Community and Catastrophe: An Ecclesio-Political Reading of the Schleitheim Confession

Author:   Dr Marius van Hoogstraten
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9780567724564


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   11 December 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Community and Catastrophe: An Ecclesio-Political Reading of the Schleitheim Confession


Overview

This book examines, from a contemporary perspective, one of the most influential document in Anabaptist tradition: the Schleitheim Confession. Van Hoogstraten develops seven constructive readings of the Confession’s articles, each of which discuss practices to shape the church community. Written in the wake of defeat at the Peasants’ rising in 1527, the Confession represents the attempt by radical reformers to outline collective, nurturing practices in the wake of external catastrophe. Van Hoogstraten sets loose a lively conversation with this text that illuminates a sense of life and togetherness in trying times. In the of this hands sophisticated and interdisciplinary scholar, the Confession becomes a vital source for constructive theology and ethics in the Anabaptist tradition. This fresh take on the Confession is sure to be of interest to Anabaptist theologians as well as students of the wider fields of political theology, Continental philosophy and ecclesiology.

Full Product Details

Author:   Dr Marius van Hoogstraten
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   T.& T.Clark Ltd
ISBN:  

9780567724564


ISBN 10:   0567724565
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   11 December 2025
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction Chapter 1: Beginning Chapter 2: Repetition Chapter 3: Presence Chapter 4: Refuge Chapter 5: Process Chapter 6: Authority Chapter 7: Guarantee Excursus: Schleitheim’s Preface and Closing Lines Conclusion Appendix: The Schleitheim Articles (the full text in English translation) Bibliography Index

Reviews

A rich and constructive engagement with the Schleitheim Confession, Community and Catastrophe breathes life into the founding document of early Anabaptism. Van Hoogstraten invites a new generation to encounter the Anabaptist tradition by engaging a familiar 16th century text in the company of contemporary voices like Hannah Arendt, Catherine Keller, and Giorgio Agamben. As a pastor and theologian, I have been waiting for a book like this, one that will enrich readers both in the classroom and in the pew. * Melissa Florer-Bixler, Duke Divinity School, USA *


A rich and constructive engagement with the Schleitheim Confession, Community and Catastrophe breathes life into the founding document of early Anabaptism. Van Hoogstraten invites a new generation to encounter the Anabaptist tradition by engaging a familiar 16th century text in the company of contemporary voices like Hannah Arendt, Catherine Keller, and Giorgio Agamben. As a pastor and theologian, I have been waiting for a book like this, one that will enrich readers both in the classroom and in the pew. * Melissa Florer-Bixler, Duke Divinity School, USA * Ever since a controversial baptism ceremony in Zurich amidst the Protestant Reformation five centuries ago, Anabaptist communities have been distinguished for dividing and starting anew amidst failure and schism. In this deeply informed rereading of the oldest church order of the Anabaptists, Marius van Hoogstraten shows how the radical reformation habit of beginning again—without sword or sovereignty—opened a new path of resilient and renewable community life amidst the disintegration of imperial Christendom in early modernity. The book explores the problems and possibilities of this peaceable path with a view to the looming catastrophes threatening the present global order, while maintaining a fluent conversation with current social theory and theology, including the work of Giorgio Agamben, Catherine Keller, Judith Butler, and John Caputo. The result is a contemplative and imaginative meditation on the political potential of highly localized communities of faith and resistance along with emerging forms of sustainable shared life that may thrive amidst the end of the world as we know it. * Gerald J. Mast, Bluffton University, USA *


Author Information

Marius van Hoogstraten is a Lecturer at the Mennonite Seminary at VU Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

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Latest Reading Guide

NOV RG 20252

 

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