20
On to Modesty
"¿Serán monjas? (Are they nuns?)"
the old woman at the fruit stand asks in a low voice, her attention
fastened on two girls coming up the cobblestone street.
"No," replies her granddaughter with a smile. "They
are Patricia Ramirez and Elena Chavez. They have joined the Mennonites."
Twin towers of the church at San Francisco de Borja cast long
shadows across the plaza. The two girls with white veilings fluttering
in the breeze, modest skirts and net shopping bags find their
way through town. New Christians in Mexico, near the end of the
twentieth century, they are in an old situation -- Anabaptists
in a Roman Catholic town.
"¡Qué lindo! (How pretty!)" says
the old woman at the fruit stand. "When I was young everyone
wore dresses like that."
Simple Clothes
Those who follow Christ wear simple clothes. Peter Rideman
wrote:
Since their citizenship is in heaven, Christians put on heavenly
jewels. They learn from the world. Worldly people, no matter
where they live, try to dress themselves as much as they can
according to the custom of their land. They do this to please
the world. How much more should Christians observe and imitate
the ways of the land to which they belong: heaven! How much more
should they adorn themselves according to the custom of heaven,
to please God! Christians forget all other adornment to obtain
the jewel of godliness. Those who desire this jewel are adorned
by God with holy virtues. Holy virtues look better on them than
gold chains around their necks. Those who recognize this forget
about pearls and silk and gold.1
Menno Simons wrote:
The writings say that the just will live by faith, and that
a good tree will bring forth good fruit. We know that a humble
person will never come around in jewelry or costly clothing.
. . . He knows God and his Word. His fear and love for God forbid
him to do such things.2
Then speaking about the state churches, he wrote:
They say they believe, but oh, there are no limits to their
accursed haughtiness, to their foolish pomp and pride. They go
about in silks and velvet. They wear costly clothes. They put
on gold rings, chains, silver belts, pins, and collars, veils,
aprons, velvet shoes, slippers, and who knows what all else for
foolish finery. They never stop to think that Peter and Paul
have forbidden all this to Christian women. And if it is forbidden
to women, how much more is it forbidden to the men who are their
leaders and heads! Everyone owns as much finery as he can afford,
and sometimes more than that.
Everyone wants to outdo the rest in this cursed folly. They
do not remember that it is written: "Love not the world,
neither the things that are in the world" (1 John 2:15-17).3
Practical Clothes
The Anabaptists, following Christ, avoided extremes in clothing
styles. They avoided impractical and uncomfortable clothes. But
they did not design new distinctive garments. The messengers Veit
Grünberger and Veit Schelch, sent out by the Bruderhöfe
in Moravia, are one example among many.
Traveling through Waldt in Pintzgau in northern Austria, the
two men fell under suspicion of being Anabaptists. But the people
of the town had no way of knowing for sure until they followed
them into a hotel and watched them as they received their food.
No sooner did the messengers bow their heads in prayer than the
cry "Anabaptists!" reached the constable's ears, and
they were promptly arrested and put in chains.
A court description of Philip Plener, elder of the Anabaptist
community at Auspitz in Moravia, describes him wearing a grey
riding jacket with blue sleeves, a black beret and red trousers.
This was in keeping with the Anabaptists' practice of wearing
loose-fitting, solid-coloured clothes, "according to the
manner of the land." Men usually wore knee pants tied around
the waist with a sash. Women and girls, even little girls, wore
head coverings.
Anabaptist men considered shaving a perversion. When Albrecht,
the lord of the Waldstein castle in Moravia, received Anabaptist
messengers from the Bruderhof at Wätzenobitz and "in
great wickedness cut off their beards," the entire brotherhood
suffered their disgrace. Already in the 1520s Thomas Müntzer
taught that wearing the beard was a part of following Christ.
Leaders at Strasbourg forbade the trimming of the beard according
to worldly fashions, in 1568, and Hans Betz of Znaim in Moravia
called the shaving of the beard (as practiced by both Roman Catholic
priests and the Protestant reformers) a "sure sign of the
Antichrist."4
Johannes Kessler of Sankt Gallen in Switzerland described the
Anabaptists in the 1520s:
They shun costly clothing and despise expensive food and drink.
They clothe themselves with coarse cloth and cover their heads
with broad felt hats. Their entire manner of life is completely
humble. They bear no weapon, neither sword nor dagger, but only
a short bread knife.5
Modest Clothes
Because the Anabaptists were slow to follow changes of style,
they did eventually stand out somewhat. Thieleman J. van Braght
compared the world's fashions about him with the changing phases
of the moon.
An Anabaptist, describing life on the Bruderhöfe in Moravia
in the 1560s, wrote:
Dancing, playing and drinking are not to be seen among us.
No fancily cut, stylish, or immodest clothing is worn. . . .
