The witness of reconciliation. In Schleitheim, we met Reformed pastor and historian Doris Brodbeck and her husband, who pastors the local parish. When they moved to Schleitheim 17 years ago, Doris learned about the Anabaptist leaders who came together in that small town near the Swiss-German border to create the Schleitheim Confession, which was the first effort of Anabaptists to disseminate how to live out their faith. (At the local museum, we saw one of the two extant copies of an early edition of that confession. The other copy is at Goshen College, in the Mennonite Historical Library.)
Doris was inspired to organize an ecumenical group of civic leaders to create the Anabaptist Path (Täuferweg) that ascends from Schleitheim, tracing the forested routes that Anabaptists used as they fled arrest. At the top of a hill, surrounded by a meadow of wildflowers, is the Täuferstein (Anabaptist Stone), a granite sculpture that honors the legacy of Anabaptists in Schleitheim, including Michael Sattler. Doris is not an Anabaptist, but she is working to ensure that the Anabaptist story and witness are known and honored today.