The story reads a lot like
Waco and the Branch Davidians in 1993, only it was the spring
of 1534 in the city of Munster (located in what is today the
west-central region of modern Germany). Hundreds of Dutch-speaking
Anabaptists-mainly artisans, peasants, and shopkeepers-converged
on the city. They were united by their common opposition to infant
baptism and the sacraments. But they were also driven by a primal
fear forged on the anvil of torture and by an eschatological
conviction that Munster was to become the New Jerusalem, the
site chosen by God for the re-establishment of his kingdom on
earth. In the months that followed, the so-called Anabaptist
Kingdom of Munster quickly degenerated into a morass of religious
fanaticism and excess.
Jan van Leyden-the David Koresh
of the sixteenth century-appointed himself the king. He instituted
a reign of terror that included polygamy (he took for himself
no fewer than 12 wives), the elimination of private property,
forced baptisms of the citys non-Anabaptist inhabitants,
and armed preparations for a glorious final battle in which the
elect gathered in Munster would vanquish the godless. But in
the summer of 1535, the New Jerusalem of Munster met with a violent
demise. Armies of the Catholic Bishop von Waldeck first besieged,
then stormed the city, and the sordid affair came to a bloody
and violent conclusion.
For most North Americans,
Waco-type images are not their first impression of todays
Mennonites, the spiritual heirs to the early Anabaptists. Instead,
when most of us think of Mennonites, images of their Amish cousins
come to mind: a hardworking, honest, and rural people, committed
to a quiet sober life of humility, simplicity, service and, above
all, to Christian pacifism; they shun politics -and sometimes
each other as a matter of church discipline- and emerge in the
public eye only for massive quilt auctions to support overseas
relief work or to clean up after natural disasters.
The contrast between this
idealized image of contemporary Mennonites and the Munsterites
of the sixteenth century could hardly be more striking. Who intervened
to accomplish this amazing turnaround? The answer is Menno Simons.
Out of the ashes of Munster,
a new Anabaptist group emerged, led by Menno Simons (1496-1561),
a Catholic priest turned radical reformer. Menno restored stability
to a group in which some had broken loose from their theological
moorings. His leadership sought to balance the eschatological
impulses of a persecuted sect with the model of a disciplined,
visible church ruled by the authority of Scripture. To a movement
of uneducated artisans, deeply suspicious of trained "school
theologians" (Schriftgelehrten), Menno brought a measure
of theological sophistication that blended central themes of
orthodox Christianity with the distinctive nuances of the radical
reformation. Later known as the Mennonites, the group that gathered
around his leadership espoused a biblicism shorn of private visions
and advocated a sober discipline of its members, which eventually
earned them the sobriquet of "the quiet in the land."
They explicitly renounced violence and political power.
To be sure, well before Menno
emerged as a leader, there were other Anabaptist groups who were
committed to biblical pacifism. On the occasion of his five-hundredth
birthday, the career and thought of Menno Simons merits renewed
consideration. Deeply biblical, thoroughly Christocentric, steeped
in the evangelical language of the New Birth and the Great Commission,
Menno offers modern evangelicals an inspiring example of leadership
that balances zeal and discipline, piety and theological depth,
courage and wisdom.
Reformer on the Run
Menno was born sometime
in 1496 in the small Friesen town of Witmarsum in the north of
the Netherlands. The son of a farmer, he attended grammar school
at a monastery, where he likely learned Latin and gained some
acquaintance with the church fathers. At the age of 15, Menno
entered a novitiate and five years later became a deacon in the
Catholic church. At the time of his ordination to the priesthood,
the Reformation in the Netherlands had found expression primarily
in the form of local resistance to the sacraments.
Indeed, soon after he began
his first assignment as a vicar in his fathers native village
of Pingjum, Menno himself experienced doubts and, by his own
account, gave himself over to "playing cards, drinking,
and frivolities of all sorts." But in 1531, the martyrdom
of Sicke Freeriks Snijder -"a godfearing, pious hero"
in nearby Leeuwarden, beheaded by state authorities for the crime
of rebaptism- prompted Menno to embark on a fresh and systematic
reading of the Bible "I examined the scriptures diligently,"
he wrote in his autobiographical Departure from the Papacy, "and
pondered them earnestly, but could find no report of infant baptism."
