April 2008 - October 2008 Archives

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Author:Mennonite Church USACreated:Tuesday, August 05, 2008 11:05 AM
This is a forum for church leaders, pastors, members and youth to have healthy, respectful discussions.

Congolese and American church representatives meet in Paraguay
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onWednesday, July 29, 2009
“When we visit with each other, the illusions begin to fall away,” said Congolese pastor and church leader Mattieu Shimatu in a gathering of about 35 Mennonites from Congo and the United States in Asunción, Paraguay, on Friday, July 17.
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Mennonite Church USA follows up on Delegate Assembly healthcare resolution
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onWednesday, July 29, 2009
NEWTON, Kan. — In response to calls in the U.S. Congress for healthcare reform, Mennonite Church USA Executive Leadership staff took several steps in late July to follow up on the National Healthcare Policy: Next Step resolution passed by the Delegate Assembly, July 4.
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First-generation immigrant churches want to build unifying bridges to Mennonite Church USA - By Laurie Oswald Robinson
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, July 24, 2009
Those who drew artwork at a recent symposium for first-generation immigrant congregations in Mennonite Church USA didn’t compete for prizes. Rather, their drawings communicated the desire to build more bridges between these congregations and the denomination.
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God’s riches for Hispanic Mennonite Women not threatened by lean economy
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, July 24, 2009
NORTH NEWTON, Kan. — The way in which the Holy Spirit poured upon women during worship at the 2009 biennial gathering of Hispanic Mennonite Women in North Newton, Kan., showed that God’s riches are not threatened by the recent economic downturn.
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MPN enjoys successful convention sales
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, July 24, 2009
WATERLOO, Ont. — Canadian Mennonites are thinking about a flu pandemic, American Mennonites want to sing.
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New managing editor for Gather ’Round appointed
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, July 24, 2009
WATERLOO, Ont. — Cyndi Fecher of Elgin, Ill., has been named the new managing editor of the Gather ’Round curriculum, a joint project of the Church of the Brethren, Mennonite Church Canada, and Mennonite Church USA.
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Dates set for Convention 2011
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, July 24, 2009
NEWTON, Kan.— Mennonite Church USA Executive Leadership announced Thursday that Mennonite Church USA Convention 2011 will be July 4 through 9, 2011, at the Pittsburgh Convention Center in Pittsburgh, Pa.
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Call for papers for the upcoming Mennonite Education Symposium - by Rachel Nussbaum Eby
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onWednesday, July 15, 2009
GOSHEN, Ind. — Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) and Mennonite Schools Council (MSC) invite interested persons to submit papers on the topic, “Articulation of the case for Mennonite education for the 21st century.” A 250-word abstract should be submitted to MEA by Friday, Aug. 7, 2009, for consideration. Additional information is available online at www.mennoniteeducation.org.
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Readers Theater scripts for congregations
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, June 25, 2009 9:41 AM
Professional screenwriters Don Yost and Joel Kauffmann have written a series of dramatic sketches for congregations to use on the national identity theme. Don directed Bridgework theater for children and youth for more than 20 years. Joel is the author of the Pontius’ Puddle cartoon strip
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The Lord's Prayer revisited - by Donald C. Yost based on sermons by Andrew Kreider
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, June 25, 2009 9:40 AM
A choral reading that suggests ways of hearingand speaking a new meaning for ancient words.
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Snappy comebacks (For when you're tired of turning the other cheek) - by Joel Kauffmann
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, June 25, 2009 9:08 AM
Snappy the Sarcastic Fairy grants a meek Mennonite her wish to counter peace critics with clever comebacks.
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The Offer by Donald C. Yost
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, June 24, 2009 1:25 PM
At an international job fair, some companies offer six figuresigning bonuses, stock options, gym privileges, Caribbean condo privileges, moving expenses, no-interest home mortgages, and five star catered lunches. One job seeker stumbles on a very different offer.
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I Luv Stuff by Joel Kauffmann
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, June 24, 2009 12:55 PM
Stuff Guy is faced with the question: How much, or how little stuff does it take to follow Christ. Stat Guy and Scripture Gal argue one point of view while the Tempter takes counterpoint.
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Mortimer by Donald C. Yost
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, June 24, 2009 12:38 PM
On the other side of the space/time continuum,a young woman gets a second chance
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Mennonite Church USA Convention 2.0
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onTuesday, June 23, 2009
NEWTON, Kan. — Mennonite Church USA Convention 2009 will take place in Columbus, Ohio, June 30 to July 5, but people who don’t make the trip physically can still experience convention on the Internet like never before.
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Red baby vs. blue baby - by Joel Kauffman
National IdentityBy chris onTuesday, June 23, 2009 3:47 PM
A newborn baby, a Cradle Mennonite, who has yet to figure out the pink vs. blue thing (girl vs. boy) is confronted by the red vs. blue choice (Republican vs. Democrat).
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Car Troubles by Donald C. Yost
National IdentityBy chris onTuesday, June 23, 2009 2:50 PM
In Volvos we trust. A stranded woman discovers the limitations of emergency preparedness.
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Dueling Pledges - by Joel Kauffmann
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, June 22, 2009 4:12 PM
Two non-traditional Mennonites with very different life experiences disagree about pledging allegiance to their country, but find they can both pledge to one common cause.
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The Playwrights
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, June 22, 2009 10:34 AM
Joel Kauffmann & Don Yost, Goshen, Indiana, have written together for nearly two decades. They have sold a dozen TV and feature scripts to CBS, ABC, Disney, Universal and others. Two of their scripts, Miracle in Lane 2 and Full Court Miracle were produced by Disney Channel. Individually, Don created and ran Bridgework, a regional theater company, for 25 years. Joel pennedThe Radicals and produces Pontius’ Puddle, a cartoon strip featuring the first frog of faith.
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Introduction
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, June 22, 2009 10:33 AM
The plays in this book were commissioned by the Mennonite Church USA Task Group on National Identity to explore “The promise and peril of living as faithful Christians in America.” The full resolution reads: “We, the delegate body of Mennonite Church USA gathered for San Jose 2007, have been challenged to consider both the promise and peril of living faithfully as Christians in the USA.
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How to use Readers Theater
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, June 22, 2009 10:33 AM
The Allegiance Plays have been written so that they can be acted out with props, or done much more simply as reader’s theater, using no or minimal props, and having your “actors” read their parts from the script. In reader's theatre, actors use vocal expression to help the audience understand the story rather than visual storytelling such as sets, costumes, and intricate blocking.
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National Identity
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, June 22, 2009 10:18 AM
The Anabaptist tradition is one that for centuries has found Mennonites living and witnessing in ways that stand in contrast to the broader culture. Today, in the context of 21st Century North America, our culture presents us with a new set of challenges for following Jesus and joining God’s work in the world.
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“Salt, Light, and Making Right” - by Klaudia Smucker
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, June 22, 2009 8:36 AM
I love the Mennonite church. As a United Methodist growing up in southeastern Pennsylvania with some Mennonite friends, I knew two things about Mennonites. They didn’t go to war, and most lived on farms. When I came to Goshen College, I took the Believer’s Church course, taught by Norman Kraus. I was impressed with the way Mennonites expressed their faith through actions, and their commitment to peace and justice. Mennonite Disaster Service and Mennonite Central Committee were just two organizations that provided ways to live out your faith. It seemed like such a practical faith to me. It made sense to me that baptism occurred once you were old enough to understand it.
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A gift for outreach to women: Sister Care
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, June 19, 2009
ELKHART, Ind. — Rhoda Keener, executive director of Mennonite Women USA, and MW USA board chair elect, Ruth Guengerich, co-facilitated a Sister Care seminar for 73 women in the Indiana–Michigan and Central District conferences of Mennonite Church USA, May 15 and 16, at Belmont Mennonite Church, Elkhart, Ind.
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Cleveland congregation and other Mennonites find solidarity in fighting poverty
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, June 19, 2009
A recent Mobilization to End Poverty conference hosted by Sojourners in Washington, D.C, surprised Al Anthony of Lee Heights Community Church in Cleveland with a level of passion and commitment he didn’t expect.
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New editorial director appointed for Herald Press Books
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, June 19, 2009
Amy Gingerich passionate about future of the Mennonite Church, role of Herald Press in promoting Anabaptism to wider church
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Fund for Peoplehood Education awards grants
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onFriday, June 19, 2009
GOSHEN, Ind. — Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) is pleased to announce the recipients of the Fund for Peoplehood Education grants.
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Allegiance at the Fault Lines - by J. Nelson Kraybill
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, June 17, 2009 11:18 AM
Fault lines appeared within Mennonite Church USA last fall as presidential politics polarized the nation. Sentiments were so strong they sometimes stretched relationships within families and congregations. Mennonites who emphasize Jesus’ call to love our enemies supported the candidate they thought most likely to pursue diplomacy. Others supported the candidate they thought most likely to protect the unborn.
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Search committee reports progress
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onMonday, June 08, 2009
