A study of the sixteenth century Anabaptist theology of baptism. Armour specifically looks at the thought of Balthasar Hubmaier, Hans Hut, Melchior Hofmann, and Pilgram Marpeck.
In certain ways for this book arose almost forty years ago, when historian E. Morris Sider joined the faculty of Messiah College in Grantham, Pennsylvania. messiah was a vastly differnt place in 19…
That Anabaptism survived as a viable movement with visible structures from the naive beginnings in Zurich in the mid 1520s to the time of the synthesizers of the 1540s, was the work of Michael Satt…
The study of Protestant spirituality in the early modern period has generally focused on Puritans and Pietiests. The tradition of the Slavic Reformation that culminated with John AmosCormenius has …
This is a book about spirituality, not your ordinary garden variety, but the stubborn, persistent, radical spirituality appearing in unusual people accross the last two thousand years who combined …
In this comprehensive volume Thomas N. Finger takes on the formidable task of making explicit the often implicit theology of the Anabaptist movement and then presenting, for the sake of the welfare…
The Anabaptist influence on the Ziegenhain order of discipline and on Martin Bucer has been a matter of scholarly debate for some time. Christian Hege, George Williams, Franklin Litell, Kenneth Dav…
This book will be of interest both to those interested in Anabaptist history and theology as well as those interested in the origins of Covenant Theology. The Covenant Theology of Oecolampadius and…
"Merely a symbol," an earthbound gesture, say radical Protestants of bread and the cup. Yet such terms do not describe what these believers experience in worship. They come to communion with awe, c…