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The Radical Reformation
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Lesson OneIntroduction3 Activities
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Lesson TwoRenaissance and Reformation3 Activities
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Lesson ThreeChristian Humanism3 Activities
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Lesson FourLuther: Resurrection of Biblical Theology3 Activities
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Lesson FiveZwingli: Humanist and Reformer3 Activities
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Lesson SixSaxony: Luther and the Radicals3 Activities
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Lesson SevenZurich: Zwingli and the Radicals3 Activities
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Lesson EightWaldshut: Hubmaier and Politics3 Activities
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Lesson NineRadical Reformation and the Peasants’ War3 Activities
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Lesson TenEstablishment and Spread of the Movement3 Activities
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Lesson ElevenThe Schleitheim Confession of 15273 Activities
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Lesson TwelveThe Hutterites3 Activities
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Lesson ThirteenThe Zwickau Prophets3 Activities
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Lesson FourteenHan Hut, Martin Cellarius, and Hans Denck3 Activities
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Lesson FifteenMelchior Hoffman and the Munster Revolt3 Activities
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Lesson SixteenMenno Simons3 Activities
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Lesson SeventeenDebates with the Reformers3 Activities
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Lesson EighteenInternal Debates3 Activities
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Lesson NineteenA Consensus Mennoniticus3 Activities
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Lesson TwentyBasic Theological Beliefs3 Activities
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Lesson Twenty-OneAnabaptism and Monasticism3 Activities
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Lesson Twenty-TwoAnabaptism and Mysticism3 Activities
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Lesson Twenty-ThreeAnabaptism and Christian Humanism3 Activities
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Lesson Twenty-FourReformers: Radicals/Parable of the Tares3 Activities
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion2 Activities
Participants 21
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Recommended Reading
Ozment, Steven. The Age of Reform 1250-1550: An Intellectual and Religious History of Late Medieval and Reformation Europe. London, United Kingdom: Yale University Press, 1980. Read chapters 1 and 2.
Estep, William Roscoe. The Anabaptist Story: An Introduction to Sixteenth-Century Anabaptism. 3rd rev. ed. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1996. Read the Preface and Introduction.