Members of the Mennonite Church USA Executive Director Search Committee were initially told by some in the church that it would be difficult to find qualified individuals interested in becoming the new executive director of Mennonite Church USA. Some suggested that no one would complete an application without being specifically asked to do so.
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Iris de León-Hartshorn slated for Pacific Northwest conference executive minister role
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, May 14, 2009
NEWTON, Kan., and PORTLAND, Ore. — Together with Pacific Northwest Mennonite Conference (PNMC), Mennonite Church USA Executive Leadership announces that effective September 2009, director of Intercultural Relations for Executive Leadership Iris de León-Hartshorn will be executive conference minister for PNMC.
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Commentary: Same Question, Different Answers: A Study of Exodus 1-2 - By Janeen Bertsche Johnson
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, May 14, 2009
A major challenge facing Mennonites as we talk about national identity is our diversity of viewpoints about relating to the nation, its culture and its government. We are not a homogenous people. We have had vastly differing experiences with immigration, assimilation, displacement, war, military service, alternative service, slavery, political power, the civil rights movement and so on. The communities around us have responded to our presence and our faith perspectives in different ways, ranging from admiration to acceptance, curiosity, toleration or even hostility. To varying degrees, we have been shaped by the larger influences of our society, such as media (including popular Christian media), consumerism, patriotism, civil religion and militarism. These powerful influences have shaped our national identity.
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What is this place? Missional leaders gather for inspiration and renewal - by Brian Yoder Schlabach
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, May 14, 2009
For Mennonite Church USA Executive Leadership and Mennonite Mission Network DENVER, Colo. — Mennonite missional leaders from across the country gathered May 2 through 4 to discuss what it means to be a missional church in our current culture. The event, held in Denver, and hosted by Mennonite Mission Network and Mennonite Church USA Executive Leadership, drew 33 attendees.
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Thomas announced as nominee for moderator-elect
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onWednesday, May 06, 2009
NEWTON, Kan. — The Mennonite Church USA Leadership Discernment Committee announces Dick Thomas of Lancaster, Pa., as its nominee for moderator-elect of Mennonite Church USA. The Mennonite Church USA Delegate Assembly will be presented with the nomination when it gathers this summer as part of Convention 2009 June 30 to July 5 in Columbus, Ohio.
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Esther’s Times
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, May 04, 2009 7:58 AM
There are two versions of the story of Esther, the more familiar one in the Old Testament and the same story with additions in the Apocrypha. The Old Testament version does not mention God, leaving it up to the reader to determine if and how God was acting. In the Apocryphal version it is clear that God is acting, beginning with Mordecai’s dream foretelling events to his explanation of the dream at the end of the story. The lengthy proclamations give additional insight into the characters. Esther’s faint and God touching the king’s heart are the central turning point. The personalities given the characters and the characters of Mim and the Court Historian are the invention of the author.
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Soul-searching leads pastor to take radical journey with Jesus - by Laurie Oswald Robinson
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, April 30, 2009
When Gilberto Flores, a longtime leader in Mennonite Church USA, saw innocent people hanging dead in a Guatemalan jungle, he felt hate.
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Goshen College helps students to serve as Mennonite Church USA delegates
Mennonite Church USA News By chris onThursday, April 30, 2009
GOSHEN, Ind. — Ten Goshen (Ind.) College students will serve as delegates for the upcoming Delegate Assembly at the Mennonite Church USA Convention 2009, June 30 to July 5 in Columbus, Ohio. To help make this happen, Goshen College is providing partial financial support for the students.
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Mennonite Women USA planning urges active advocacy through women’s prophetic voice — by Dr. Patricia Burdette
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onWednesday, April 29, 2009
STURGIS, Mich. — As the 30 participants of the Mennonite Women USA (MW USA) Strategic Planning Retreat at Amigo Centre March 27 to 28 listened to a “State of MW USA” presentation, including the history of the organization, and reviewed the current mission and vision statements, they endeavored to envision needs of women—both within and outside of the church — that are best met by other women. As they worked at what a new vision statement for the coming three to five years might include, words such as “advocating for women in the church,” “taking risks,” “empowering women,” “working from the margins to the margins,” “valuing our diversity” and “using the prophetic voice of women” emerged as themes.
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Photo release: A prayer collage for Congo
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, April 23, 2009
GOSHEN, Ind. — Late last year, Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary student and member of Eighth Street Mennonite Church in Goshen, Ind., Suella Gerber and a friend decided to meet weekly to pray for peace for a particular place. That first week, they prayed for Congo. The following week, Gerber met with another friend for a three-hour prayer retreat. “We prayed, creating collages of our prayers and at the end of the retreat we shared our prayers with each other,” Gerber says.
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Historical Committee names Gross executive secretary emeritus
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, April 23, 2009
GOSHEN, Ind. – Leonard Gross, who directed denominational historical ministries for 20 years, has been named executive secretary emeritus of the Mennonite Church USA Historical Committee. The committee took that action during its spring meeting April 17-18 in Goshen.
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Commentary: Our boys — by Susan Mark Landis
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onWednesday, April 22, 2009
Monday was the ten-year remembrance of the shooting at Columbine. Likely you remember that day and the impact it had on your life every bit as clearly as I do. Each spring when my columbine flowers push up in the garden and the Mars-like blossoms burst forth, I pause to remember the horror of kids shooting kids.
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Executive Board makes plans for executive director transition — by Marathana Prothro
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onWednesday, April 22, 2009
NEWTON, Kan. — At its April 16 to 18 meeting in Rochester, N.Y., the Mennonite Church USA Executive Board approved a staff recommendation that, in the event a new executive director has not been named, current associate executive Ron Byler will serve as acting executive director for the denomination beginning Aug. 1. At the same time, current executive director Jim Schrag plans to compile a history of the transformation of Mennonite Church USA, until he retires in November.
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Complete Mennonite Encyclopedia now online, project enters new phase
Mennonite Church USABy Mennonite Church USA onThursday, April 09, 2009 9:35 PM
From his home in Abbotsford, B.C., on Feb. 20 at 11:44 p.m., Thiessen posted the 14,160th and final article from the print version of the five-volume Mennonite Encyclopedia onto the Web site of the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online, www.gameo.org.
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Open invitation to Mennonite education symposiums - by Rachel Nussbaum Eby
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, April 09, 2009
GOSHEN, Ind. — Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) and Mennonite Schools Council (MSC) invite interested people to a free symposium focused on the theme, “Mennonite Education: Why and How?” The first symposium will be from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., May 8, 2009, at the Lancaster campus of Lancaster Mennonite School. The second symposium will be Oct. 23, in Goshen, Ind. These symposiums are the first step of the process to update the 1971 book, Mennonite education: why and how? A philosophy of education for the Mennonite Church, written by Daniel Hertzler.
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Mennonite VBS 2009 curriculum selected as a “Top Pick”
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, April 09, 2009
NEWTON, Kan. and WATERLOO, Ont. — Mennonite Publishing Network’s 2009 Vacation Bible School curriculum has been selected as a “Top Pick” by the Center for the Ministry of Teaching of Virginia Theological Seminary (CMT). Catch the Spririt! Join God’s Work in the World was cited for its “upbeat and nonjudgmental tone, and strong message of evangelism.” The Center’s evaluation highlights the curriculum’s focus on worship and the original music by Mennonite composer Bryan Moyer Suderman as particular strengths. Catch the Spirit! uses stories from the book of Acts to help children age 4 through grade 8 learn how the Holy Spirit works in their lives, in the church and with God’s people throughout the world.
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Convention connection links New York and Indiana youth in ministry - by Ryan Miller
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onThursday, April 09, 2009
BROOKLYN, N.Y. — What began as a connection among youths at a Mennonite Church USA convention has turned into a relationship of equals for Iglesia Unida de Avivamiento (United Revival Mennonite Church) in Brooklyn, N.Y., and Clinton Frame Mennonite Church in Goshen, Ind. The connection has helped both churches consider their mission to one another and to the world.
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Complete Mennonite Encyclopedia now online, project enters new phase
By Mennonite Church USA onThursday, April 09, 2009 4:35 PM
From his home in Abbotsford, B.C., on Feb. 20 at 11:44 p.m., Thiessen posted the 14,160th and final article from the print version of the five-volume Mennonite Encyclopedia onto the Web site of the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online, www.gameo.org.
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Lever and Kauffmann named to Denominational Ministry leadership roles
Mennonite Church USA NewsBy chris onTuesday, March 10, 2009
NEWTON, Kan. — Lee Lever has begun a new assignment as interim director of denominational ministry for Mennonite Church USA Executive Leadership. He will lead a team of denominational ministers providing support and encouragement for conference ministers.
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Same Question, Different Answers: A Study of Exodus 1-2
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, March 09, 2009 8:29 AM

Same Question, Different Answers:
A Study of Exodus 1-2

A major challenge facing Mennonites as we talk about national identity is our diversity of viewpoints about relating to the nation, its culture and its government. We are not a homogenous people. We have had vastly differing experiences with immigration, assimilation, displacement, war, military service, alternative service, slavery, political power, the civil rights movement and so on. The communities around us have responded to our presence and our faith perspectives in different ways, ranging from admiration to acceptance, curiosity, toleration or even hostility. To varying degrees, we have been shaped by the larger influences of our society, such as media (including popular Christian media), consumerism, patriotism, civil religion and militarism. These powerful influences have shaped our national identity.

