- Feb 8, 2015
- 455
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- US-Libertarian
I'm aware that the Religious Society of Friends aren't related to Anabaptists despite both being peace churches, but I'm looking for a church home and I want to know if I'd fit in better with the Quakers or the Mennonites.
I find myself agreeing on a lot of things with both of them. However, I was put off by Anabaptism's pacifism and rejection of eternal security. I'm not necessarily against pacifism and I am pretty close to it myself (I think there are some rare instances where violence is permitted, albeit as a last resort), and the Anabaptists seem to strict about it, while with the Quakers it was a traditional belief, but not necessarily a required one.
-I like and agree with the Quakers about the sacraments, but I don't think water baptism and the ritual observance of the Lord's Supper are necessarily wrong, either, I guess I see it as a preference thing.
-Anabaptists seem to accept the Bible as infallible and as the final authority, while Quakers (at least the non-evangelical ones) seem to accept the Bible as inspired and are quite knowledgeable biblically, they don't seem to accept that it is the final authority or without error. Idk who is right in this regard.
- I also don't really know whether the ideal form of worship is the unprogrammed waiting worship of the Friends or the Scripture reading and hymn singing of the Anabaptists.
I find myself agreeing on a lot of things with both of them. However, I was put off by Anabaptism's pacifism and rejection of eternal security. I'm not necessarily against pacifism and I am pretty close to it myself (I think there are some rare instances where violence is permitted, albeit as a last resort), and the Anabaptists seem to strict about it, while with the Quakers it was a traditional belief, but not necessarily a required one.
-I like and agree with the Quakers about the sacraments, but I don't think water baptism and the ritual observance of the Lord's Supper are necessarily wrong, either, I guess I see it as a preference thing.
-Anabaptists seem to accept the Bible as infallible and as the final authority, while Quakers (at least the non-evangelical ones) seem to accept the Bible as inspired and are quite knowledgeable biblically, they don't seem to accept that it is the final authority or without error. Idk who is right in this regard.
- I also don't really know whether the ideal form of worship is the unprogrammed waiting worship of the Friends or the Scripture reading and hymn singing of the Anabaptists.