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Daniel Zwicker, 1612-1678: Peace, Tolerance and God the One and Only.


Peter T. Bietenholz. (Studi e Testi per la Storia della Tolleranza in Europa nei Secoli XVI-XVII.) Florence: Olschki, 1997. viii + 330 pp. IL 62,000. ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
: 88-222-4561-X.

The present study is a handsomely published, very thorough examination of the life and controversial writings of a second-tier religious radical of seventeenth-century Amsterdam.

Relatively little is known of the life of Daniel Zwicker. Bietenholz organizes biographical data into an introductory chapter of 53 pages. Born in Gdansk, the son of a Lutheran pastor, Zwicker studied medicine and received university degrees in Konigsberg and Leiden. He joined a Socinian circle in Gdansk at age thirty in 1642 and was expelled together with other Socinians in the following year. Zwicker's next fifteen years in Poland were interrupted by a visit to the Hutterite community in Sobotiste in Slovakia, which impressed him greatly. Intellectual differences with the Polish Socinians led him in 1657 to emigrate em·i·grate  
intr.v. em·i·grat·ed, em·i·grat·ing, em·i·grates
To leave one country or region to settle in another. See Usage Note at migrate.
 to Amsterdam, where he spent the last twenty-one years of his life, apparently no longer practicing medicine but engaging himself in controversial discussions that spanned a diversity of issues: most importantly Adv. 1. most importantly - above and beyond all other consideration; "above all, you must be independent"
above all, most especially
, Christology, Christian unity, toleration TOLERATION. In some. countries, where religion is established by law, certain sects who do not agree with the established religion are nevertheless permitted to exist, and this permission is called toleration. , and pacifism pacifism, advocacy of opposition to war through individual or collective action against militarism. Although complete, enduring peace is the goal of all pacifism, the methods of achieving it differ. . At the time of his death he left a modest estate, of which his books were the most valuable asset. Bietenholz has reproduced a facsimile copy of the inventory of Zwicker's books made at the time of his death (183-215) and identified 90% of the titles (216-59).

In Amsterdam Zwicker interacted with Collegiant, anti-Trinitarian and Mennonite groups and individuals. Out of their concerns and ones he brought with him from Poland he developed the themes of his controversial publications, which are discussed in three of Bietenholz's five chapters. His distinctive contribution to anti-Trinitarian discussion was his study of ante-Nicene church fathers, among whom he argued that there was no Trinitarian consensus. Since Polish Socinians granted no authority to church tradition and paid it scant attention, this was an original approach to discussion of Christology and one that would be substantially confirmed by future patristic pa·tris·tic   also pa·tris·ti·cal
adj.
Of or relating to the fathers of the early Christian church or their writings.



pa·tris
 scholarship. In his early years in Amsterdam Zwicker drafted projects for Christian unity based on proposals for merger of various contending groups. Eventually he was impressed sufficiently by the pluralist atmosphere of Amsterdam to seek his solution to Christian unity rather in universal toleration. He thought of the true church as an assemblage of persons from all churches and traditions, in each of which he acknowledged definite strengths and weaknesses. Despite his monarchian stress the supremacy of God the Father, he did not consider the merits of other monotheistic traditions such as Judaism and Islam - his spirit of inclusiveness stopped short of non-Christian religions and atheists. It also stopped short 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.
 tradition of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Like conservative members of the Anabaptist sects, he insisted on the importance of baptism and the Lord's Supper as essential Christian ceremonies and upheld the authority of ministerial leadership, in opposition to groups like the Quakers who thought that any member of the congregation might be a medium of the Holy Spirit. In all these respects he was anabaptist rather than spiritualist. On the matter of coercion he held to a strict nonresistance non·re·sis·tance  
n.
1. The practice or principle of complete obedience to authority even if unjust or arbitrary.

2. The practice or principle of refusing to resort to force even in defense against violence.
 that separated true Christians from the use of force and the holding of magisterial mag·is·te·ri·al  
adj.
1.
a. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a master or teacher; authoritative: a magisterial account of the history of the English language.

b.
 office. He continued throughout his life to regard Hutterite communism as a high Christian ideal, which he did not, however, practice himself. Bietenholz emphasizes that the spirit of Zwicker's writings was utopian rather than apocalyptic.

Apparently Zwicker's writings lacked organizational power or stylistic grace. Bietenholz certainly does not exaggerate either his subject's originality or his importance. To the extent he is representative it is as a product of the radical ferment ferment /fer·ment/ (fer-ment´) to undergo fermentation; used for the decomposition of carbohydrates.

fer·ment
n.
1.
 in the immigrant community of cosmopolitan seventeenth-century Amsterdam.

The book is a work of meticulous scholarship in all its parts, which include, beyond the sections discussed, appendices on a bibliography of Zwicker's writings and controversies and on the writings on tolerance of the sixteenth-century Sienese exile Mino Celsi.

Queen's University Queen's University, at Kingston, Ont., Canada; nondenominational; coeducational; founded 1841 as Queen's College. It achieved university status in 1912. It has faculties of arts and sciences, education, law, medicine, and applied science, as well as schools of  
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Title Annotation:Review
Author:Stayer, James M.
Publication:Renaissance Quarterly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Sep 22, 1999
Words:659
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