Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Balthasar Hubmaier


Related Topics

In the News (Sun 15 Nov 09)

  
  Hubmaier, Balthasar (1480?-1528)
Hubmaier now also in actual practice dropped infant baptism, baptizing only the children of such parents as were still weak in the faith and therefore desired baptism for their children.
That in the Hubmaier affair the primary issue was his political activity in Waldshut is seen in the command Ferdinand issued to his government in Ensisheim to conduct a careful investigation of Hubmaier's actions in Waldshut, where he caused insurrection and revolt among the common people.
Balthasar Hubmaier was an Anabaptist theologian and martyr.
www.gameo.org /encyclopedia/contents/H8358.html   (8300 words)

  
 AT 22: The Anabaptism of Balthasar Hubmaier | The Anabaptist Network
Hubmaier is regarded by some as the virtual initiator of the German Peasants’ War (1524-1526); while the evidence does not support this, he was certainly the most prominent Anabaptist leader who was associated with the Peasants’ War while he was an Anabaptist.
Hubmaier’s outlook is realistic in the sense of recognising humanity’s common culpability and common responsibility to restrain evil, even with the sword.
Hubmaier was one of the few Anabaptists whose ministry attempted to answer the question of whether a reformation undertaken with the blessing of a civil government in sixteenth-century Europe could be Anabaptist and still survive.
www.anabaptistnetwork.com /node/155   (2500 words)

  
 Balthasar Hubmaier - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hubmaier's fame as a pulpiteer was widespread, and his success as an administrator was not exceptional.
In December of 1525, Hubmaier fled to Zürich to escape the Austrian army.
Within the discussion, Hubmaier proceeded to quote statements by Zwingli in which he asserted that children should not be baptized until they had been instructed.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Balthasar_Hubmaier   (570 words)

  
 A History of the Baptists, John T. Christian | The Reformed Reader
Balthasar Hubmaier, or Hubnor, as he generally wrote his name, was the great apostle of the Baptists of Moravia.
Hubmaier is himself a witness to the practice of immersion.
Hubmaier always denied that he was an Anabaptist or that he practiced Anabaptism.
www.reformedreader.org /history/christian/ahob1/ahobc11.htm   (3470 words)

  
 lion&lamb: Back Issue
By 1525 Hubmaier was identifying himself with a new cause — the Anabaptist movement.
Hubmaier was a wanted man. He fled to Zurich, but Zwingli, the Protestant Reformer, was no more sympathetic to Hubmaier than the Catholics.
Hubmaier was not the first or last Anabaptist to die in the flames of religious persecution.
www.econi.org /LionLamb/022/church2.html   (475 words)

  
 6. BALTHASAR HUMBAIER IN MORAVIA -- The Protesters
In a gloating style excessive even for Zwingli, he writes that, seeing that Hubmaier was clearly "a sport of demons", he extracted a recantation from him while he was "stretched upon the rack".
Many others besides Hubmaier found a temporary haven of refuge in Moravia during 1526, and a steady stream of refugees from Switzerland, the Tyrol, Italy and Germany swelled the ranks of the Brethren in that country.
Hubmaier was convinced that, despite the profound nature of the subject, Christian theology was needlessly complicated by men more interested in displaying their erudition than in explaining the verities of God, for among the Brethren he had witnessed humble artisans become mighty in the Scriptures.
www.antipas.org /books/protesters/prot_06.html   (2056 words)

