaningful, since both my wife and I have
a common ancestor from that area who was persecuted and imprisoned for
his faith. To worship in the church responsible for his persecution was
a bittersweet experience. I felt inward pain as I was there, but then
a release as I prayed a blessing over the church. From there we went to
the cave, where we joyfully sang with a group of people that included
Reformed brothers and sisters.
On Tuesday, after the conference, Amish and Mennonites gathered at the
Trachselwald castle, in the Emmental Valley, where many Anabaptists had
been incarcerated and tortured before being taken to execution. A government
official of the region, Markus Grossenbacher, publicly asked forgiveness
on behalf of the government of the Trachselwald region for the persecutions
done there against the Anabaptists. As he spoke I felt a breaking of strongholds.
Later, in Schaffhausen, Sabine Aschmann, a Reformed State Church pastor,
gave her family's rare copy of a Froschauer Bible as a gift of restitution
to the Lancaster Mennonites. The Bible, printed by Sabine's family in
1538 for Anabaptists, had been confiscated during the persecution years.
There were also times of blessing and celebration as Amish, Mennonites
and others joined hands to sing and dance around the meeting hall, waving
flags and shouting praise to God.
I believe that in the days ahead we will see the effects of this conference
as the church moves forward with renewed vision and power.
It was a spiritual pilgrimage for me. I enjoy history and have studied
Anabaptist history, but this conference touched me deeply. The few times
I spoke or prayed publicly, I was overcome with emotion. There was an
inward pain that I cannot fully explain. At one point Reformed pastors
were on their knees before Mennonite leaders and asking forgiveness for
the persecution to our ancestors. I was thinking, this is no small thing
they ask for, and who am I to stand in the gap and answer for the Anabaptists
in history and in the present. It was an awesome and humbling privilege
to be among those invited to participate.
The Reformed pastors are serious about reconciliation. They have a burden
for the health of their church and believe that reconciliation with the
Anabaptists is an important part of their renewal. I lost count of how
many came to my wife Janet and me in tears, asking forgiveness for the
things done to our ancestors. They also made a financial sacrifice to
have the Mennonites and Amish attend the conference. The Swiss attending
the conference gave an offering of 15 thousand dollars for youth work
among the various groups represented in the conference. A flag carried
to every canton in Switzerland by prayer teams was sent to America with
us to symbolize their desire for renewal among Mennonites here. Many of
these Reformed pastors struggle with baptism of adults. That, of course,
takes us back to the basic issue that divided us in the first place. Several
confessed to baptizing adults in secret because of fear of their church
leaders. One tearfully asked us, "Will you stand with us if we are driven
out of our church?" I saw the same conflict of conscience that the Anabaptists
had between obeying the church rules, and at the same time being faithful
to their understanding of the Scriptures, both historically and in the
present.
This conference also made me realize more than ever before how we need
to address the divisions within our own denomination here in our own country.
How might the Lord work reconciliation here in America? There are various
Mennonite groups that do not worship together, although we claim a common
faith tradition. What about relationships between Anabaptists of today
and other denominations? Can we reach out to other faith traditions with
respect and affirm our common faith in Christ without imposing our beliefs
upon each other?
I pray this conference will help to bring healing to the Mennonite Church
so that God can visit us with renewal. While we cannot change the past,
we can change the way we think of ourselves in the present, and create
a new identity for the future. The prophet Samuel called Israel to put
away the false gods and worship God alone. In a similar way I believe
as a Mennonite church we need to overcome the impact of persecution that
still affects us today. These strongholds (patterns of thinking) of fear
of man, self-righteousness, materialism, control, avoidance of conflict,
and pride in tradition have hindered spiritual vibrancy and church growth.
The original Anabaptist beliefs in the simple yet bold proclamation of
Scripture, the power of the Holy Spirit, prophetic ministry, radical discipleship,
and a passion for the unchurched need to be recaptured and practiced.
I pray that we might be found faithful.
A memorial plaque at the Limmat River commemorates the Anabaptists
executed in this conflict: Here in the middle of the Limmat River from
a fishing platform, Felix Manz and five other Anabaptists were drowned
between 1527 and 1532 during the Reformation. The last Anabaptist to
be executed in Zurich was Hand Landis in 1614. Swiss Reformed pastor
Geri Keller, Menonnite pastor Charles Ness, and Amish Bishop Ben Girod
Left: Zwingli's Grossmunster Church in Zurich where many of the first
Anabaptists were tried.
©2006 by Christian History Institute. Prepared by Ken
Curtis, PhD, and Charles A. Ness, with Joe Thomas, PhD, Tracey L. Craig,
and Ann Snyder. Photo credits Charles A. Ness and Chi Archives. |
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