No wonder we find ourselves with such differing attitudes about voting in electio ...

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Now bunking at Camp Survival: HEROD, ZWINGLI and ME
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, March 09, 2009 8:28 AM

Now bunking at Camp Survival:

HEROD, ZWINGLI and ME

By Joel Kauffmann

In my story of faith, Herod the Great is a bad man. No question. He killed any and all who got in his way, including wives and children. And, of course, he tried to kill the Baby Jesus by brutally massacring all the newborn males in the Jerusalem suburb of Bethlehem. While this story continues to horrify and galvanize those generations who follow Christ, historical records suggest it was just another day at the office for Herod the Great.

Until recently, I had never imagined I might be sharing the same camp with him or similar bad guys, a placed called Camp Survival.

Several years ago, I wa ...

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Sunday Worship Service: Following Jesus in a world that is not
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, March 09, 2009 8:23 AM
In Jesus we see an astonishing revelation of God’s love for the whole world, a love that overflows all boundaries and brings healing, peace and great joy. When we follow Jesus, our true identity as children of God is renewed and, in consequence, all other loyalties and commitments take their place in relationship to our core allegiance to Christ.
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Mission Statement
Historical Committee NewsBy Mennonite Church USA onMonday, February 23, 2009 11:58 AM
God calls us to preserve our heritage, to interpret our faith stories, and to proclaim God's work among us.
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La armadura de Dios
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/20/2009 4:15 PM

La armadura de Dios

Por último, fortalézcanse con el gran poder del Señor. Pónganse toda la armadura de Dios para que puedan hacer frente a las artimañas del diablo. (Efesios 6.10-11 NVI)

En 1984, un oportuno y convincente llamado del teólogo y activista Ron Sider puso en movimiento a Equipos Cristianos de Acción por la Paz (ECAP) en la Conferencia Mundial Menonita de Estrasburgo, Francia:

En los últimos 450 años de martirio, inmigración y proclamación misionera, el Dios del shalom nos ha estado preparando a los anabautistas para una cita con la historia a fines del siglo XX. Los próx ...

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We like to work — J.Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/19/2009
If the highest goal in life is to accumulate money, Dottie and Roland Yoder of Harleysville, Pennsylvania, are odd-ones-out. However, they have, in a counter cultural way, become very rich in terms that money-hungry people might not understand. For the past seven years, they have given away their time and energies which on the market might have brought them a couple hundred thousand dollars, given Dottie’s experience in nursing and Roland’s wide-ranging skills in the arts and sciences. But this thought is mine, not theirs.
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Nouveau riche? — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/19/2009
There’s a French term that comes to mind as I begin this next account of giving. It’s nouveau riche (new’vo reesh’). It’s a person who has recently become rich, especially one who shows off his wealth. Rather frequently the term suggests that the person has risen above his social and economic class without the background or qualifications for his new status.
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The gift of “YES” — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/19/2009
Perhaps the greatest gift that Ertell Whigham ever gave anyone was the heartfelt “YES” that he gave to God when he gained “a very clear sense” that God was calling him to ministry. The call, says Ertell, came not from a church, not from a personal friend, not from a psychological hunch, but from Isaiah 61.
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“A faith thing” — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/19/2009
After another day of practicing anesthesiology and of doing pastoral work, Jon Schrock and Mandy Yoder sit in their Indianapolis living room and reflect on their giving to the church. “It’s a habit,” says Mandy, who is soft-spoken but no push over. “It’s a faith thing.”
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The Sauder Brothers
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/19/2009
Brother, where art thou? Am I my brother’s keeper? These questions come to mind when I think of Cain slaying Abel, when I read about Jacob’s deceiving Esau, and when I now come upon family tragedies involving sibling rivalries. I have been especially aware of successful family businesses later destroyed by domestic warfare. For example, nationally respected newspaper, The Louisville Courier Journal, was ripped apart in a few short months by feuding family members. Many other sad cases could be cited here.
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Freida Sauder — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/18/2009
“I guess you’d just say I’m down to earth,” Freida Sauder said to me. This came in reference to my question of why Adriel School in West Liberty coaxed her to stay on the board for a third term. “They told me that they needed somebody to keep their feet on the ground. I don’t have the education of the lawyers and professors on the board. I think like the average person on the street.” What Freida said summed up my impressions of her memories, demeanor, her smile, her conversational style, her smile, her house, and her priorities. She is also wealthy, but this profile is not about money. It is about spirit and attitudes. It is about Freida Sauder’s way of living.
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Should entrepreneurs give? — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/18/2009
Upon hearing about “the empty hole,” I finally asked Peggy, “When, then, did you sense that you had money?” She looked at me and at Roger puzzled by the question that seemed not to fit. The best I could determine, the hole was empty for decades. Peggy finally said, “You can’t just cash it out.”
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Giving: Aaron and Mabel Miller — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
I am searching for stories from committed, disciplined stewards who are in the habit of giving back to God a portion of what God has given to them. I am doing this in hopes that the youth in our church will establish patterns of strong, consistent giving. Thus when a contact in Lancaster arranged for me to speak with his uncle and aunt who inspired him to grow in giving, I was not surprised nor discouraged that they wished to remain anonymous. If that was their wish, it should be respected. I shall use the names Aaron and Mabel, and modify several details so as to preserve their privacy.
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A conversation with James R. Martin
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
James R. Martin, an affable down-to-earth 67-year-old minister of stewardship for Lancaster Mennonite Conference (PA), believes that the complex concept of stewardship can be fully expressed in four practical ways of living:
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Two young Lancaster families model giving: Part 2 — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
Two young farm-related Lancaster Conference families do not bear out recent research findings about giving. Those findings, from a church wide study, indicate that most of the people in the habit of giving back to God a portion of what God has given to them are over 40 years of age. I was directed to meet two couples who defy the norm. They happen not to know each other.
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Two young Lancaster families model giving: Part 1 — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
Two young farm-related Lancaster Conference families do not bear out recent research findings about giving. Those findings, from a church wide study, indicate that most of the people in the habit of giving back to God a portion of what God has given to them are over 40 years of age. I was directed to meet two couples who defy the norm. They happen not to know each other.
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Giving for reasons more than generosity — Dan Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
“It's still a bit embarrassing,” says Sam Bixler, “to think that an article about our giving would appear in print, but …” Many generous people are, like the Bixlers, quite private about their contributions. For them, generosity is not a matter of honor, but rather of faithfulness.
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Giving as a family
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
They sit on the front bench at Shalom Mennonite Church in Indianapolis, all six of them when Rachel is home from EMU. Even if Rod weren’t an elder and even if Martha weren’t Church Council chair, we’d think of them as congregational keystones. Look the second time and you’d agree that they’d fit comfortably in a traditional synagogue, Rod with his long uncut beard and Martha with clean sturdy Goodwill clothing that bespeaks European rather than contemporary American tastes.
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A three-career gift of personal caring
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
Sometimes the gift we give back to God is shaped by the place where we live. That could be said for Jon E. Moore, a tall, broadly smiling but photo-shy African-American bus mechanic. His home is Levittown-Bristol, Pennsylvania.
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The Grieser sisters — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
Our New Testament contains a list of “big names” – Peter, Paul, John, Luke, James and numerous other prominent followers of Jesus whose names now label churches and cathedrals around the world. And then, almost hidden from the crowd, are unnamed souls, often women, whose faith is remembered decades later by the New Testament writers.
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A personal gift — J. Daniel Hess
Generosity Project StoriesBy Mennonite Church USA on2/17/2009
What gift may we bring to God? If we ask that question because we truly seek an answer, we might find ourselves taking inventory not just of our financial holdings but of other tangibles and intangibles.
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Recursos para la adoración
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/16/2009 12:13 PM

Iglesia Menonita USA Proyecto sobre la identidad nacional

Recursos para la adoración

Para ayudar a su congregación a enfocarse en la resolución sobre la identidad nacional que los delegados de la Iglesia Menonita USA aprobaron en San José 2007, se publicarán recursos adicionales para la adoración y el estudio en la web (www.MennoniteUSA.org/identity):

  • Recursos para la adoración para un culto entero, como dramatizaciones bíblicas, oraciones y letanías, momentos para niños y presentaciones visuales;
  • Preguntas de debate para cada historia;
  • Historias adicionales, como dramatizaciones y un rap anabautista.

