In England, when Henry VIII first severed the bands that attached him to Rome, and established the church of England, the Baptists of that country were emboldened to come forth from their hiding places to find, not peace, but persecutions. In 1535 ten of these faithful followers of the Lamb were put to death, mention being made of them in the Registers of London.
The testimony of the learned Lutheran historian, Mosheim, is so frank and decisive that we give it in his own language: "The true origin of that sect which acquired the denomination of Anabaptists, by their administering anew the rite of baptism to those who came over to their communion, and derived that of Mennonites, from that famous man to whom they owe much of their present felicity, is hidden in the depths of antiquity, and is of consequence difficult to be ascertained. They not only considered themselves descendants of the Waldenses, who were so grievously oppressed and persecuted by the despotic heads of the Romish church, but pretend, moreover, to be the purest offspring of those respectable sufferers being opposed to all principles of rebellion on the one hand, and all suggestions of fanaticism on the other. It may be observed that they are not entirely in error when they boast of their descent from the Waldenses, Petrobrussians, and other ancient sects, who are usually considered as witnesses of the truth in times of general darkness and superstition. Before the rise of Luther and Calvin, there lay concealed in almost all the countries of Europe, particularly in Bohemia, Moravia, Switzerland, and Germany, many persons who adhered tenaciously to the doctrine, etc., which is the true source of all the peculiarities that are to be found in the religious doctrine and discipline of the Anabaptists." - Mosheim's History of the Anabaptists, pp. 490-491.
Such admissions, made by an acknowledged scholar who was not a Baptist, carries with it great weight as testimony. It is as plain as history can make it, that the Baptist church has descended from the Apostles. There remains not a shadow of doubt. When the new world furnished an asylum for the persecuted, across the water came flocks of these liberty-loving disciples, and churches were planted in America. When the yoke of British oppression was broken off, and a new government was formed, the establishment of a state church was prevented, and liberty of conscience was guaranteed, the Baptist influence aiding not a little in bringing about this desirable state of affairs.
Thus we have seen that the gates of hell have not prevailed against the church founded by Christ.
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