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"Just as in the Time of the Apostles": Uses of History in the Radical Reformation.


Geoffrey Dipple. "Just as in the Time of the Apostles": Uses of History in the Radical Reformation The Radical Reformation was a 16th century response to both the perceived corruption in the Roman Catholic Church and the expanding Protestant movement led by Martin Luther. .

Kitchener: Pandora Press, 2005. 324 pp. index. bibl. $33.50. ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
: 1-894710-58-4.

In an important new book, Geoffrey Dipple reevaluates the role history played in the Reform movements of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. For Protestants and Catholics, for humanists and Reformers, history was a battleground as competing understandings of the past played important roles in calls for reform. As Dipple demonstrates, history was a contentious matter, not only for mainstream groups, but also for those individuals and groups gathered by modern scholars under the rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t.  of the Radical Reformation. Dipple begins with a discussion of Erasmus's attitude toward the history of the Church, arguing that while Erasmus saw no period of the Church as a golden age, for him, as for other humanists, the era of scholasticism scholasticism (skōlăs`tĭsĭzəm), philosophy and theology of Western Christendom in the Middle Ages. Virtually all medieval philosophers of any significance were theologians, and their philosophy is generally embodied in their  served as the low point of the Church's development. Dipple sees this attitude shared by the Protestant Reformers This is an alphabetical list of Protestant Reformers.

Directory: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

A
  • Johannes Aepinus
  • Johann Agricola Eisleben
  • Ludwig Agricola
  • Mikael Agricola
  • Stephan Agricola
  • Erasmus Alber
. Like Erasmus, Luther saw faults throughout Church history, but his early writings focused on scholasticism's evils. It was only later, as the conflict with Rome heated up, that Luther identified the fall of the Church with the rise of the papacy.

Dipple's analysis runs the spectrum of the Radical Reformation: from the Saxon radicals of Karlstadt and Thomas Muntzer, to the Anabaptists of Switzerland, Moravia, and the Netherlands, and finally to the Spiritualists, especially Sebastian Franck Sebastian Franck (January 20 1499 – c. 1543) was a 16th century German freethinker, humanist, and radical reformer.

Franck was born about 1499 at Donauwörth, Bavaria. Because of this he styled himself Franck von Word.
. Dipple's survey of the territory leads to some surprising and important conclusions. Conventional wisdom has long contended that what drove the Anabaptists was the idea of restitution--the hope of recreating the perfect Church of the New Testament. Dipple problematizes this notion by showing that the Anabaptists' model was much more biblicist than primitivist. They sought to reform the Church on the basis of the teachings and practices handed down by Jesus and followed by his disciples. There was little sense of an overarching historical vision that interpreted the whole of Church history, nor did the early Anabaptists develop a full-blown theory of a past golden age.

Dipple demonstrates this in his survey of the "evangelical Anabaptists." Among those he discusses are the Hutterites of Moravia, whose Great Chronicle told the story of the struggles of the "true Church" throughout history, identifying it with the faithful Israelites of the Old Testament, the early Church, and the faithful remnant suffering from the false persecuting Church that had gained power in Constantine's conversion and the rise of the papacy. Dipple shows how other Anabaptists, like Menno Simons Menno Simons (mĕn`ō sē`mōns), 1496?–1561, Dutch religious reformer. The name of the Mennonites was derived from his name, although he was not the actual founder of the sect. , turned to history in their battles with their opponents, and developed a notion of the "fall of the Church." For Menno, the fall did not occur at a single moment, but rather took place over time--a declension declension: see inflection.  and perversion Perversion
See also Bestiality.

bondage and domination (B & D)

practices with whips, chains, etc. for sexual pleasure. [Western Cult.: Misc.
 of the original purity. Menno linked that decline with the rise of the practice of infant baptism.

One of the work's great strengths is the analysis of the Spiritualists, a group of individuals who in different ways rejected the externals of Christianity. While the usefulness of that typology typology /ty·pol·o·gy/ (ti-pol´ah-je) the study of types; the science of classifying, as bacteria according to type.

typology

the study of types; the science of classifying, as bacteria according to type.
, derived from Ernst Troeltsch, is debated, Dipple deftly sketches its continued relevance and analyzes the views of Schwenckfeld and Sebastian Franck. He argues persuasively for the central role of Church history in the formation and articulation of the Spiritualist spir·i·tu·al·ism  
n.
1.
a. The belief that the dead communicate with the living, as through a medium.

b. The practices or doctrines of those holding such a belief.

2.
 perspective. He also proves that many of the early Anabaptists came to care about Church history because of the role it played in the Spiritualist movement.

Dipple's work reminds us that almost every aspect of the Christian tradition played a role in the confessional conflicts of the sixteenth century. That the history of Christianity
Church historian redirects here. For the official church historian in the LDS Church, see Church Historian and Recorder.
The history of Christianity
 was a center of conflict is hardly surprising, but the innovators, whether Luther, Zwingli, Calvin, or the radicals, had to offer a vision of Church history that was compelling to would-be followers and provided a foundation for their reforming visions. It is not without irony that the vision of Church history that emerged among the Hutterites and Mennonites in the later sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was largely derived from the work of one of their Spiritualist opponents, Sebastian Franck. This book is an important addition, not only to the narrow field of Anabaptist and Radical Reformation studies, but to the larger intellectual and religious history of the sixteenth century.

D. JONATHAN GRIESER

Furman University
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Author:Grieser, D. Jonathan
Publication:Renaissance Quarterly
Article Type:Book review
Date:Mar 22, 2007
Words:717
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