La declaración central del material para la adoración y el estudio es:

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Una historia sobre una iglesia menonita y una bandera de Estados Unidos — June Galle Krehbiel
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/16/2009 10:01 AM

Y hubo una gran alegría en toda la gente:

Una historia sobre una iglesia menonita y una bandera de Estados Unidos

ARCHBOLD, OHIO—Esta es una historia sobre una iglesia menonita y una bandera de Estados Unidos. Un cuento en el que no aparecen ni elfos ni hadas sino personas que ayudan a aquellos que andan por el mundo.

Desde su fundación en 1955, la Iglesia Menonita Zion, una congregación de más de 250 miembros de un pueblo pequeño de Archbold, Ohio, se lanzó al trabajo por la paz y la justicia. La iglesia ayudó a polacos y alemanes de la segunda guerra mundial a reestablecerse, trajo familias de vietnamitas, laosianos y tailandeses a la región en los ‘70 y acogió a refugiados de Centroamérica que se dirigían a Canadá en los ‘80. Durante muchos años la iglesia se relac ...

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Iglesias de inmigrantes llaman a Iglesia Menonita USA a ir más allá de lo conocido — Ken Beidler
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/16/2009 9:44 AM

Iglesias de inmigrantes llaman a Iglesia Menonita USA a ir más allá de lo conocido

El Philadelphia Praise Center (“Centro de Alabanza de Filadelfia” o PPC, por sus siglas en inglés) y el Nations Worship Center (“Centro de Adoración de las Naciones”), dos congregaciones menonitas de la Conferencia de Franconia, consideran al mismo barrio del sur de Filadelfia como su hogar. Ambos grupos están compuestos en su mayoría por inmigrantes trasplantados de Indonesia. Los disturbios de raíces religiosas del año 2000 en Surabaya, la segunda ciudad más grande de Indonesia, hicieron que muchos cristianos indonesios fueran a Filadelfia en busca de asilo y un nuevo hogar.

Los líderes de estas congregaciones lidian con las implicancias espirituales y prácticas de haberse convertido en congregaciones de inmigrantes.& ...

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Introspección lleva a pastor a emprender viaje radical con Jesús — Laurie Oswald Robinson
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/16/2009 9:37 AM

Introspección lleva a pastor a emprender viaje radical con Jesús

por Laurie Oswald Robinson

Cuando Gilberto Flores, un líder de la Iglesia Menonita USA de toda la vida, vio gente inocente ahorcada en una selva guatemalteca, sintió odio.

Antes de ese día, varias décadas atrás, Flores, pastor menonita en Guatemala por aquella época, había visto tanta injusticia provocada por la guerra civil que se preguntó si acaso ponía en práctica su fe. Cuando luego se topó con el baño de sangre en la montaña, comprendió que algo tenía que cambiar.

“Un pastor fue con algunos miembros a la selva para recuperar unas vacas que se escaparon de sus campos”, cuenta Flores. “Al llegar a las montaña ...

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Congregación de Chicago da pan y construye puentes para cuerpo y alma — Laurie Oswald Robinson
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/16/2009 9:32 AM

Haciendo discípulos: Un bautismo en la iglesia Living Water

Congregación de Chicago da pan y construye puentes para cuerpo y alma

La Iglesia Comunitaria de Living Water descubrió al poco tiempo de mudarse a una esquina de Chicago donde en 2001 hubo un tiroteo entre pandillas que el camino a la vida de la gente joven a veces va por su estómago.

Living Water (“Agua de vida” en inglés), que se fundó en 1995, rentaba un especio para sus cultos dominicales a un par de cuadras de este lugar cuando ocurrió el tiroteo. En respuesta a esto, la congregación se sintió llamada a orar en la esquina. Pronto las oraciones permi ...

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Lucha por fidelidad une a iglesias nacionales — Laurie Oswald Robinson
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/13/2009 3:14 PM

Lucha por fidelidad une a iglesias nacionales

Centrados en Cristo: Un servicio de adoración en Colombia

Miles de kilómetros separan a la Iglesia Menonita de Colombia (IMCOL) de la Iglesia Menonita USA. Pero una lucha común por una fidelidad mayor las une de maneras que las acercan tanto como el latido de Cristo.

Los anabautistas de estos países saben que las buenas nuevas de Cristo incluyen la salvación del alma y el shalom para las comunidades, pero a veces cuestionan su testimonio e identidad. Algunas personas se preguntan cómo integrar el aspecto social del llamado de Crist ...

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Lealtad en las fallas geológicas — J. Nelson Kraybill
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/13/2009 2:54 PM

Lealtad en las fallas geológicas

J. Nelson Kraybill

En el otoño pasado, cuando la política presidencial polarizó a la nación, aparecieron fallas geológicas dentro de la Iglesia Menonita USA. Los sentimientos eran tan fuertes que a veces dañaban vínculos dentro de las familias y las congregaciones. Los menonitas que ponen énfasis en el llamado de Jesús a amar a nuestros enemigos apoyaban al candidato que creían que más probablemente elegiría el camino de la diplomacia. Otros apoyaban al candidato que creían que más probablemente protegería a quienes aún no han nacido.

La política no es el único tema que enfrenta a los menonitas entre sí por lealtades que van más allá del cuerpo de C ...

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La resolución de la asamblea 2007
La identidad nacionalBy Mennonite Church USA on2/13/2009 2:35 PM

Trasfondo

La resolución de la asamblea 2007

En San José 2007, los más de 900 delegados de las congregaciones, conferencias regionales y grupos raciales/étnicos de la Iglesia Menonita USA aprobaron la siguiente resolución:

Nosotros, el cuerpo de delegados de la Iglesia Menonita USA reunidos en San José 2007, hemos sido desafiados a considerar tanto la promesa como el riesgo de vivir fielmente como cristianos en los Estados Unidos. Como cuerpo nacional de menonitas recientemente creado, invitamos a la junta directiva a iniciar un proceso que nos ayude a explorar nuestra identidad como menonitas que viven en el país que muchos consideran el más rico y poderoso de la tierra. Pedimos que nos provean recursos que nos ayuden a vivir fielmente como Cristo, lidiando a veces con nuestra cultura nacional, y reconociendo que ninguna cultura está totalm ...

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The Empire Strikes Back — by Sue Conrad
National IdentityBy chris onFriday, February 13, 2009 1:26 PM

The Empire Strikes Back

by Sue Conrad, pastor, East Chestnut Street Mennonite Church, Lancaster, Pa.

This text will be replaced by the flash music player.
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Zacchaeus — by Rod Stafford
National IdentityBy chris onFriday, February 13, 2009 12:53 PM

Zaccheus

by Rod Stafford

This text will be replaced by the flash music player.
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Hymns of Dangerous Praise — by Iris de León-Hartshorn
National IdentityBy chris onMonday, February 09, 2009 10:08 AM

Hymns of Dangerous Praise

Iris de León-Hartshorn

“And all the angels stood around the throne and around the elders and the four living creatures, and they fell on their faces before the throne and worshipped God, singing, ‘Amen! Blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honour and power and might be to our God for ever and ever! Amen.’” Revelation 7:11-12

This morning’s text can be seen as a beautiful image of the angels, elders and the four beasts bowing down worshipping God. The verse just before this particular text we see the image of every nation from all tribes, peoples and languages standing before God worshipping. This is often the image we remember in these texts. But what if I told you these were daring and subversive texts that ...