  
 Amazon.fr : Balthasar Hubmaier's Understanding of Faith: Livres en anglais: Eddie Mabry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Balthasar Hubmaier's Understanding of Faith brings together Balthasar Hubmaier's ideas on faith, since he never wrote a specific treatise on faith himself.
This analysis of Hubmaier's views on faith shows that he saw two kinds of faith as necessary and operative in the whole restoration process of fallen human beings.
Eddie Mabry wrote Balthasar Hubmaier's Doctrine of the Church (University Press of America, 1994) and is Associate Professor of the History of Christianity and Chair of the Religion Department at Augustana College.
amazon.fr /Balthasar-Hubmaiers-Understanding-Faith-Eddie/dp/0761812202   (365 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Balthasar Hubmaier's Doctrine of the Church: Books: Eddie Mabry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Balthasar Hubmaier understood the church to be a visible assembly of regenerated baptized saints, who both memorized Christ's suffering on the cross in the ordinance of the Lord's Supper, and who participated in that suffering as a church under the cross.
Hubmaier's doctrine of the church seems to have many parallels both in medieval and sixteenth-century Anabaptist ecclesiology; but it cannot be solidly placed in either category.
Contents: Preface; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Balthasar Hubmaier: The Man and His Theological Development; Hubmaier's Doctrine of the Church; Hubmaier's Doctrine of Regeneration and Salvation; Hubmaier's Doctrine of Baptism; Hubmaier's Doctrine of the Lord's Supper; Hubmaier's Doctrine of the Role of the Church in the World; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.
www.amazon.com /Balthasar-Hubmaiers-Doctrine-Church-Eddie/dp/0819194727   (599 words)

  
 Hubmaier
Regarding infant baptism Hubmaier wrote, "The meaning of this sign and symbol (baptism), the pledge of faith until death, in hope of the resurrection of life to come, is to be considered more than a sign.
Hubmaier was a thoughtful opponent to the doctrine of the bondage of the will and of predestination that was prevalent in thought of Luther, Zwingli and the Magisterial Reformers.
Hubmaier's distaste for the doctrine of predestination is unconcealed.
www.mainstreambaptists.org /mbn/hubmaier.htm   (732 words)

  
 Direction: Anabaptist Liturgical Spirituality and the Supper of Christ
Hubmaier, for example, rejected the religious ritual of infant baptism because he believed that it was not the form of baptism instituted by Christ for the incorporation of the church.
Hubmaier argues that communion with God, and with each other as individual parts of the whole body of Christ, are essential within the genuine Christian church.
Hubmaier, like other early Anabaptist leaders, placed an emphasis on the role of the Holy Spirit in shaping the church and her worship practices.
www.directionjournal.org /article/?1373   (4261 words)

  
 March 10: Balthasar Hubmaier killed
Balthasar wrote an argument for toleration which became the first work on religious liberty to spring from the Reformation.
When the Council of Trent met in 1645 and condemned the works of the Reformers, Balthasar Hubmaier was grouped with Martin Luther, Ulrich Zwingli, and John Calvin as a heretic to the Church of Rome.
"Hubmaier, Balthasar." The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, edited by F. Cross and E. Livingstone.
chi.gospelcom.net /DAILYF/2003/03/daily-03-10-2003.shtml   (694 words)

  
 Post-Reformation Church History
Balthasar Hubmaier, an Anabaptist burned at the stake in 1528, preached at St.
A few months before Hubmaier’s death, Luther wrote a tract against the Anabaptists (January or February, 1528).
In it he said, "I know well enough that Balthasar Huebmoer [sic] quotes me among others by name, in his blasphemous book on Re-baptism, as if I were of his foolish mind.
www.chaplain.us /church/anabaptist.htm   (966 words)

  
 ttt
Born in Friedberg near Augsburg, Hubmaier was sometimes known as Dr. Friedberger.
By 1527 he had broken with the Swiss, South German, and Austrian Anabaptists on the subject of nonresistance as set forth in his booklet on the sword; on that subject he stood closer to Luther.
Arrested in 1527, both Hubmaier and his wife were imprisoned in Vienna.
www.matthew548.com /t-hub.html   (345 words)

  
 The Anabaptists
Balthasar Hubmaier: Hubmaier was one of the better educated men of his day, having received his doctorate in theology.
Hubmaier’s conscience began to bother him about the Bible’s teachings about baptism, the purity of the church, the new birth, discipleship, and evangelism.
Hubmaier was probably one of the few Anabaptist leaders who believed in election and predestination.
www.thirdmill.org /files/english/html/ch/CH.Arnold.RMT.10.HTML   (2166 words)

  
 Batlhasar Hubmaier, 1480-1528, German Anabaptist A short biography of Balthasar Hubmaier, a German anabaptist ...
Batlhasar Hubmaier, 1480-1528, German Anabaptist A short biography of Balthasar Hubmaier, a German anabaptist Believersweb.org
Hubmaier was born of poor parents in Augsburg, Germany.
Although little is known of his early life, he became an unusual student, receiving a master's de- gree in 1511 from the University of Freiburg, and a doctor of theology degree from the University of Ingolstadt two years later, where he became professor of theology.
www.believersweb.org /view.cfm?ID=47   (334 words)

