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=== Swiss Brethren === {{Main|Swiss Brethren}} Zwingli's cautious "Magisterial Reformation" outraged the more radical reformers, among them [[Conrad Grebel]] (d. 1526), a Zürich patrician's son who had fallen out with his family for marrying a low born girl. The radicals summarized their theology in a letter to Müntzer in 1524. They identified the Church as an exclusive community of the righteous, and demanded its liberation from the state. They deplored all religious practices that had no Biblical foundations, and endorsed [[believer's baptism|believers' (or adult) baptism]]. In January 1525, a former Catholic priest [[George Blaurock]] (d. 1529) asked Grebel to [[Rebaptism|rebaptize]] him, and after his request was granted they rebaptized fifteen other people.{{sfn|Lindberg|2021|pp=198–201}} For this practice, they were called [[Anabaptism|Anabaptists]] ('rebaptizers').{{sfn|MacCulloch|2003|pp=145–146}} As a featuring element of [[Donatism]] and other heretic movements, rebaptism had been a [[capital offence]] since the Late Roman period. After the magistrates had some radicals imprisoned, Blaurock called Zwingli the Antichrist.{{sfn|Lindberg|2021|pp=198–203}} The town council enacted a law that threatened rebaptizers with capital punishment, and the Anabaptist [[Felix Manz]] (d. 1527) was condemned to death and drowned in the [[Limmat River]].{{sfn|MacCulloch|2003|p=146}} He was the first victim of religious persecution by reformist authorities. The purge convinced many Anabaptists that they were the true heirs to early Christians who had [[Persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire|suffered martyrdom]] for their faith. The most radicals took inspiration from the [[Book of Daniel]] and the [[Book of Revelation]] for apocalyptic prophesies. Some of them burnt the Bible reciting St Paul's words, "[[2 Corinthians 3|the letter kills]]".{{sfn|Lindberg|2021|pp=203–204}} In [[St. Gallen]], Anabaptist women cut their hair short to avoid arousing sexual passion, while a housemaid Frena Bumenin proclaimed herself the New Messiah before announcing that she would give birth to the Antichrist.{{sfn|MacCulloch|2003|pp=164–165}} According to Dr Kenneth R. Davis, "the Anabaptists can best be understood as, apart from their own creativity, a radicalization and Protestantization not of the Magisterial Reformation but of the lay-oriented, ascetic reformation of which [[Erasmus]] is the principle mediator."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Davis |first1=Kenneth Ronald |title=Anabaptism and Asceticism: A Study in Intellectual Origins |date=1974 |publisher=Herald Press |isbn=978-0-8361-1195-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XIrZAAAAMAAJ |language=en}}</ref>{{rp|292}}
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