Anabaptist Theological Perspectives

How Anabaptists Shaped Religious Freedom: A July 4th Reflection

16 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio How Anabaptists Shaped Religious Freedom: A July 4th Reflection

Descripción

Host Jerry Eicher reflects on the Anabaptist roots of religious freedom in an episode timed for July 4th. Guests and voices referenced include Steve Stuzman (Straight Paths Ministry), Gene Edwards, and Walter Beachy. The conversation traces the Anabaptist conviction of the church as local gathered believers, their rejection of state-backed religion and infant baptism, and the brutal persecution they endured for that stance. The episode explores how those radical ideas influenced early American thinking about separation of church and state, the framers’ experiment in religious liberty, and why conservative Anabaptists today are grateful for the protections that allow free worship. Key points include the theological basis for church autonomy, historical examples of persecution, and a grateful assessment of America’s experiment in religious freedom despite its flaws.

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episode How Anabaptists Shaped Religious Freedom: A July 4th Reflection artwork

How Anabaptists Shaped Religious Freedom: A July 4th Reflection

Host Jerry Eicher reflects on the Anabaptist roots of religious freedom in an episode timed for July 4th. Guests and voices referenced include Steve Stuzman (Straight Paths Ministry), Gene Edwards, and Walter Beachy. The conversation traces the Anabaptist conviction of the church as local gathered believers, their rejection of state-backed religion and infant baptism, and the brutal persecution they endured for that stance. The episode explores how those radical ideas influenced early American thinking about separation of church and state, the framers’ experiment in religious liberty, and why conservative Anabaptists today are grateful for the protections that allow free worship. Key points include the theological basis for church autonomy, historical examples of persecution, and a grateful assessment of America’s experiment in religious freedom despite its flaws.

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