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Dekings, an anabaptist, and one that had witnessed a great deal of discontent with the present proceedings.
2
That anabaptist, methodistical, quaker, psalm-singing rascal has frightened the boy, with his farrago about flames and brimstone.
3
In 1526, Felix Mants, the anabaptist, is drowned at Zurich, in obedience to Zwingli's pithy formula-'Quiiterum mergit mergatur'.
4
The outbreak at Munster was the crisis of the Anabaptist movement.
5
Doesn't the word Anabaptist simply mean that you're not a Baptist?'
Usage of anabaptism in English
1
His crime, to be sure, was anabaptism, the most deadly offence in the calendar.
2
This was a tract entitled 'On Anabaptism; to two pastors.'
3
For the measures taken to suppress the movement in the Netherlands see Richard Heath's Anabaptism.
4
The further characteristic marks which may be selected to differentiate Anabaptism from other movements of the period are:
5
One of the best historians of the Reformation, Walter Köhler, calls Erasmus one of the spiritual fathers of Anabaptism.
6
The Prince of Orange at this moment was strenuously opposed both to Calvinism and Anabaptism, but inclining to Lutheranism.
7
The grim rocks of Episcopalianism and Presbytery, of Independence and Anabaptism, of divine right and republicanism, stood opposed to one another.
8
For while Lutheranism stood essentially for passive obedience, and flourished nowhere save as a state church, Anabaptism was frankly revolutionary and often socialistic.