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Before Esther Comes Vashti — by Joel Miller
National IdentityBy chris onFriday, February 06, 2009 11:02 AM

6/26/08

Before Esther Comes Vashti

by Joel Miller

(Esther 1)

This summer at Cincinnati Mennonite we’re taking up a special offering. We’re asking people to carefully consider what portion of their government rebate checks they do not need to spend of save, and to give, generously, to this offering. At the end of the summer we’ll give away all of what we collect together, ½ internationally to the work that MCC is doing with the global food crisis and half locally, to the St. Vincent de Paul Society and food pantry in our Oakley neighborhood that we support.

I’ve appreciated the letters and essays from conference and denominational leaders who have put out this challenge. Given the gracious gift of an economic stimulus package and charged with the mission of going out and spending it on consumer goods, we have put our own Holy S ...

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Help Me Save My People — by Cyneatha Millsaps
National IdentityBy chris onFriday, February 06, 2009 10:54 AM
Help save my people! Help save my people! Three out of four African American males between the ages of 19 and 30 are either on probation, parole or in prison. Help save my people! Fifty percent of African American high school girls will have a baby before they graduate high school. Help save my people! Many of them -- roughly 30% -- will have two. Help save my people!
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National Identity resolution passed by San Jose 2007 delegates
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, February 04, 2009 5:04 PM

National Identity resolution passed by San Jose 2007 delegates

“We, the delegate body of Mennonite Church USA gathered for San Jose 2007, have been challenged to consider both the promise and peril of living faithfully as Christians in the USA. As a recently-created national body of Mennonites, we call upon the Executive Board to formulate a process that helps us explore our identity as Mennonites living in what many consider to be the wealthiest and most powerful nation on earth. We ask for resources that help us live faithfully in Christ-like ways, sometimes at odds with our national culture, acknowledging that no culture is either completely redeemed or completely fallen.”

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Go and do what is right and good
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, February 04, 2009 4:23 PM

Go and do what is right and good

Oklahoma urban church, pastors unite on cause of conscience

The conscience is a funny thing. It leads us where we might never go to do things we might never do.

That’s what happens when we take a literal view of Jesus’ command to love (Matt. 5:43-48). Here’s a story of a church and its pastors who have followed their conscience to go and do what is right and good.

Quotes:

On National Identity

“The feeling I get from a lot of Mennonites right now is that we will appeal to more people if we are like the rest of society. But I think we draw people to us by being who we are. We are not called necessarily to be big. We are called to be faithful, and in our being faithful, people will come to u ...

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A Brooklyn-Goshen Connection
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, February 04, 2009 4:21 PM

A Brooklyn-Goshen Connection

BROOKLYN, N.Y. — What began as a connection among youths at a Mennonite Church USA convention has turned into a relationship of equals for Iglesia Unida de Avivamiento (United Revival Mennonite Church) in Brooklyn, N.Y., and Clinton Frame Mennonite Church in Goshen, Ind. The connection has helped both churches consider their mission to one another and to the world.

Over the last two years, one set of Brooklyn Mennonites from Unida de Avivamiento has spent time in Indiana while two Goshen groups from Clinton Frame have visited the city. The Clinton Frame groups left home intending to focus their labor on Unida de Avivamiento’s building. They returned speaking the language of ...

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Tongue screws and testimony by Alan Kreider
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, February 04, 2009 4:19 PM

December 2008

Tongue screws and testimony

At the seminary where I work, I teach a course called “Mission and Peace.” Recently, midway through the course, we came to the session in which we deal with evangelism. I gave a lecture, after which a student raised her hand. “Well, I think St. Francis got it just about right. He said, ‘Go into all the world and preach the gospel; use words if you must.’” There was a general muttering of assent among the students.

But another student raised her hand. “Look, I was raised a Mennonite,” she said. “And I’ve been in seminary for several years. But I’m still uneasy talking about my faith. I know that how we live is important, but I think talking is important, too.

Last year I was in a group that went to Fort Benning, to the School of the ...

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Allegiance at the Fault Lines - by J. Nelson Kraybill
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, February 04, 2009 3:55 PM

Allegiance at the Fault Lines
J. Nelson Kraybill

Fault lines appeared within Mennonite Church USA last fall as presidential politics polarized the nation. Sentiments were so strong they sometimes stretched relationships within families and congregations. Mennonites who emphasize Jesus’ call to love our enemies supported the candidate they thought most likely to pursue diplomacy. Others supported the candidate they thought most likely to protect the unborn.

Not only in politics are Mennonites tugged by allegiance to something beyond the body of Christ. A substantial part of the denomination today is professional, educated, entrepreneurial or wealthy. In each ca ...

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An open letter to the members of Mennonite Church USA:
Schrag BlogBy Mennonite Church USA onMonday, February 02, 2009 1:28 PM
Our church, Mennonite Church USA, is part of a society that is attempting in fresh ways to live up to its ideals of equality and fairness for all its citizens. A dramatic sign of this new wave of respect for each other, based on our character, not the color of our skin, is the election of an African-American as our next president.
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Spiritual homelessness leads to working with homeless in Harvey County
National IdentityBy chris onTuesday, January 27, 2009 11:15 AM

Spiritual homelessness leads to working with homeless in Harvey County

Lee Penner, Newton, Kan., was restless and felt like a man without a spiritual home. Though his former church focused on sharing how Jesus saves hearts, there seemed less interest in sharing how Jesus’ way of life called believers to meet the social needs of their neighbors.

Lee Penner, bottom right, enjoys building relationships with residents such as these at the Harvey County Homeless Shelter in Newton, Kan.

— Laurie Oswald Robinson

Because Penner ached ...

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Why I am a Mennonite by Michelle E. Armster
National IdentityBy chris onFriday, January 23, 2009 9:18 AM

Why I am a Mennonite

Michelle E. Armster

Since I moved to Lancaster, Pa., and joined a Lancaster Mennonite Conference church, I have often turned to the book Profiles of Anabaptist Women: Sixteenth-Century Reforming Pioneers1. Along with the Bible, this is one of the few books that remind me why I made and continue to make the choice to remain in the Mennonite tradition. Profiles of Anabaptist Women recounts the limited history of these women who were often arrested, imprisoned and/or executed because they would not recant their faith and understanding of the Scriptures.

One such woman is Anna Hendricks of Amsterdam, who died in 1571. Because of her defiant proselytizing and unswerving commitment to hold meetings in her home, “the hangman tied her to a ladder, filled her mouth with gunpowder and cast her o ...

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Identity and security: Lessons from Mennonite history by Rich Preheim
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 22, 2009 4:20 PM

Identity and security: Lessons from Mennonite history

Plaques in the sanctuary of Weierhof Mennonite Church in Germany commemorating young men from the congregation who were killed as soldiers in World War II

Photos courtesy of Rich Preheim

For many in the United States, World War II ushered in two decades of glorious national pride. Militarily, the country got rid of fascism and then led opposition to the global ...

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New Orleans presence in line with Mennonite Church USA presence
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 22, 2009 12:23 PM

New Orleans presence in line with Mennonite Church USA presence

Churches Supporting Churches connects Gulf churches with resources of broader church

Every little bit we do magnifies Jesus to the world.

– Steve Brown, Churches Supporting Churches vice-president

Imitate the compassion of Christ. That’s Steve Brown’s message when he talks about helping New Orleans people and churches as they recover from Hurricane Katrina. Brown is the Mennonite Church USA representative to Churches Supporting Churches (CSC) and currently serves as its vice-president.

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The Armor of God
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 22, 2009 10:52 AM

The Armor of God

Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the strength of his power. Put on the whole armor of God, so that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. (Ephesians 6:10-11 NIV)

CPTers light candles on the anniversary of September 11.

Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) was set in motion by a timely and compelling call by theologian and activist Ron Sider at the 1984 Mennonite World Conference in Strasbourg, France:

Over the past 450 years of martyrdom, immigration and missionary proclamation, the God of shalom has been preparing us Anabaptists for a late twentieth-century rendezvous with ...
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Struggle for faithfulness bonds national churches
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 22, 2009 9:59 AM

Struggle for faithfulness bonds national churches

Thousands of miles separate the Colombian Mennonite Church (IMCOL) and Mennonite Church USA. But a common struggle for greater faithfulness bonds these churches in ways that bring them as close as the heartbeat of Christ.

While Anabaptists in these countries know Christ’s good news includes salvation for souls and shalom for communities, they sometimes question their witness and identity. Some people wonder how to integrate the social and spiritual aspects of Christ’s call in cultures embattled with economic and political turmoil. Some people ask, “Do we need to integrate these in order to be faithful?” Some people give up, having been criticized for focusing too much on peace or too much on evangelism.

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THREE LEECHES CAKE By Don Yost
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, January 21, 2009 2:50 PM

THREE LEECHES CAKE

By Don Yost

Nelson sits in a chair. His leg is In a brace or cast. Katie, Nelson’s daughter, enters.

