What's the difference between anabaptist and anabaptistical?
Anabaptist
Definition:
(n.) A name sometimes applied to a member of any sect holding that rebaptism is necessary for those baptized in infancy.
Example Sentences:
(1) Within this apocalyptic tradition, Cohn identified the Flagellants who massacred the Jews of Frankfurt in 1349; the widespread heresy of the Free Spirit; the 16th-century Anabaptist theocracy of Münster (though some have criticised Cohn's account of this extraordinary event as lurid); the Bohemian Hussites; the instigators of the German peasants' war; and the Ranters of the English civil war.
(2) The Mennonites are the most receptive Anabaptist group to outside socioeconomic influences and provide a demographic contrast to the more conservative Amish and Hutterites.
(3) His best known study, The Pursuit of the Millennium: Revolutionary Millenarians and Mystical Anarchists of the Middle Ages (1957), demonstrated convincingly that the totalitarian ideologies of the 20th century, chiefly Marxism and nazism, shared a "common stock of European social mythology" with apocalyptic medieval movements such as the Flagellants and the Anabaptists.
(4) The Anabaptist Amish, Hutterite and Mennonite peoples trace their origins to the Reformation.
(5) The Hutterites are an Anabaptist population, highly inbred, with large family sizes and extensively documented pedigrees.
Anabaptistical
Definition:
(a.) Relating or attributed to the Anabaptists, or their doctrines.
Example Sentences:
(1) Within this apocalyptic tradition, Cohn identified the Flagellants who massacred the Jews of Frankfurt in 1349; the widespread heresy of the Free Spirit; the 16th-century Anabaptist theocracy of Münster (though some have criticised Cohn's account of this extraordinary event as lurid); the Bohemian Hussites; the instigators of the German peasants' war; and the Ranters of the English civil war.
(2) The Mennonites are the most receptive Anabaptist group to outside socioeconomic influences and provide a demographic contrast to the more conservative Amish and Hutterites.
(3) His best known study, The Pursuit of the Millennium: Revolutionary Millenarians and Mystical Anarchists of the Middle Ages (1957), demonstrated convincingly that the totalitarian ideologies of the 20th century, chiefly Marxism and nazism, shared a "common stock of European social mythology" with apocalyptic medieval movements such as the Flagellants and the Anabaptists.
(4) The Anabaptist Amish, Hutterite and Mennonite peoples trace their origins to the Reformation.
(5) The Hutterites are an Anabaptist population, highly inbred, with large family sizes and extensively documented pedigrees.