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Eberhard Arnold
In 1920, leaving a promising career as a writer and the privileges of upper-middle-class life in Berlin, Arnold moved with his wife and children to Sannerz, a small village in central Germany, where they founded a community on the basis of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. Later named the Bruderhof, this settlement grew into an international Christian community movement that is still growing and evolving today.
The Early Christians
The Early Christians in their own words. Selected and edited by Eberhard Arnold.
What did Christianity look like before it became an institution? Find out for yourself with this collection of firsthand accounts of the early church. Includes excerpts from Origen, Tertullian, Polycarp, Clement of Alexandria, Justin, Irenaeus, and others—and equally revealing material from their critics, detractors and persecutors.
304 pages 
God's Revolution -- Justice, Community, and the Coming Kingdom
Extracts from the writings of Eberhard Arnold
Eberhard Arnold doesn't approach discipleship as a benign route to religious fulfillment, but as revolution - a transformation that begins within and spreads outward to encompass every aspect of life. Here is the raw reality of the gospel that has the power to change the world.
228 pages 
Innerland
Arnold's classic guide into the heart of the gospel invites readers to turn from the chaos of a society distracted by violence and greed to that "inner land of the invisible, where our spirit can find the roots of its strength."
429 pages 
Salt and Light -- Living the Sermon on the Mount
Salt and Light became a book many years after
Eberhard Arnold’s death. Its chapters were compiled
and translated by members of the Bruderhof
communities from articles, talks, and lectures
from the years 1915–1935.
184 pages 
Selected writings
If you've never read any of Eberhard Arnold's writings before, this collection may be the best place to start. For those already familiar with the author, this e-book might be described as the Portable Arnold -- a collection of the strongest and best of his prolific output.
239 pages 
Why we live in Community
In this time-honored manifesto, Arnold adds his voice to the vital discussion of what real intentional community is all about: love, joy, unity, and the great "adventure of faith" shared with others along the way. He does not describe (or prescribe) community here, but provides a vision to guide our search.
30 pages 
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