Search results

From Anabaptistwiki
  • ...dresses in Geneva, Oxford, London, and Paris, and numerous other cities in Germany, Holland, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. Everywhere he went, large audiences [[Category:India Sources]]
    17 KB (2,939 words) - 14:02, 17 March 2016
  • ...orld Conference met more regularly: 1948 (U.S.); 1952 (Switzerland); 1957 (Germany); 1962 (Canada). The Eighth Conference is called for 1967 (Holland) and the ...to Müntzer in September 1524 (when the revolutionary disturbances of south Germany had already begun) seems to me convincing proof of that understanding. The
    60 KB (9,998 words) - 02:48, 31 August 2022
  • ...he Anabaptist movement in the years 1527-60 not only in Switzerland, South Germany, and Thuringia, but in all the Austrian lands as well as in the Low Countri ...er, Anabaptism proper, maintained an unbroken course in Switzerland, South Germany, Austria, and Holland throughout the sixteenth century, and has continued u
    62 KB (9,964 words) - 18:08, 4 October 2016
  • ...riginal reads "Schlaten am Randen." A good half-dozen villages in southern Germany bear the names Schlat, Schlatt, or Schlatten. One, near Engen in Baden, als ...d thus a most fitting meeting place linking the major centers in southwest Germany and northeast Switzerland. This was the first area where Sattler's colleagu
    47 KB (8,030 words) - 18:56, 24 March 2016
  • ...r own." Later it was adopted by the Mennonites in the Palatinate and North Germany; the Swiss Mennonites never accepted it, perhaps because it teaches shunnin [[Category:Netherlands Sources]]
    35 KB (5,825 words) - 18:41, 24 March 2016
  • ...aars" which word signifies "immersion church" in Altona and Friedensstadt, Germany. Menno Simons Treatise on baptism has the title:"Die Christliche Taufe in d [[Category:United States Sources]]
    58 KB (9,271 words) - 18:55, 24 March 2016
  • ...in with the added tedious suggestion that the congregations in Prussia and Germany be consulted for their opinion.14 Thus the matter was delayed indefinitely. [[Category:17th Century Sources]]
    48 KB (7,962 words) - 18:33, 24 March 2016
  • ...s and the Reformed. Indeed, the schisms that rent the Lutheran churches in Germany between 1545 and 1600 parallel in intensity and scope the schisms among the ...theologians of old Princeton did espouse these formulas, and these are the sources from which it was imported into the Mennonite Church. '''<span style="color
    58 KB (9,434 words) - 13:40, 16 September 2016
  • ...s and the Reformed. Indeed, the schisms that rent the Lutheran churches in Germany between 1545 and 1600 parallel in intensity and scope the schisms among the ...theologians of old Princeton did espouse these formulas, and these are the sources from which it was imported into the Mennonite Church. '''<span style="color
    58 KB (9,434 words) - 02:49, 31 August 2022
  • ...now using German in their services, and for the congregations in Southwest Germany and Alsace and their "colonies" in America; it expresses the hope that the ...of that country. In order to make the work accessible to the Mennonites in Germany and in America the late Carl J. van der Smissen made a German translation i
    147 KB (23,366 words) - 18:42, 24 March 2016
  • ===Predecessors and Sources=== ...er des 16. Jahrhunderts, die für ihren Glauben ihr Leben hingaben.'' Lage, Germany: Logos Verlag, 2002. || German translation
    42 KB (6,032 words) - 13:56, 26 July 2012

View (previous 20 | next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)