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.

Words possibly related to "anabaptistical"