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Thesis, Final Draft BETWEEN REMNANT AND RENEWAL: A HISTORICAL AND COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE “APOSTOLIC CHRISTIAN CHURCH” AMONG NEO-ANABAPTIST RENEWAL MOVEMENTS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA By Joseph F. Pfeiffer A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts: Theological Studies Church History Concentration Elkhart, Indiana May 2010 Table of Contents Introduction……………………………………………………………………………….iv Chapter One: Anabaptists and Neo-Anabaptists as Movements of Radical Renewal………………………………………..1 PART I: EUROPEAN ORIGINS Chapter Two: The Origins and Birth of a European Neo-Anabaptist Movement: Samuel Fröhlich and the Formation of the Neutäufer Movement to 1833……………...…………………………………………….……...42 Chapter Three: Consolidation and Organization of a European Neo-Anabaptist Sect, 1833-1865………………………….….75 PART II: THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE Chapter Four: A European Faith on the American Frontier: Immigration, Expansion and Etnicization, 1847-1890………………......93 Chapter Five: Tensions with Modernization at the Turn of the 20th Century: Immigration, Divisions, and Americanization, 1890-1950…….............116 Chapter Six: Toward a Renewed Global Identity: Modernization, Identity Crisis, and New Global Realities, 1950-2010……………....…155 CONCLUSION……………………………………………………………………..…..198 BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………………………………………………………200 i Acknowledgments Acknowledgement is due to all the many people that contributed to this project in so many different ways. Special thanks are due to Adele Weingartner, who opened up to me the collection of her late husband Paul, a faithful member of the Apostolic Christian Church (Nazarean) who cared deeply about many of the issues with which this study deals. Marc Igic, Perry Klopfenstein, Petar Nenadov, William Hrubik, Adele Weingartner, Eric Weingartner, and various others from the Apostolic Christian Churches provided very helpful and insightful interviews and conversations. Thanks are also due to Walter Sawatsky and Berhard Ott for their valuable guidance in research. The staffs of the Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary Library and the Mennonite Historical Library were generous in their help finding and working with materials and resources. And certainly much gratitude goes to my wife Cara, who not only provided needed encouragement and moral support, but also spent hours looking over drafts and giving helpful comments. All of the above only demonstrate that the pursuit of knowledge is always a community affair. ii Dedication This project is dedicated to my grandmother, Elisabeth Pfeiffer (Müller). Born and raised in the Nazarene (Apostolic Christian) faith in Yugoslavia, she survived the cataclysm of World War II and the horrors of ethnic cleansing in post-war Yugoslavia, married and began a family in a refugee camp in Austria, and emigrated to America to begin anew in a foreign new world. Her devotion to her faith, her hope in God’s goodness and in His promise of eternal life to those who overcome, and her peaceful and patient endurance of the troubles and sufferings of this life is an inspiration to her family, and to all. Hers is a faith that is lived. iii Introduction In the early 1830’s, a dynamic new “Neo-Anabaptist” movement emerged in Switzerland. Led by the charismatic young Samuel Heinrich Fröhlich (1803-1857), the vital new movement quickly spread across Switzerland, spanning from Geneva to St. Gallen. From there, it was carried on by Fröhlich and his associates into Baden- Württemberg and Bavaria in southern Germany, Alsace-Lorrain in France, Austria- Hungary, and across the Atlantic into the United States of America, where it continued to expand and grow numerically throughout the 19 th century. The movement would come to be known by different names in the various regions where it manifested. Early on, the believers of this faith called themselves simply Gläubige –“believers,”–and referred to one another simply as brother and sister. Because they came to adopt many of the beliefs and practices of the Swiss Mennonites – known simply as Täufer for “Baptizers” or “Baptists” because of their traditional emphasis on Believers’ baptism entailing willful repentance and conversion of adults – this new movement soon came to be called Neutäufer or “New Baptists.” Officially, they were called the Gemeinschaft Evangelisch Taufgesinnter , the “Fellowship of Evangelical Baptists.” 1 In eastern Europe, they came to be known as the Nazarenes , hearkening back to the name of the early followers of Jesus, who came from Nazareth, the “Nazarene.” 2 In America, they came to be most commonly known by the Apostolic Christian, because of their desire to restore apostolic, New Testament Christianity. 