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Worldly Conformity in Dress

e-kirja


It is perhaps generally known that there is carried on, at the present

time, an organized propaganda to persuade our people that certain restrictions,

for which we as a church stand, are nothing more than unnecessary customs,

commandments of men. In particular is this charge made in reference to the

order of the Church as regards restrictions in dress, such as the head dress of

our sisters.

The fact deserves to be noticed here that the opponents of the Church

have in all ages of her history advanced similar charges. In the earliest

history of the Church the leaders of state church Protestantism accused the

Mennonite fathers of setting up commandments of men. The leaders of popular

Christianity in that period asserted that non-essential things alone were the

obstacles in the way of a union of the Mennonites with the state churches.

Zwingli wrote repeatedly that the Swiss Brethren (the Mennonites of

Switzerland) were of one mind with him in the articles of faith. He expressed

the opinion that on account of “mere external things” (which in his view were

not warranted by Scripture and were commandments of men) they refused to unite

with the state church