Alexander Mack | |
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Church | Schwarzenau Brethren (German Baptist) |
Orders | |
Ordination | Minister, elder |
Personal details | |
Born | 27 July 1679 Schriesheim, Palatinate, Germany |
Died | 19 January 1735 Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
(aged 55)
Buried | Upper Burying Ground, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Nationality | German Palatine |
Denomination | Protestant Christian, Pietist Anabaptist |
Residence | Schriesheim, Palatinate; East Friesland; and Schwarzenau, Bad Berleburg, Germany and Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Parents | Johann Phillip Mack (father) and Christina Fillbrun Mack (mother) |
Spouse | Anna Margarethe Kling |
Children | Johann Valentine, Johannes, and Alexander Mack, Jr. (sons) and Christina and unnamed infant (daughters) |
Occupation | Composer, elder and minister, philanthropist, theologian |
Profession | Miller |
Signature |
Part of a series on the |
Schwarzenau Brethren
(the German Baptists or Dunkers)
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Background |
Christianity · Protestantism · Anabaptism · Radical Pietism · Radical Reformation |
Doctrinal tenets |
Non-creedalism · Trine baptism · Love feast · Feet washing · Holy kiss · Free church · Anointing with oil · Non-resistance · Pacifism · The Brethren Card |
People |
Alexander Mack · Louis Bauman · Conrad Beissel · Donald F. Durnbaugh · Vernard Eller · Christoph Sauer · John C. Whitcomb |
Groups |
Brethren (Ashland) Church · Brethren Reformed Church · Church of the Brethren · Conservative Grace Brethren · Dunkard Brethren · Grace Brethren · Old Brethren German Baptist · Old German Baptist Brethren · Old Order German Baptist Brethren · Old German Baptist Brethren, New Conference |
Related movements |
Amish · Bruderhof · Community of True Inspiration · Hutterites · Mennonites · River Brethren · Religious Society of Friends · Christian Peacemaker Teams |
Alexander Mack (c. 27 July 1679[a] – 19 January 1735) was the leader and first minister of the Schwarzenau Brethren (or German Baptists) in the Schwarzenau, Wittgenstein community of modern-day Bad Berleburg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Mack founded the Brethren along with seven other Radical Pietists in Schwarzenau in 1708. Mack and the rest of the early Brethren emigrated to the United States in the mid-18th century, where he continued to minister to the Brethren community until his death.
Contents |
Mack was born in Schriesheim, Palatinate in contemporary Baden-Württemberg, Germany, where he worked as a miller. He was born the third son to miller Johann Phillip Mack and his wife Christina Fillbrun Mack and baptized into the local Reformed church on 27 July 1679.[1] The Macks remained in Schriesheim throughout the Nine Years' War, intermittently seeking refuge in the hill country due to violence.[1] Upon finishing his studies, Mack took over the family mill and married socialite Anna Margarethe Kling on 18 January 1701.[1] By 1705, the Macks became moved by the Pietist movement locally led by Ernst Christoph Hochmann von Hochnau and started to host an illegal Bible study and prayer group at their home.[1]
In the early 1700s, Graf (Count) Heinrich Albrecht Sayn-Wittgenstein provided refuge to religious dissenters from other German states and elsewhere. Many were settled around the small village of Schwarzenau, including Mack and his followers. The era of toleration for radical Pietism lasted only until ~1740, but had few precedents at the time and was denounced by the rulers of most other German states. [2] Schwarzenau is now part of the town of Bad Berleburg in the district of Siegen-Wittgenstein in the state of Nord Rhein Westfalen. The school (now closed) in Schwarzenau was named in honor of Alexander Mack. [3]
The initial group that became known as the Schwarzenau Brethren were inaugurated by Mack as a Bible study with four other men and three women. In 1708—having become convinced of the necessity of Believer's baptism—the group decided to baptize themselves, using a lottery system to choose who would baptize one another in the Eder.[4]
Mack and several other Brethren emigrated to East Friesland due to pressure within the interfaith community in Schwarzenau in 1720.[5] They stayed until 1729, when the impoverished community found it impossible to sustain itself. In 1719, a different Brethren group led by Peter Becker had already emigrated to Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States for religious freedom.[5] Mack and his followers sailed for Germantown to establish a community in the New World.
Prior to the formation of any strict doctrine, the Schwarzenau Brethren espoused several fundamental tenets that would define the Brethren movement, including a rejection of any coercion in religion (such as infant baptism), viewing Christian rites and ordinances as a means of grace, and the New Testament as the only creed and Rule of Faith.[5] Mack was a Universalist and strict pacifist.
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