1) the baptism of infants is unBiblical
2) only adults should be baptized as a sign of Christian belief
3) primitive Christianity should be restored, through the abolition of oaths, capital punishment, and the Magisterium.
4) a new kingdom of God on communitarian grounds should be founded.
These heretics were rejected by Catholics for denying the Church that Our Blessed Lord founded, and for denying His Bishops and priests: as He says in The Bible (Luke 10:16) "He who hears you, hears me; and he who rejects you, rejects me; and he who rejects me, rejects him who sent me." In other words, they were rejected by Catholics for rejecting Our Blessed Lord.
Further, they rejected His Sacraments, that He established for the remission of sins, and the salvation of men. Particularly disturbing was their rejection of baptism - really altogether - as even their adult baptism rejects the very notion of a sacrament that really accomplishes what it symbolizes.
To reject the living Church, the very physical presence of Our Blessed Lord, and the Holy Spirit living in the Church is to leave the faith altogether, they had become heretics, rejecting their salvation. This is why they were rejected by Catholics.
The Anabaptists were almost like Ecclesiastical Hippies. I know that is a bad analogy but unlike the Hippies they were often violent, advocated Peasant uprisings- and what we would now call riots. They were a bunch of Rebel-Rousers and troublemakers. Imagine peasants burning crops and vandalizing estate property. They were, let us state it, trouble makers!
The Anabaptist were condemned because the leaders, Munzer, John Leyden, and Simons were executed by their radical actions to overthrow political and social order.
Jews
netherlands
George Santayana
"Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it."'Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.'
Many different English politicians condemned the French revoltion. One of the most famous ones to do so was Irish-English Edmund Burke, who, having earlier supported the revolution, wrote a book critical of it called Thoughts on the Revolution in France.
Anabaptist was a movement, a church reformation, the term was given to Anabaptist by their enemy. Anabaptist means to be baptized again, the Anabaptist believe that a person needs to be able to confess on their own.
It is an oxymoron. There is no such thing as an Anabaptist-Catholic
Anabaptist radicals held sway in Munster.
Anabaptist
Rembrandt did not belong to an anabaptist sect.
To the best of my knowledge, the Catholic Church never sought to kill Anabaptists, they certainly condemned them as heretics, but the Catholic Church is the Mystical Body of Christ and is here on earth to save people, not to kill them. To kill someone is a complete loss for the Church, that soul can never be saved.
Anabaptist
No, he was an Anabaptist Christian.
Anabaptism is a monotheistic Christian movement that upholds belief in one God.
Here is a link that may help.
The Condemned.
Menno Simmons