Anabaptist Studies
Reuben Sairs, Instructor
Course Description: The Conservative Mennonite Conference (CMC)
descends from 16th century Anabaptism. This class examines Anabaptism
in this earlier context, and traces the essential ideas from then to now. We will study the people, the variants
and the developments in Anabaptism.
This class consists of one week of classroom lecture, independent study
and the submission of four assignments, including an examination.
Course
Objectives:
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The student will become familiar with and become
able to discuss intelligently the events, personalities, and beliefs that are
important to Anabaptism.
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The student will learn to discern between
timeless theological issues and ephemeral historical developments.
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The student will be equipped to define and defend
Anabaptist ideas.
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The student will be able to contrast Anabaptist
beliefs to beliefs shaped by theological liberalism or different
forms of evangelical Protestantism.
Requirements:
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Participate appropriately in class presentations.
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Final exam, on Estep’s book and class
notes, due Nov. 16, 2007
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An Anabaptist biography and appraisal. Due
January 4, 2008
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A study of an Anabaptist church. Due February 29,
2008.
T
A review of the “Foundation Document”
by Menno Simons. Due April 18, 2008.
Texts:
The Anabaptist Story, 3rd ed. William Estep.
The Foundation Document, Menno Simons.
Biographical and reference materials of your
choice.
Try
www.gameo.org
Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online.
Grading:
Ten percent scale 90-100 A
80-89 B
70-79
C
60-69 D
Final 25%
Biography 25%
Church Report 25%
Foundation Document Report 25%
Final Examination: The exam will be based on the book and the
classroom presentations. It will include,
fill-in questions, short-2 sentence, answers, and a selection of essay
questions.
Anabaptist biography Assignment : One can learn a great deal about the beliefs
and character of Anabaptists by looking at one person closely. You may choose any of the following
Anabaptist figures: Menno Simons, Dirck Philips, Obbe Philips, Conrad Grebel,
Michael Sattler, Balthasar Hubmaier, Jakob Hutter, Melchior Hoffman, Pilgram
Marpeck, Hans Ries, Jacob Amman. Or
you may take a collective look at
several Anabaptist women: martyrs, and/or wives of leaders from the same period
(up to about 1700), e.g. Margaretha Sattler, Gertrude Simons, Margaret
Hottinger. C. Arnold Snyder has written a book called Profiles of Anabaptist
Women. There are numerous
biographies of women martyrs in the Martyr’s Mirror: Weynken, Daughter of Claes “a
woman called Claesken,” “Anna of Rotterdam” “Elizabeth
(martyred 1549), etc. The record with regard to these women is a little less
than we could desire.
For some of those persons mentioned above there
are book length biographies; for others you would have to piece together their
lives from general histories, the Martyr’s Mirror, the Mennonite Encyclopedia, and the
biographies of other persons that might mention them, etc. The number of sources will depend on
their nature. If you read a major
book length biography, it will probably be sufficient to supplement it with
references from at least 2 other historical sources. If no book length biography is
available, try to acquire at least 5 sources.
Write briefly concerning the objective
facts: where they were born, lived, died, etc. Spend more time on their beliefs and
any personal struggles arriving at
them. Situate them in the larger Anabaptist context. Pay attention to comments comparing and
contrasting them to other leaders. Comment from a modern perspective on their
lives and teachings. Would this
person fit into your congregation?
Please research enough to write 5 pages (not
including the works cited page).
Pick up a Research Papers Guidelines handout in the RBC library
or use the MLA Handbook 6th edition. You need to cite sources and document.
Church Report: Many churches (denominations) descend from the Anabaptists, some of
them would no longer identify very closely with the movement. Prepare a report
on any denomination which descends from the Anabaptists or Anabaptist-related
groups we studied in class. You may
choose any group that interests you, and for which you can do enough
research. Consider a single example
from the various groups of Amish, Mennonite, River Brethren and Brethren in
Christ (but not Church of the Brethren since they stem to Anabaptism indirectly
from German pietism), Holderman, Hutterites, The Missionary Church, United Zion
Church, Apostolic Christian Church of America.
Emphasize doctrines, history, critical
developments. Always keep an eye on how the group has modified the beliefs or
practices of 16th century Anabaptism. What have they added or taken away? Consider doing firsthand research, by
visiting a congregation, interviewing leaders or members, etc.
Please research enough to write 5 pages (not
including the works cited page).
Pick up a Research Papers Guidelines handout in the RBC library
or use the MLA Handbook 6th edition. You need to cite sources and document.
Menno Simons: The Foundation is not long, but it will
be difficult to read. I suggest
taking notes as you read and keeping a dictionary of church history nearby to
check some of his references. Menno
was a great organizer of the early northern Anabaptist movement. His writing was successful and effective
in its time, but few Mennonites take the time to read him today.
Read the Foundation document and write a
review. Consider
Menno’s content, style and appraisal of other churches. Consider all of the following in your
paper. List briefly his central
concerns and lines of argument. Why
does he write and who is his intended audience? How does Menno come across? What are his convictions regarding other
churches? Explain areas of
agreement or disagreement you have with Menno. How would Menno get along in your
congregation? In your paper
refer to page numbers and content, only very brief quotations are acceptable.
The Foundation is available in PDF format
at the RBC Web site through the library link. Feel free to read it online or
download it. This version is from
1871. Herald Press published and
translated The Complete Writings of Menno Simons in 1956. It costs about 40 dollars used; 50 new
at amazon.com. The 1871 edition is
available at anabaptistbooks.com for 15.00.
Please research enough to write 5 pages (not including the works cited page). Pick up a Research Papers Guidelines handout in the RBC library or use the MLA Handbook 6th edition. You need to cite sources and document.