1 It ought to be kept in mind that in German, the terms Täufer and Taufgesinnte recall what in English is called the “Anabaptist” or Mennonite movement. Later bodies of groups that formed from the influence ofEnglish and American Baptists were known as Baptisten . 2 See the Gospel of Matthew, 2:23. iv Soon the Neutäufer would come to outnumber the Alttäufer in their own homeland as the numerically leading Anabaptist movement in Switzerland. The Nazarenes in Eastern Europe would represent the first major Anabaptist movement in modern history to find a significant following among such ethnicities as Hungarians, Serbians, Romanians, and Slovaks, coming to be fully inculturated within their respective cultural contexts and languages, and serving to forge bonds of reconciliation and brotherhood between those from ethnicities historically set against each other. Forged in the context of the expanding Midwestern frontier of mid-nineteenth century America populated mostly by German speaking immigrants, the movement would become uniquely inculturated among newly arrived European immigrants of a Swiss and German background. It would also serve as a neo-Anabaptist modernizing renewal movement among a culturally static Amish-Mennonite culture that had remained in virtual ethno- linguistic agrarian insulation for 200 years, and bridge a gap between them and new converts to a 19 th century contextualization of an historic Anabaptist Believers Church faith. Yet serious scholarly study of this fascinating phenomenon has been curiously lacking. The Problem The subject of the Apostolic Christian movements has long posed a gap in the area of Anabaptist scholarship. The absence of critical studies on what has proved to be a dynamic “neo-Anabaptist” renewal movement since the 19 th century, manifesting since its inception the ability to cross linguistic and cultural boundaries with a radical Anabaptist “Believers’ Church” conviction, is noteworthy. Late Mennonite historian v Delbert Gratz once noted, “One of the major areas that has been neglected in the historical treatment of Anabaptism is the story of the Apostolic Christian Church in America.” 3 This was a deficiency to which Graz called attention for much of his scholarly life. Though a number of critical and scholarly treatments have been conducted on the European manifestations of the movement, no critical study has been conducted of the American manifestations of the Apostolic Christian Church. Bernhard Ott’s Missionarische Gemeinde werden ,4 marked a milestone in the writing of critical history of the movement, especially in Western Europe. Beyond simply presenting a chronology of historic events and details, Ott employs a critical apparatus for understanding the movement’s emergence as an outgrowth of missionary renewal movements, to institutionalization and sectarianism, to embracing anew missionary renewal impulses and finding new vitality in relating constructively and faithfully to the outside world. The Nazarenes of Eastern Europe have received the most attention, of any scholarly community. They have received such attention practically from the time of their explosive growth in east-central Europe in the mid 19 th century. The more modern critical treatments began with a historical and sociological study of Hungarian Nazarenes by Laszlo Kardos and Jeno Szigeti. 5 However, as this work has only been published in Hungarian, it has had a limited readership. Canadian historian of pacifism, Peter Brock, 3 Delbert Gratz, Review of Marching to Zion: A History of the Apostolic Christian Church , 1847-1982 by Perry A. Klopfenstein, in The Mennonite Quarterly Review 61:4 (October 1987), 430. 4 Bernhard Ott, Missionarische Gemeinde werden: Der Weg der Evangelishen Täufergemeinden (Uster, Switz.: ETG Verlag, 1996). 5 Laszlo Kardos and Jeno Szigeti, Boldog emberek kozossege: A magyarorszagi nazarenusok (Budapest: Magveto, 1988). Roughly translated, the title reads: “Blessed People in Community: The Nazarenes in Hungary.” vi wrote a number of articles on the Nazarenes, but focused almost exclusively on their aversion to violence and resolute stance on nonresistance. 6 Serbian historian Bojan Aleksov has made the most recent scholarly contributions to study of this movement. This began with his 1999 masters thesis at Central European University in Budapest, Hungary, on the identity struggles and decline of the Nazarene movement in Yugoslavia after 1945. 7 The work that Aleksov here began with his Masters thesis, he continued in his doctoral dissertation, on the 19 th century Nazarene movement as a broker of modernization and religious renewal among ethnic Serbs in Serbia and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was later published. 8 References have been made in Mennonite historical accounts, but these only note the story of
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