Still, he vacillated. Though intrigued by the staunch biblicism
of the Anabaptist movement, he nonetheless accepted a promotion
as a priest in his home church at Witmarsum in 1531 and continued
to carry out the duties of his office for the next three years,
all the while struggling with the tension between his understanding
of Scripture and received Catholic tradition.
In the end, it was not a new
intellectual insight that led Menno to break with the old church,
but rather the fanatical excesses of the Anabaptist movement
itself. In the spring of 1535, as the horrors of the Munsterite
kingdom unfolded, Menno penned his first surviving tract, a polemic
against Jan of Leyden, in which he denounced the private visions
and impatient violence of the Munsterites and laid the groundwork
for a biblical hermeneutic based firmly on the teachings of Christ.
For the next nine months, Menno attempted to preach his new message
of evangelical reform from the pulpit of his parish church in
Witmarsum.
But finally, on January 20,
1536 -precisely when public sentiment against the Anabaptists
had reached a crescendo- Menno resigned his priestly office,
gave up the salary, status, and security of his former identity,
and publicly aligned himself with the Anabaptist cause. "Without
constraint," he wrote, "I renounced all my worldly
reputation, name and fame, my unchristian abominations, my masses,
my infant baptism, and my easy life, and I willingly submitted
to distress and poverty under the heavy cross of Christ."
Shortly thereafter Obbe Philips, leader of the beleaguered pacifist
remnant of Dutch Anabaptism, ordained Menno as an Anabaptist
pastor.
Immediately Menno set about
to rebuild the scattered and dispirited brotherhood. For the
next three years, he traveled almost constantly -preaching, baptizing,
instructing new believers in the faith, denouncing the apocalyptic
remnants of the Munsterite kingdom- while simultaneously writing
a flurry of apologetic treatises, including The Spiritual Resurrection
(1536), Meditation on the Twenty-Fifth Psalm (1537), The New
Birth (1537), Christian Baptism (1539), and his most influential
work, Foundation of the Christian Doctrine (1539-40). By 1542,
Dutch authorities in Leeuwarden publicized a reward of 500 guilders
for Mennos capture. Remarkably, he eluded arrest for the
next two decades. Traveling with his wife, Gertrude, and their
three children, Menno lamented in 1544 that he "could not
fine in all the countries a cabin or hut in which [we] could
be put up in safety for a year or even half a year."
Although he successfully eluded
arrest, numerous tales circulated of his narrow escapes from
the authorities. One oft-repeated, though likely apocryphal,
story recounts how Menno was once traveling by stagecoach when
a group of armed horsemen, carrying a warrant for Mennos
arrest, overtook the carriage. As it happened, Menno was seated
outside next to the driver. When the soldiers asked him whether
Menno Simons was in the carriage, Menno leaned into the coach
and said, "They want to know if a Menno Simons is in there."
When the occupants said no, Menno answered his pursuers: "They
say he is not in there." The horsemen continued on their
way.
Menno preached a gospel of
the New Birth, giving prominent attention to distinctive Anabaptist
convictions regarding adult baptism, the priesthood of all believers,
pacifism, and a rejection of the oath and magisterial offices.
During the last period of his life, Mennos writings took
on an increasingly polemical character as he defended the Anabaptists
from attacks from without (against Reformed theologians such
as John a Lasco, Martin Micron, and Adam Pastor) and heresy from
within (against fellow Anabaptist David Joris, for example, on
the question of prophetic visions).
Menno died on January 31,
1561, at the age of 65 in Fresenberg, a haven of refuge in north
Germany and site of the press that printed many of his later
works. The followers he left behind -known as Mennists or Mennonites
as early as 1542- were not altogether unified. Bit his legacy
as a prolific writer, a theologian, and a polemicist lived on
in the broader Anabaptist tradition. A recent bibliography of
his published writings runs to 200 entries in Dutch, German,
English, and Spanish. On the occasion of his five-hundredth birthday,
nearly a million Mennonites, scattered in six continents and
over 60 countries around the world, are paying him special honor.
No Other Foundation
It would be presumptuous
to suggest that Menno was a reformer on a par with Luther or
Zwingli, or that his Foundation of Christian Doctrine could be
read as a parallel to Melancthons Loci Communes or Calvins
Institutes of the Christian Religion. Menno never enjoyed the
leisure to reflect systematically on his theology, and his emphasis
on practical holiness did not harmonize well with abstract theological
argumentation. Written in the white heat of debate, Mennos
writings today sound somewhat defensive in tone. He can be repetitious,
even bombastic, overwhelming opponents as much with a flurry
of scriptural references as with carefully nuanced argument.