  
 Son-in-law, in sermon, notes Patterson's biblical passion - (BP)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
But in the year 1522, Hubmaier came to understand that salvation came by faith alone and was subsequently baptized on Easter Sunday, 1525.
But on March 10, 1528, Hubmaier was extradited by the Hapsburgs to Vienna and burned at the stake for preaching the Gospel.
Just as Hubmaier signed each of his literary works with the affirmation, "Truth is immortal," the ministry of Paige Patterson at Southwestern Seminary will also stand the test of eternity to the degree to which it is based on the inerrant and infallible Word of God, Howell said.
www.bpnews.net /bpnews.asp?ID=16914   (1163 words)

  
 Études Théologiques & Religieuses/2004 : numéro 1/PRÉSENTATION ET TRADUCTION DU PREMIER ÉCRIT ANABAPTISTE : ...
L'inspirateur de cette Réforme "radicale", le théologien Balthasar Hubmaier (1480/85-1528), en expose les raisons dans un bref traité dont Jean Marcel VINCENT offre ici la première traduction française ainsi qu'un commentaire introductif.
In April 1525, the City Council of Waldshut decided to undertake a substantial change in the practice of the Church's sacraments, namely to baptise only professing believers and to perform the Eucharist as a symbolic meal, with ordinary bread and cups, in memory of Christ's death.
Balthasar Hubmaier (1480/85-1528), who inspired this "radical" Reformation, outlines its theological grounds and reasons in a brief treatise which is here translated in French for the first time.
www.revue-etr.org /revue/2004-1-art1.html   (230 words)

  
 Toleration and Freedom in Christian Thought   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The Schleitheim Confession was the first unifying document to come out of that hodgepodge of radical reformers often grouped under the term “Anabaptist.” Representatives of the various groups met together in Schleitheim in early 1527.
Balthasar Hubmaier (1480-1528) was an ordained Catholic priest who held a doctorate in theology.
Hubmaier’s Appeal was written in the hopes that he could avoid extradition from the Protestant Schaffhausen back to Catholic Austria.
www.samford.edu /~tsmcginn/tf/r13.html   (316 words)

  
 На Даче: Anabaptist Readings...
He is inspired so to write due to problems he identifies in Lutheran followers who seem to emphasize God's will to the point of completely overriding man's will.
Hubmaier levels some good critizism's against the abuses of the Lutherans, but I think his argument is weakened by employing the philosophy of church fathers and an often alegorical interpretation of scripture.
Hubmaier wrote many pamphlets, but his most well known work, Heretics and Those Who Burn Them, was written around 1525.
na-dache.blogspot.com /2004/10/anabaptist-readings.html   (439 words)

  
 Direction: The Lord’s Supper in Anabaptism: A Study in the Christology of Balthasar Hubmaier, Pilgram Marpeck, ...
The Lord’s Supper in Anabaptism: A Study in the Christology of Balthasar Hubmaier, Pilgram Marpeck, and Dirk Philips
Hubmaier’s theology was a radically new departure that established the tendency in Anabaptist thought that sees a sacramental ceremony as a response rather than a means of grace.
Even with Marpeck, however, Rempel is not hesitant to point out that his work is not finished; it is formed through response to questions, in conflict, and must be understood with its unresolved tensions.
www.directionjournal.org /article/?918   (1029 words)

  
 MWC - Courier
By this the old Adam is martyred, killed, and carried to the grave." (Balthasar Hubmaier, d.
The Anabaptists believed that after the baptisms of Spirit and water, they would still face a constant struggle against "the flesh" and "the world." There were human failings that had to be resisted constantly, and the power of the Spirit had to be invoked with the same constancy.
The Lord's Supper was a memorial to be celebrated by baptized and disciplined believers, not a re-creation of Christ's sacrifice to be done by priests on behalf of sinners.
www.mwc-cmm.org /Courier/1998/98q2pg09.html   (2619 words)