But the one who leaves what is good and returns to the world
. . . the one who reappears with a stylish collar around his
neck, big floppy pants and checkered garments becomes instantly
popular among sinners again. . . . The people of the world commend
him for abandoning the brotherhood and for having become a "true
Christian."6
Anabaptist leaders, gathered at Strasbourg in 1568, wrote:
Tailors and seamstresses shall stick to the simple and modest
customs of the land in regards to clothing. They shall make nothing
new for pride's sake.7
Peter Rideman wrote:
We serve our neighbours with all diligence, making all manner
of things to meet their needs. But that which serves pride, style,
and vanity, such as elaborate braiding, floral designs, and embroidery
on clothing, we make for no man. We want to keep our consciences
unspotted before God.8
New Christians entered the Anabaptist movement from all walks
of life. They entered by the hundreds and thousands. It would
have been neither practical nor possible to help all of them into
a new set of clothes. But the brotherhood did give practical direction.
Peter Rideman wrote:
The person who comes from the world does not sin when he wears
out his clothing after coming to the knowledge of the truth.
But he should avoid misusing his conventional attire and should
not let it hinder him from finding divine adornment. If it hinders
him, it would be better to throw his clothes into the fire than
to keep on wearing them. . . . We do not permit our brothers
and sisters to make or purchase stylish clothing. Satan might
take an opportunity in that to betray us again.9
Modesty and Conviction
Innerly convicted to dress modestly, the Anabaptists of all
walks of life dressed as common peasants. In a meeting at Köln
am Rhein in 1591, some of their leaders warned against "the
wearing of fancy clothes, which speak more of worldly styles than
they do of Christian humility." But they concluded that "it
is impossible to prescribe for each individual what he shall wear."10
In the beginning the Anabaptists did not regulate specific
dress patterns. When such regulations first appeared among groups
with Anabaptist background (such as the Old Flemish Mennonites
and the Amish), many leaders warned against them.
Gerrit Roosen, author of the confession of faith of the Anabaptists
in northern Germany, and of the Christliches Gemüthsgespräch
was a leader among European Anabaptists in the seventeenth century.
On December 21, 1697 he wrote:
I am truly sorry that you have been disturbed by people who
exalt themselves and make rules about things not clearly laid
down in the Gospel. If the apostles had told us exactly how and
with what the believer is to clothe himself, then we would have
a case to work on. But we dare not contradict the Gospel by forcing
men's consciences about certain styles of hats, clothes, shoes,
stockings or haircuts. Things are done differently in every country.
We dare not excommunicate people just because they do not line
up to our customs. We dare not put them out of the church as
sinful leaven, when neither Jesus nor the apostles bound us in
matters of outward form. Neither Jesus nor the apostles made
rules or laws about such things. Rather, Paul said in Col. 2
that we do not inherit the kingdom of heaven through food and
drink. Neither do we inherit it through the form and cut of our
clothes.
Jesus did not bind us in outward things. Why does our friend
Jakob Amman undertake to make rules, then exclude those from
the church who do not keep them? If he considers himself a servant
of the Gospel but wants to live by the letter of outward law,
then he should not have two coats. He should not carry money
in his pocket nor shoes on his feet. If he does not live according
to the letter of Jesus' law, how can he force the brothers to
live by the letter of his own laws? Oh that he would follow Paul
who feared God, who treated people gently and who took pains
not to offend the conscience of the weak. . . . Paul did not
write one word about outward forms of clothing. But he taught
us to be conformed to those of low estate and imitate only that
which is honourable. We are to do that within the manner of the
land in which we live. We are to shun styles and proud worldliness
(1 John 2). We should not be quick to change our manner of dress.
Fashion deserves rebuke. New articles of dress should not be
accepted until they become common practice in the land, and then
only if they are becoming to Christian humility.
I do not walk in the lust of the eyes and worldliness. All
my life I have stuck to one style of dress. But suppose I should
have dressed myself according to another custom, the way they
do it in another land? Should I then be excommunicated? That
would be illogical and against the Scriptures.
The Scriptures must be our guide. We dare not run ahead of
them. We must follow them, not lightheartedly, but in carefulness
and fear. It is dangerous to step into the place of God's judgement
and bind on earth what is not bound in heaven.11
Not in extremes, not in worldly fashions but modestly dressed,
the Anabaptists followed Christ . . .
1 Rechenschaft, 1540
2 Dat Fundament des Christelycken leers
. . . 1539
3 Van dat rechte christen ghelooue . . .
ca. 1542
4 The Anabaptists, like their Hutterite descendants,
wore both beards and moustaches. Two hundred years later, after
the Napoleonic wars of the early 1800s, the Amish began to shave
the moustache to protest French militarism. Some Amish groups
did not stop wearing the moustache until after they were in America.
5 From the diary of Johannes Kessler which
he wrote during the early 1500s.
6 Geschichtbuech, ca. 1570
7 Artikel und Ordnungen der christlichen
Gemeinde in Christo Jesu, 1568
8 op. cit.
9 ibid.
10 At this meeting, attended by a large number
of Anabaptist leaders from Germany and the Netherlands, the Spirit
of Christ led to unity and peace. Those present from the Netherlands
lamented the fact that they had misused church discipline and
the ban. They came to see that excommunicating people over details
of application was wrong, and all those assembled prepared a statement
of faith (the Concept van Keulen) together.
11 Abschrift von Gerhard Rosen von Hamburg.
Den 21. Dezember, 1697
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