That said, however, Menno
deserves a fresh reading today by those in the broader evangelical
tradition who will find in his writings some surprisingly familiar
themes. Modern evangelicals will be impressed with Mennos
command of Scripture and the way in which all of his though is
suffused in biblical language and imagery. Wary of his contemporaries
who had allowed personal revelations and visions to transcend
the authority of the written Word, Menno continuously defended
Scripture as the foundation of the Christian life. Contemporary
readers will undoubtedly appreciate Mennos high view of
Christ and his repeated insistence that the inner transformation
of the Christian into a "new creature" is made possible
only by the blood of Christs atoning sacrifice. So central
was the saving work of Christ to Mennos thought that he
included on the title page of every book he published the Pauline
text: "For no one can lay any foundation other than the
one already laid, which is Jesus Christ" _1 Cor. 3:11, NIV).
Menno also emphasized the
active and empowering presence of the Holy Spirit in the life
of the believer and the centrality of missions. But Mennos
writings also deserve a fresh reading because they offer a challenge
-and even a helpful corrective- to contemporary evangelical theology.
Consider, first, Mennos understanding of salvation. Few
reformers emphasized the centrality of the New Birth more than
Menno; indeed, he devoted a lengthy treatise to the theme in
1537 in which the themes of grace, repentance, and faith so central
to the Protestant Reformation find eloquent expression. But Menno
stubbornly insisted that the New Birth was more than simply the
inner experience of forgiveness of sins. He emphasized the link
between the New Birth and the life of the "new creature,"
a life of Christian discipleship that gave tangible evidence
of the gift of grace. It will not "help a fig," Menno
insisted, "to boast of the Lords blood, death, merits,
grace or gospel if the believer is not truly converted from his
sinful life." To be sure, the believer never is fully freed
from the taint of original sin -Menno did not preach perfectionism-
but he had no patience for the popular appropriation of Luthers
doctrine of justification that seemed to promote a casual approach
to Christian ethics. The regenerate "live no longer after
the old corrupted nature of the earthly Adam, but after the new
upright nature of the new and heavenly Adam, Christ Jesus."
Becoming "like minded with Jesus" meant actually to
live like Jesus. "True evangelical faith," Menno wrote,
"cannot lie dormant. It clothes the naked, it feeds the
hungry, it comforts the sorrowful, it shelters the destitute,
it serves those that harm it, it binds up that which is wounded,
it has become all things to all people."
Menno challenges our temptation
to preach a gospel of saving grace shorn of a gospel of empowering
grace. Mennos emphasis on a life of practical holiness
was closely tied to his understanding of the church. "They
verily are not the true congregation of Christ who are truly
converted, who are born from above of God, who are of a regenerate
mind by the operation of the Holy Spirit through the hearing
of the Divine Word, and have become children of God, have entered
into obedience to him, and live unblamably in his holy commandments."
Many of his writings sought to define the character of the true
church in contrast to the state-dominated official churches of
his day. According to Menno, the true church was found in the
local body of adult believers who voluntarily gathered to study
the Word and pledged themselves to lives of discipleship and
mutual aid one for the other. This community was an alternative
society where violence and coercive force had no place, a setting
where nurture in the faith and mutual discipline according to
the teaching of Jesus in Matthew 18 could happen in Christian
love.
Mennos emphasis on the
church as a deeply committed fellowship challenged the Protestant
temptation to regard the church as an institution closely allied
with the state, charged with the task of maintaining the status
quo, with an identity virtually independent of the lives of individual
believers. Mennos view of the church necessarily implies
an ongoing corporate discernment of the meaning of the gospel
in a changing culture. Mennos understanding of the church
as a voluntary gathering has become the Protestant norm in America.
But Mennos understanding of the church is also in tension
with the modern impulse to view the church primarily in individualistic
terms, as a setting in which to discover ones private understanding
of faith. Baptism, in Mennos view, symbolized a new life
in Christ as lived in the nurturing fellowship of other believers.
Baptism marked a public statement of incorporation into a new
body, the church. Called to present itself as the bride of the
risen Christ -"without spot or wrinkle"- the church
offers a collective and visible witness to the world as a redeemed
community. But the church can only maintain this character if
its members actively discern the will of God in their lives and
willingly exercise church discipline as an act of Christian charity
and love to the struggling or fallen believer.