KATIE Hey, Dad.

NELSON (irritated)Katie?

KATIE What’s wrong?

NELSON I was afraid of this.

KATIE That’s a strange greeting. I just drove 400 miles to get here.

NELSON That’s what I was afraid of. You shouldn’t be skipping classes.

KATIE I think having my father in the hospital is a pretty good reason to skip classes.

NELSON I’m fine. I’m going home tomorrow.

KATIE The hospital social worker said y ...

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THIS LAND IS WHOSE LAND? By Joel Kauffmann
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, January 21, 2009 2:23 PM

THIS LAND IS WHOSE LAND?

By Joel Kauffmann

SAM, a (male or female) Mennonite seminary student, enters a bus station in Harrisonburg, Virginia, carrying a suitcase. He takes a seat near a fellow student: WINONA, a young woman with black hair who has her nose buried in a text.

SAM Oh, hey...

WINONA (looking up)Winona.

SAM Sam. I’ve seen you around the seminary.

WINONA Yeah, my first semester --(holding up book)-- so this Hebrew is all Greek to me.

SAM Yeah, that sounds like first semester humor. (gesturing to seat)Mind if I?

WINONA Please.

SAM takes a seat next to Winona.

SAM So what’s your major?

WINONA Haven’t decided. What about ...

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A, LIKE, SELF-INFLICTED TONGUE SCREW By Joel Kauffmann
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, January 21, 2009 2:10 PM

 

A, LIKE, SELF-INFLICTED TONGUE SCREW

By Joel Kauffmann

            MARIE, a woman in medieval garb, stands bound to a stake. Her voice is muffled by a tongue screw. She tries to call out as a contemporary couple, PASSERSBY ONE and TWO, passes, but fails to attract their attention. She has more success with IPOD GUY, who removes the plugs from his ears, unbinds her,removes and examines the tongue screw.(note: IPOD GUY like uses “like” a lot,which the reader can do as noted, or improvise)

IPOD GUY What’s this?

MARIE A tongue screw.

IPOD GUY Is that like anything like a tongue stud?
& ...

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Welcome to Camp Survival - by Joel Kauffman
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, January 21, 2009 11:01 AM

Welcome to Camp Survival

By Joel Kauffmann

A Mennonite CAMPER, carrying a rolled-up sleeping bag along wit other summercamp gear, is greeted by the camp DIRECTOR.

DIRECTOR Welcome to Camp Survival.

(checking clipboard)

I see your name is A. Mennonite. What does the “A” stand for?

CAMPER It used to be Assertive, but now it stands for Apathetic,which is why my folks sent me here, but I prefer to think ofmyself as Amenable -- you know, agreeable, open-minded ...

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Soul-searching leads pastor to take radical journey with Jesus
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 3:07 PM

Soul-searching leads pastor to take
radical journey with Jesus

by Laurie Oswald Robinson

When Gilberto Flores, a longtime leader in Mennonite Church USA, saw innocent people hanging dead in a Guatemalan jungle, he felt hate.

Gilberto Flores seen here at a 1985 gathering of pastors from Central America, Mexico and Panama focusing on the theme of Christian Communities and Pastoral Ministry in Societies in Conflict.

Even before that day decades ago, Flores, a Mennonite pastor in Guatemala at the time, had seen so much in ...

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Immigrant Churches call Mennonite Church USA beyond their comfort zone
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 2:12 PM

Immigrant Churches call Mennonite Church USA beyond their comfort zone

Philadelphia Praise Center (PPC) and Nations Worship Center, two Franconia Conference Mennonite congregations, call the same South Philadelphia neighborhood home. Transplanted immigrants from Indonesia comprise the majority of members of both groups. The religiously motivated riots in 2000 in Surabaya, Indonesia’s second largest city, brought many Indonesian Christians to Philadelphia seeking asylum and new homes.

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Among all the people there was great joy:
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 11:27 AM

Among all the people there was great joy:

A story about a Mennonite Church and an American flag

ARCHBOLD, OHIO—This is a story about a Mennonite church and an American flag. It’s a story with no elves or fairies, but a tale of people helping those who wander the earth.

Project Hope and the Peace and Justice Project at Zion Mennonite Church in Archbold, Ohio, hosted a fiesta, complete with piñatas, to raise money for fuel costs to transport ESL students. ESL students, new citizens and other immigrants added t ...

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Sermon: Help Me Save My People
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 11:08 AM

Sermon: Help Me Save My People

by Cynentha Millsaps

Central District Conference
annual meeting
July 2008

Text

Esther 5:1-3
On the third day, Esther put on her royal robe and stood in the inner court of the palace in front of the king’s hall. The king was sitting on his royal throne in the hall, facing the entrance. When he saw Queen Esther standin ...

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Sermon: Empire Series — Colossians 3: 18-46
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 11:03 AM

Sermon: Empire Series — Colossians 3: 18-46
By Ron Adams, for East Chestnut Street Mennonite Church, October 5, 2008

And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.

Whatever you do. In word or deed. Do everything.

I am struck by how frequently Paul uses language like this in his letter to the Colossians. How many times he uses words like all and everything to describe what belongs to Christ. It reminds me of that question someone asked Jesus about paying taxes. And Jesus said to give ...

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Sermon: Empire Series — Colossians 3: 1-17
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 11:02 AM

Sermon: Empire Series — Colossians 3: 1-17
By Ron Adams, for East Chestnut Street Mennonite Church, September 28, 2008

This is the fourth in our series on living faithfully in the Empire. Three weeks ago I attempted to set the background for the series. I tried to describe the setting in which the early Colossian believers lived, a setting dominated by the Roman Empire.

The Empire was everywhere. And it was readily apparent to all with eyes to see. From the Roman garrison, to the temple dedicated to a Roman god, to the image of the Emperor on your money, to the smell of meat being burned on a pagan altar, to the stories of heroes from the past, all ...

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Sermon : Empire Series — Colossians 1
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 11:00 AM

Sermon : Empire Series — Colossians 1
By Ron Adams, for East Chestnut Street Mennonite Church, September 7, 2008

For the last few years, I have struggled to understand how our faith in Christ defines us and shapes our behavior. I’ve talked about this before from this pulpit, wondering aloud how George W. Bush and I can both claim to be followers of Jesus and yet behave so differently. How he can participate in regular Christian worship and still advocate war and torture and trade policies which create and sustain misery around the world even as they benefit us and our corporations. While I participate in Christian worship and am a pacifist, and believe that we will be judged as a nation on our care for the poorest among us, and am shamed by the effects of global capitalism run amok. We both claim ...

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Sermon: Daniel in Babylon
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 10:58 AM

Sermon: Daniel in Babylon
© Megan M. Ramer

[see “Living in the Empire” worship resource under tab for “worship and study.”]

National Identity Resolution:

We, the delegate body of Mennonite Church USA gathered for San Jose 2007, have been challenged to consider both the promise and peril of living faithfully as a Christians in the USA. As a recently created national body of Mennonites, and one member in the larger body of Christ, we call upon the Executive Board to formulate a process that helps us explore our i ...

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A series of dramatic sketches for congregations to use on the national identity theme
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 10:55 AM

Professional screenwriters Don Yost and Joel Kauffmann have written a series of dramatic sketches for congregations to use on the national identity theme. Here are some excerpts. You’ll find these entire sketches and others at this site soon.

 


Camp Survival

A perplexed Mennonite Camper tries to understand why he has been assigned to share a cabin with two of his historical nemeses: Herod the Great and Ulrich Zwingli, the reformer.

ZWINGLI: We didn’t like putting all those people to death, but the survival of our nation, our very way of life was at stake -- so ...

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“Living in the Empire” Worship series readings
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 10:54 AM

“Living in the Empire” Worship series readings
Chicago Community Mennonite Church
Megan M. Ramer (ccmcil@gmail.com)

[See Living in the Empire worship resource and sermons]

Readings from Daniel, Esther and Joseph


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Sunday Worship Service: Following Jesus in a world that is not
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 10:52 AM
Sunday Worship Service: Following Jesus in a world that is not Marlene Kropf, denominational minister of worship, and Susan Mark Landis, peace advocate Focus statement In Jesus we see an astonishing revelation of God’s love for the whole world, a love that overflows all boundaries and brings healing, peace and great joy. When we follow Jesus, our true identity as children of God is renewed and, in consequence, all other loyalties and commitments take their place in relationship to our core allegiance to Christ.
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PONZI SCHEME
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 10:49 AM

Following Jesus in a world that is not

Drama for National Identity Worship Service

PONZI SCHEME

inspired by Luke 19:1-10

Peter:

Man, I can’t believe you let Zacchaeus give away all his money.