  
 Balthazar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Balthazar (also spelled Balthasar), is a traditional name for one of the anonymous Three Wise Men in the Gospel of Matthew.
Balthasar Gérard, assassin of William I of Orange
Balthasar Oomkens von Esens, 16th century Frisian rebel (two of whose brothers were named Caspar and Melchior)
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Balthasar   (359 words)

  
 4. THE WHOLE AND THE DRAGON -- Brethren In Christ, by Alan Eyre
Deep in the dungeons Balthasar Hubmaier and his wife Elizabeth spent most of the last few months of mortal life.
Hans Hut's passing must have affected Hubmaier and his wife very deeply, knowing that their turn would be very soon.
: Bullying 'appeal' by arch-persecutor Johannes Fabri of Vienna to Balthasar Hubmaier imprisoned in Kreuzenstein 1528.
www.west.net /~antipas/books/brethren_in_christ/binc_04.html   (1343 words)

  
 The Morning News: Religion : America's Top Church-hunter Writes An Invaluable Encyclopedia Of Protestantism
Hubmaier, known to few Baptists today, was a Catholic theologian and vice rector of Bavaria's University of Ingolstadt when the Protestant Reformation broke out.
Hubmaier's story is among many revealing episodes tucked into the new Encyclopedia of Protestantism.
In 2003, a multi-volume work with the same title was published by Routledge but at $695 it's mainly for research libraries.
www.nwaonline.net /articles/2005/08/13/religion/05protestan.txt   (706 words)

  
 Dirk Pieters Krood, Pieter Trijnes, Class Roders, Pieter Class Jans, Of Wormer, In Waterlandt
At the time of Zwinglius there was also one Balthasar Hubmor of Friedberg, whom the papists called a doctor of the Holy Scriptures, a learned and eloquent man. He was first a teacher and preacher at Ingolstadt, and subsequently came to Reinsburg, where he preached mightily against the Jews and their usury.
Through the enlightenment of the Holy Spirit, the abomination of popery was made manifest to him, in consequence of which he, according to the counsel of God, separated therefrom.
Afterwards they apprehended him and his wife, and brought them to Vienna, in Austria, where, after manifold trials and long imprisonment, he was burned to ashes, suffering it with great steadfastness, and his wife drowned; and thus both steadfastly confirmed with their death the faith which they had received from God.
www.homecomers.org /mirror/martyrs064.htm   (5558 words)

  
 Balthasar Hubmaier: Theologian of Anabaptism by Pipkin, H. Wayne (Editor) and Yoder, John Howard (Editor) - KTLW Radio ...
Balthasar Hubmaier: Theologian of Anabaptism by Pipkin, H. Wayne (Editor) and Yoder, John Howard (Editor) - KTLW Radio Network
This series makes available in English the primary works of major Anabaptist figures of the 16th century as well as the writings of other religious thinkers who influenced or shed light on the Anabaptist movement.
This is the critical English-language edition of the complete writings of Balthasar Hubmaier provided by editors H. Wayne Pipkin and John H. Yoder.
www.parable.com /ktlw/item_0836131037.htm   (188 words)

  
 Mennonite Publishing Network
A Study in the Christology of Balthasar Hubmaier, Pilgram Marpeck and Dirk Philips
He highlights the role of Christology in Hubmaier, Marpeck, and Dirk, and the eucharistic theologies which issue from their different pictures of Christ.
These views of the Lord's Supper, shaped by attempts to defend the Anabaptist Supper against both sacramentalism and spiritualism, were taken up and changed in later Mennonitism (and by other radical Protestants) and greatly reduced from their sixteenth-century origins.
www.mph.org /hp/books/LordsSupperAna.htm   (266 words)

  
 Search the MQR index
Possibilities of Erasmian influence on Denck and Hubmaier in their views on the freedom of the will.
(Listed under Estep, William R., Jr; Freedom Of Religion; Hubmaier, Balthasar, D. Scholasticism and radical reform: nominalist motifs in the theology of Balthasar Hubmaier.
The Hutterite doctrines of church and common life, a study of Peter Riedemann's confession of faith of 1540.
www.goshen.edu /mqr/search.php?subjID=1015   (632 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.