This view of the church assumes
that a commitment to the larger body of believers will necessarily
qualify individual freedoms to live faith strictly in accordance
with personal inclination. In light of the ongoing highly publicized
moral failures of prominent church leaders, modern evangelicals
will find in Menno fresh insights on the questions of accountability
and discipline.
Called to Peace
Perhaps most radical
of all, Mennos writings challenge contemporary evangelicals
to rethink the question of Jesus teachings on peace, and
particularly the easy alliance modern Christians have made with
the political order. In our own time, the graphic accounts of
bloody massacres and human atrocities committed against each
other by the Hutus and Tutsis in Rwanda have all but disappeared
from the headlines these days. Yet, for evangelical Christians,
there is an element to the Rwanda story that should haunt our
conscience for a long time: 90 percent of Rwandas people
are professed Christians. To the African church, Rwanda had been
a success story. Yet, according to an InterVarsity leader in
the region, missionaries preached a gospel about having a right
relationship with God but not necessarily right relationships
with one another. "This is why we can be 90 percent Christian
yet kill in the name of ethnicity," he says.
Preaching a gospel that separates
relationship with God from human relations was anathema to Menno
Simons. Worse, the haunting specter of Christians killing Christians
was completely unthinkable. In his refutation of the violence
at Munster, Menno recognized the profound danger of mixing zealous
Christian convictions with the coercive power of the sword. At
the heart of the New Birth, he insisted, was a recognition that
God granted us his gift of forgiveness and love while we were
still sinners alienated from him -indeed, while we were yet enemies
of God. Gods gift of salvation through Christ has world-transforming
power precisely because it offers followers of Jesus a concrete
model for love expressed in daily life. Because we have been
saved and transformed by grace, we too will embody that same
grace-filled love with all relationships, including -indeed,
especially- those who might be considered our enemies. "The
Prince of Peace," wrote Menno, "is Jesus Christ. We
who were formerly no people at all, and who knew of no peace,
are now called to be...a church...of peace. True Christians do
not know vengeance. They are the children of peace. Their hearts
overflow with peace. Their mouths speak peace, and they walk
in the way of peace" (Reply to False Accusations).
Living in accordance with
this forgiving, gracious peace of God may well entail suffering.
In the sixteenth century the cost was social and economic marginalization,
torture, and sometimes even death. But such suffering also offers
a profound opportunity for witness to the love of God in the
midst of a violent, hate-filled culture. The prospect of suffering
rather than retaliating with violence is certainly alien to modern
notions of self-esteem; it is also alien to contemporary expressions
of North American Christianity, whether on the Right or the Left,
that seek to impose their visions of a godly society upon others.
Which, in a roundabout way,
brings us back to the story of the ill-fated Anabaptist kingdom
of Munster. Christians have always been tempted to take control
of history; to seize the levers of temporal power and make history
come out "right," to try to align the kingdoms of this
world with the kingdom of God. To be sure, the temptations of
violence today are rarely as blatant or extreme as that of Jan
van Leyden -or even that of Rwanda. But a Christianity that aligns
itself with a culture of violence -from the Left or the Right-
seems to make a mockery of the grace it proclaims as its gift
to the nonbelieving world. Menno would argue that violence of
any sort in the name of Christ is blasphemy, which calls for
repentance. His writings call upon Christians to resist the seduction
of a violent culture (even when that violence is sanctioned by
the state). As a whole, evangelicals will probably not be convinced
of Mennos arguments for Christian pacifism; but at the
very least we should have an uneasy conscience about our too-easy
rationalizations.
Regardless of ones understanding
of Christian pacifism, in a profound way we are all heirs of
Menno. The principles of religious voluntarism and a disestablished
church -principles for which the sixteenth-century Anabaptists
paid with their lives- are now assumed. Even though not a systematic
theologian, Menno Simons vision of reborn Christians living
in a disciplined and visible church, and embodying in their daily
lives the loving peace of Gods grace, still has the power
to inspire Christians today. On the five-hundredth anniversary
of his birth, evangelicals of all stripes -including Mennonites-
would do well to blow the dust off Mennos writings and
read them afresh.
--John D. Roth is a member of the Historical
Committee of the Mennonite Church, and teaches History at Goshen
College. This article was reprinted with permission from Christianity Today. It appeared
in the October 7, 1996 issue of CT, titled "The Mennonites
Dirty Little Secret."