Jesus:

Oh, I don’t think he gave it all away. But ...

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“Living in the Empire” Worship Resource
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 10:44 AM

“Living in the Empire” Worship Resource
Chicago Community Mennonite Church
Compiled by Megan M. Ramer (ccmcil@gmail.com) in 2008

[See full length sermon under “sermons” tab]

Introduction and history

The delegates of Mennonite Church USA passed a "National Identity" resolution in San Jose las ...

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Chicago congregation provides bread and bridges for body and soul
National IdentityBy chris onThursday, January 15, 2009 10:43 AM

Chicago congregation provides bread
and bridges for body and soul

Soon after Living Water Community Church relocated to a Chicago street corner where a gang shooting occurred in 2001, the church discovered that the way to young people’s lives is sometimes through their stomachs.

Living Water, begun in 1995, was renting space for its Sunday services a couple blocks from this site when the shooting happened. In response, the congregation felt called to pray on the corner. Soon, the prayers turned toward t ...

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Allegiance at the Fault Lines
National IdentityBy chris onWednesday, January 14, 2009 4:52 PM

Allegiance at the Fault Lines
J. Nelson Kraybill

Fault lines appeared within Mennonite Church USA last fall as presidential politics polarized the nation. Sentiments were so strong they sometimes stretched relationships within families and congregations. Mennonites who emphasize Jesus’ call to love our enemies supported the candidate they thought most likely to pursue diplomacy. Others supported the candidate they thought most likely to protect the unborn.

Not only in politics are Mennonites tugged by allegiance to something beyond the body of Christ. A substantial part of the denomination today is professional, educated, entrepreneurial or wealthy. In each ca ...

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Una carta abierta a los miembros de la Iglesia Menonita USA:
Schrag BlogBy Mennonite Church USA onThursday, December 11, 2008 2:51 PM
Nuestra iglesia, la Iglesia Menonita USA, forma parte de una sociedad que está intentando vivir de forma nueva sus ideales de igualdad e imparcialidad hacia todos sus ciudadanos. Una señal dramática de esta nueva corriente de respeto el uno hacia el otro, basado en nuestro carácter, no en el color de nuestra piel, es la elección de un Afro-Americano como nuestro próximo presidente.
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YMLT Tip Jar
YMLT Tip JarBy Mennonite Church USA on12/4/2008 11:56 AM

The YMLT Tip Jar is a place for Mennonite youth and youth workers to share tips on anything from fundraising, conventions and organizing to how to discuss controversial issues.

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Mennonite Women USA to invite participants for strategic planning
Mennonite Church USABy Mennonite Church USA onMonday, December 01, 2008 4:06 PM
NEWTON, Kan. — Recognizing that the lives of women have become vastly more complex and demanding for women today than they were 50 or 100 years ago, Mennonite Women USA (MW USA) also recognizes that women have the same basic need to connect with one another that their foremothers had. Because of this reality, MW USA is engaging in a process to discern the best way to meet the needs of Mennonite women in the United States in the future through a strategic planning retreat designed, in part, to elicit new ways for MW USA to help women connect, share and serve together in a postmodern world.
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Mennonite Women USA to invite participants for strategic planning
By Mennonite Church USA onMonday, December 01, 2008 10:06 AM
NEWTON, Kan. — Recognizing that the lives of women have become vastly more complex and demanding for women today than they were 50 or 100 years ago, Mennonite Women USA (MW USA) also recognizes that women have the same basic need to connect with one another that their foremothers had. Because of this reality, MW USA is engaging in a process to discern the best way to meet the needs of Mennonite women in the United States in the future through a strategic planning retreat designed, in part, to elicit new ways for MW USA to help women connect, share and serve together in a postmodern world.
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Economic crisis is opportunity for generosity and service
Schrag BlogBy Mennonite Church USA onTuesday, November 25, 2008 10:46 AM
The current financial crisis in our nation, and by extension, in the world, is something greater than how this impacts you and me in our jobs, housing, savings, retirement, education expenses or need for business loans. All of that is real and painful and we are reminded again of how dependent we are upon the larger fabric of community as a society and how tenuous is our kinship with our fellow human beings. When human systems of this kind go afoul, everyone suffers, but those who suffer most are those who are already located at the bottom rung of the social and economic ladder. That position may describe some of us, but not most of us.
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Jesus For President: An Ecumenical Campaign
Interchurch Relations NewsBy Mennonite Church USA onThursday, September 18, 2008 1:12 PM
Jesus For President: An Ecumenical Campaign - The Jesus for President campaign came to Raleigh, N.C. on July 22nd. Chris Haw, Shane Claiborne, and their crew took the stage at 7pm. People started filling the seats at 6:30, anticipating the acclaimed campaign. For two and a half hours, Shane and Chris spoke about Jesus and politics to an attentive crowd. Although our Mennonite district took the lead role in bringing them to town, we were a marginal presence. With no money spent on advertising, we drew around 650 people to a midweek event.
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Brethren anniversary celebration
Interchurch Relations NewsBy Mennonite Church USA onThursday, September 18, 2008 1:06 PM
A celebration of the 300th anniversary of the Brethren denominations will be hosted by Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary’s Institute of Mennonite Studies, October 2 and 3.
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April 2008 - October 2008

2009 Education Leaders Gathering reistration began October 10 - Thursday, October 16, 2008

GOSHEN, Indiana — Registration for the 2009 Education Leaders Gathering (ELG) began online October 10 at www.MennoniteEducation.org/ELG2009. Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) invites administrators and board members of Mennonite elementary and secondary schools and Mennonite higher education institutions, and conference and churchwide leaders to register for the 2009 ELG that will be held at The Hilton Pittsburgh (Pa.), January 30 to February 1, 2009. The cost of registration is $115 ($122 CND). Conference lodging rates at The Hilton of $89 plus tax are available to participants.

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Mennonite Men presents grant to Ohio church - Thursday, October 09, 2008

NEWTON, Kan. — On Sept. 28, Mennonite Men representatives Lyle Troyer, Lorain, Ohio, from Ohio Conference, and Joe Graber, Berne Ind., a Mennonite Men board member, presented a $35,000 Join Hands grant to JubileeMennonite Church, Bellefontaine, Ohio.

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Mennonite University Faculty Conference presentations now online - Thursday, October 09, 2008

GOSHEN, Ind. — The fourth Mennonite University Faculty Conference, funded by The Marpeck Fund and Mennonite Education Agency (MEA), was held August 7-9, 2008, at Eastern Mennonite University. The keynote addresses and faculty presentations on the Mennonite University Faculty Conference’s theme, “Creation, Christ and the Classroom,” can now be accessed online at www.MennoniteEducation.org/2008MUFC. Presentations are available in PDF version and WMA audio streaming.

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Convention 2009 gives Holy Spirit center stage - Thursday, October 09, 2008

NEWTON, Kan. — The Mennonite Church USA Convention 2009 is far removed from when Jesus breathed his Spirit on the first disciples. But the planning committees for Mennonite Church USA’s convention next July are risking the theme on the belief he’ll do it again with huge crowds of Mennonites.

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Interchurch peace gathering to draw Christian leaders - Thursday, October 09, 2008

NEWTON, Kan. — Mennonite Church USA and other historic peace churches are inviting U.S. Christian leaders to participate in Heeding God’s Call: A Gathering on Peace, Jan. 13 to 17 in Philadelphia, Pa.

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Denominational consultants examine timing of next hymnal project - Thursday, September 25, 2008

NEWTON, Kan. — Results of an online survey completed by individuals representing Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada congregations indicate that many congregations may be ready for a new printed hymnal in 10 to 15 years.

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Flores to transition ministry focus - Thursday, September 25, 2008

NEWTON, Kan. — Mennonite Church USA Executive Leadership and Western District Conference (WDC) together announce a ministry transition for Gilberto Flores, director of Denominational Ministry and Missional Church for Executive Leadership. Beginning in February 2009, Flores will leave his post with Executive Leadership to pick up ministry with WDC as associate conference minister for Texas.

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Flores cambia enfoque de ministerio - Thursday, September 25, 2008

NEWTON, Kansas — El Liderazgo Ejecutivo de la Iglesia Menonita USA y la Conferencia del Distrito del Oeste (WDC, por sus siglas en inglés) anuncian conjuntamente el cambio de ministerio de Gilberto Flores, director del Ministerio Denominacional y de la Iglesia Misional para el Liderazgo Ejecutivo. A partir de febrero de 2009, Flores dejará su puesto en el Liderazgo Ejecutivo para sumarse al ministerio de la WDC como ministro de conferencia adjunto para Texas.

