Timothy G. Fehler
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‘Especially unto those of the household of faith’
Menso Alting, discipline, and community in Emden’s social welfare
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The arrival in Emden, Germany, of the influential Calvinist pastor Menso Alting in October 1575 is often mentioned as a high-water mark in Emden’s path of ‘Calvinisation’. Under his direction, the consistory expanded the influence of the church to establish proper moral behaviour throughout the city. Among the various Reformed ecclesiastical developments early in Alting’s ministry, the consistory records indicate a full re-organisation of the city’s poor relief districts in a way that coupled the charitable responsibility of the Reformed deacons directly to the more disciplinary work of the elders and pastors. Poor relief has previously been used as a lens by which to see competing conceptions of Christian community, especially across confessions or between civic and ecclesiastical social welfare; the era of Menso Alting’s Emden ministry allows a closer focus on issues and conflicts which emerged within the Reformed diaconates themselves. Careful analysis of the operation of poor relief within the Reformed congregation, especially an attempt to create a particular diaconate for the ‘household of faith’ (cf. Galatians 6:10) separate from the primary Reformed deacons, reveals doctrinal fault lines that had repercussions in the exercise of both church discipline and social welfare. This case study of Emden, the so-called ‘Geneva of the North’, confirms that internal confessional theological disputes on charity must be carefully analysed to avoid overlooking tensions that existed among otherwise like-minded theological compatriots. Reformed discipline also had implications for charity in light of behaviour and family dynamics, as deacons raised certain troublesome questions to the consistory.

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Do good unto all

Charity and poor relief across Christian Europe, 1400–1800

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