"...Others, such as Haetzer and Denck, doubted the doctrine of the Trinity and the divinity of Christ.
[36] Most Anabaptists emphasized the necessity of good works, and deemed it possible to keep the law and to reach perfection.
[37] The
Schleitheim Confession of 1526 could be considered a workable outline of Anabaptist theology. The two most prominent theological ideas of Anabaptism are 1) a reinstitution of a pure church of regenerated believers, and 2) the baptism of believers alone. These are the fundamental articles of the Anabaptist creed.
[38]
As a general rule, the Anabaptists “rejected the idea of an invisible church, viewing the church as a voluntary association of regenerated saints.” "
The Rise of the Radical Anabaptists - by Dr. C. Matthew McMahon
The Magisterial Reformation - Post Tenebras Lux - Out of Darkness Light