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Burkholder joins Mennonite Education Agency - Thursday, September 25, 2008

GOSHEN, Ind. — Mennonite Education Agency executive director, Carlos Romero, announced that Timothy J. Burkholder of Goshen, Ind., will join MEA as the associate director with a focus on church relations and development. Burkholder, with over 25 years of experience working in this area in a variety of churchwide ministries, will begin working half-time at the Goshen office on October 1, increasing to full-time on January 1, 2009.

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Historical Committee announces essay contest winners - Monday, September 15, 2008

GOSHEN, Ind. — Mutual aid emerged as a theme of the winning entries in this year’s John Horsch Mennonite Historical Essay Contest, sponsored by the Mennonite Church USA Historical Committee.

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Gather ’Round materials connect generations in summer quarter - Monday, September 15, 2008

NEWTON, Kan. — When Mennonite Publishing Network (MPN) integrated its congregational worship resources and Gather ’Round Sunday school materials around a unified theme this past summer, Bonita Howard knew they were an answer to her prayers for connecting the generations.

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New meetinghouse brings peace to Peace Mennonite - Friday, August 22, 2008

LAWRENCE, Kan. — In approaching Peace Mennonite Church in Lawrence, Kan., one sees members tending flower beds in front of their recently-purchased building — a former Odd Fellows Lodge nestled into just under an acre of quiet green space.

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Motorbikes Received - Wednesday, July 16, 2008
In a July 7 e-mail to Mennonite Church USA leaders, Reverend Benjamine Mubenga Wa Kabanga, president of the Evangelical Mennonite Church in Congo (CEM), shared photos of local church leaders receiving motorbikes purchased as a gift from Mennonite Church USA members. read more ...

Pastors Day planned for Columbus Convention - Wednesday, July 16, 2008
NEWTON, KAN. — Pastors Day will kick off the Mennonite Church USA Convention in Columbus, Ohio, next summer. This is the denomination’s first biennial convention to devote an entire day to resource pastors, according to Gilberto Flores, director of denominational ministry and missional church for Mennonite Church USA. read more ...

Myers, Enns and Roth speak at Interchurch Relations consultation - Wednesday, July 16, 2008
AKRON, Pa. — Sixty people from across Mennonite Church USA met July 1 to 3 in Akron, Pa., as part of a consultation focused on the theme Connecting with ‘old’ and ‘new’ Anabaptists. Ched Myers, Elaine Enns and John D. Roth were presenters. read more ...

Executive Board "ready to defer" on one-board concept - Wednesday, June 25, 2008
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Following a June 20 meeting of all Mennonite Church USA boards of directors, the Mennonite Church USA Executive Board spent a day and a half discerning how to move forward. After considering the perceived concerns and possibilities shared in the meeting, the Executive Board adopted Sunday a statement of response outlining its intentions for moving forward. read more ...

Long-held dream comes true in Hispanic church plant - Wednesday, June 04, 2008
IMG_0091_thumb.jpgNEWTON, Kan. — For years, Rosa Flores searched for someone who could begin a Spanish-speaking Mennonite church in the Newton, Kan., area. It wasn’t until she recognized herself as that person that the long-held dream came true. read more ...

At the Summit: the church at the crossroads - Wednesday, May 28, 2008
TomYoderNeufeld_thumb.jpgWINNIPEG, Man. — For pastor and teacher Tom Yoder Neufeld, Christian identity and mission go hand in hand — and they are at the heart of the theme for the 2008 “People’s Summit for Faithful Living.” read more ...

New Anabaptist book in Spanish - Wednesday, May 28, 2008
SiendoAnabautista_thumb.jpgGOSHEN, Ind. — As part of its role to advocate for the vision and mission of Anabaptist-Mennonite education in Mennonite Church USA, Mennonite Education Agency announces the publication of a new book on Anabaptism in Spanish by Tony Brun. Siendo Anabautista y Contemporáneo: Contribuciones para una Comunidad local con conciencia universal, translated as Being Anabaptist and Contemporary: Contributions for a Local Community with Universal Conscience, seeks to show how 16th century radical Anabaptism complements the perennial and contemporary wisdom of humanity. read more ...

Commentary: Seeing myself in the face of an enemy by Susan Mark Landis - Wednesday, May 28, 2008
IranPeaceLamp_thumb.jpgTwo weeks ago, I was walking the streets of Esfahan, the large city near the disputed nuclear power plant of Iran. Iman Square, the second largest square in the world; Iman Mosque, bright dome colors flashing in sun; and the Persian Palace with the long winding stairway are among the most amazing ancient sites of the world and just miles from the nuclear power plant. Our Fellowship of Reconciliation USA (www.forusa.org) 21-person delegation, ages 21 to 75, Buddhist, Christian, Jewish, Muslim and Native American, toured, shopped the bazaar and ate delicious quince/chicken stew at a traditional Iranian restaurant. read more ...

United Church of Canada endorses Gather ’Round curriculum. - Wednesday, May 28, 2008
NEWTON, Kan. — The United Church of Canada has become the newest cooperative user of the Gather ’Round curriculum, citing its value for congregations that want to connect with families. read more ...

Churches in Congo and United States learning to work together - Thursday, May 15, 2008

WATERLOO, Ont. — When the United States government recently refused to give a visa for Rev. Benjamin Mubenga to visit the United States, Mennonite Church USA leaders decided to go to him instead. Mubenga, president of the Evangelical Mennonite Church in Congo (CEM), was in Canada to meet with Mennonite Church Canada pastors and congregations.

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Mennonite Historical Bulletin announces Mennonite History essentials - Thursday, May 15, 2008
GOSHEN, Ind. — Mennonite church, college and historical libraries have shelves filled with books about the history of the faith. Choosing which ones to read can be a daunting task. That’s why the April issue of Mennonite Historical Bulletin, published by the Mennonite Church USA Historical Committee, has compiled “The Essential Anabaptist/Mennonite History Reading List.” read more ...

Needles stitch healing into storm-ripped lives - Thursday, May 15, 2008
NEWTON, Kan. — “Hammers ring hope” in Mennonite Disaster Service (MDS) building projects. And since 2005, needles also ring hope as quilters stitch healing into those same storm-ripped lives through Housewarming, a Sister Link Project of Mennonite Women USA. read more ...

New Mennonite Women USA editor no stranger to ministry - Thursday, May 01, 2008
NEWTON, Kan. — When Patricia Burdette began to serve Mennonite Women USA (MW USA) four years ago on the board of directors, she had no idea she was helping to guide the staff she would someday join as editor.

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Editor completes work with Mennonite Church USA - Thursday, May 01, 2008
NEWTON, Kan. — Laurie Oswald Robinson of Newton, Kan., resigned earlier this year from her position as editor for Mennonite Women USA.
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Conference resource advocates attend training in Baltimore - Thursday, May 01, 2008
BALTIMORE — Mennonite Church USA conference resource advocates met March 28 to 30 in Baltimore for a training retreat focused on networking and learning about new resources. Thirteen of Mennonite Church USA’s 21 area conferences were represented at this third annual gathering.
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No words big enough for Greensburg Mennonite’s gratitude. - Thursday, April 24, 2008
GREENSBURG, Kan. — Jeffrey Blackburn, pastor of Greensburg Mennonite Church, searches for words big enough to convey the gratitude for Mennonite Church USA’s support after a May 4 tornado last year destroyed their church. read more ...

Connie Stauffer hired as interim associate director for MEA. - Thursday, April 24, 2008
GOSHEN, Ind. — Connie Stauffer of Lancaster, Pa., began serving as interim associate director for Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) April 21. MEA is the education agency of Mennonite Church USA. Stauffer will be the MEA staff liaison with Mennonite Schools Council (MSC) and will carry these responsibilities until a permanent person has been hired.  read more ...

Gather ’Round offers summer supplement for youth and junior high - Monday, April 21, 2008
NEWTON, Kan. — In response to requests by congregations, the Gather ’Round Sunday school curriculum is offering a new Youth/Junior Youth Summer Supplement this year. The supplement accompanies either the Summer 2008 Connect guide for parents and caregivers of children or the teacher’s guide for multiage groups.
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Commentary: A vision of faith and unity for the church’s future - Monday, April 21, 2008
This testimony comes from Mennonite Church USA moderator Sharon Waltner, moderator-elect Ed Diller, executive director Jim Schrag and associate executive director Ron Byler. Additional commentaries from Mennonite Church USA are planned to be released on a regular basis as the Executive Board continues moving toward its vision.

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