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Harold S Bender

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Occupation
  
Theologian

Name
  
Harold Bender


Died
  
September 21, 1962

Education
  
Harold S. Bender gameoorgimagesthumb771BenderHaroldSJPG250p

Born
  
July 19, 1897 (
1897-07-19
)

Children
  
Mary Eleanor (b. 1927) and Nancy Elizabeth (b. 1933)

Parent(s)
  
George Lewis and Elsie (Kolb) Bender

Spouse
  
Elizabeth Horsch (m. 1923)

People also search for
  
Robert Friedmann, Cornelius J Dyck, John Horsch

Books
  
Anabaptist Vision, Menno Simons' Life and, These are My People: The Natur, Conrad Grebel ‑ The Foun, Conrad Grebel - C 1498‑152

The Anabaptist Vision


Harold Stauffer Bender (July 19, 1897 – September 21, 1962) was a prominent professor of theology at Goshen College (Goshen, Indiana) and Goshen Biblical Seminary. His accomplishments include founding both the Mennonite Historical Library and The Mennonite Quarterly Review. He served as President of the American Society of Church History, and was a major scholarly influence on fellow Mennonite theologian John Howard Yoder.

Contents

Bender graduated from Elkhart High School (1914), Goshen College (Bachelor of Arts, 1918), Garrett Biblical Institute (Bachelor of Divinity, 1922), Princeton Theological Seminary (Master of Theology, 1923), Princeton University (Master of Arts, 1923). He attended the University of Tübingen, 1923-1924. Bender was awarded his Ph.D. from the University of Heidelberg in 1935.

Background

Bender taught one year at the high school in Thorntown, Indiana (1916-1917) and two years at Hesston College (1918-1920). From 1924 to 1962 he was professor at Goshen College in church history, Bible, and sociology. He was dean of Goshen College, 1931-1944, and dean of Goshen College Biblical Seminary, 1944-1962.

Professional

Bender is perhaps best known for authoring The Anabaptist Vision in 1944. The Anabaptist Vision was a short essay intended to refocus the Anabaptists and Mennonites during the trying years of World War II by re-examining the religious movement's historical context. Anabaptists distinctives were summarized as:

  1. Discipleship is the essence of Christianity.
  2. Church as a community grows out of the central principle of newness of life.
  3. Love and nonresistance apply to all human relationships.

References

Harold S. Bender Wikipedia