Mennonites: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Anabaptist groups originating in Western Europe}} |
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The '''Mennonites''' are a group of [[Christianity|Christian]] [[Anabaptist]] (Re-baptizers) denominations named after and influenced by the teachings and tradition of [[Menno Simons]] (1496-1561). As one of the historic ''[[peace church]]es'', Mennonites are committed to [[non-violence]], [[non-resistance]] and [[pacifism]] (or refusal to go to war). |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}} |
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{{Infobox religious group |
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| group = Mennonites |
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| founder = |
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| image = Mennonite World Conference logo.svg |
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| image_size = 200px |
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| caption = Emblem of the [[Mennonite World Conference]] |
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| population = {{increase}} 2.13 million (2018)<ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 58">{{cite book |author=Mennonite World Conference |author-link=Mennonite World Conference |title=World Directory, 2018 |page=[https://mwc-cmm.org/sites/default/files/resource-uploads/directory2018statistics.pdf 58]}}</ref> |
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| region1 = United States |
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| pop1 = 500,469 |
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| ref1 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 58"/> |
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| region2 = Ethiopia |
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| pop2 = 310,912 |
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| ref2 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56">{{cite book |author=Mennonite World Conference |author-link=Mennonite World Conference |title=World Directory, 2018 |page=[https://mwc-cmm.org/sites/default/files/resource-uploads/directory2018statistics.pdf 56]}}</ref> |
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| region3 = India |
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| pop3 = 257,029 |
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| ref3 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| region4 = {{abbr|Dem.|Democratic}} Republic of the Congo |
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| pop4 = 225,581 |
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| ref4 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| region5 = [[Mennonites in Bolivia|Bolivia]] |
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| pop5 = 150,000 |
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| ref5 = <ref>{{cite web|access-date=12 September 2023|date=3 April 2023|language=en-US|title=Expansion of Mennonite farmland in Bolivia encroaches on Indigenous land|url=https://news.mongabay.com/2023/04/expansion-of-mennonite-farmland-in-bolivia-encroaches-on-indigenous-land/|website=Mongabay Environmental News|archive-date=6 September 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230906043550/https://news.mongabay.com/2023/04/expansion-of-mennonite-farmland-in-bolivia-encroaches-on-indigenous-land/|url-status=live}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref> |
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| region6 = Canada |
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| pop6 = 149,422 |
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| ref6 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 58"/> |
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| region7 = [[Mennonites in Mexico|Mexico]] |
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| pop7 = 110,000 |
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| ref7 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 57"/> |
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| region8 = Indonesia |
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| pop8 = 102,761 |
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| ref8 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| region9 = Tanzania |
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| pop9 = 92,350 |
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| ref9 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| region10 = Thailand |
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| pop10 = 63,998 |
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| ref10 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| region11 = Zimbabwe |
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| pop11 = 50,287 |
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| ref11 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| region12 = Germany |
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| pop12 = 47,492 |
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| ref12 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 57">{{cite book |author=Mennonite World Conference |author-link=Mennonite World Conference |title=World Directory, 2018 |page=[https://mwc-cmm.org/sites/default/files/resource-uploads/directory2018statistics.pdf 57]}}</ref> |
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| region13 = [[Mennonites in Paraguay|Paraguay]] |
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| pop13 = 36,009 |
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| ref13 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 57"/> |
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| region14 = Kenya |
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| pop14 = 35,575 |
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| ref14 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| region15 = Angola |
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| pop15 = 30,555 |
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| ref15 = <ref name="MWC World Directory 2018, p. 56"/> |
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| rels = [[Anabaptist]] |
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| scrips = [[Bible]] |
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}} |
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{{Anabaptist vertical}} |
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'''Mennonites''' are a group of [[Anabaptism|Anabaptist]] [[Christianity|Christian]] communities tracing their roots to the epoch of the [[Radical Reformation]]. The name ''Mennonites'' is derived from the cleric [[Menno Simons]] (1496–1561) of [[Friesland]], part of the [[Holy Roman Empire]], present day [[Netherlands]]. Menno Simons became a prominent leader within the wider Anabaptist movement and was a contemporary of [[Martin Luther]] (1483–1546) and [[Philip Melanchthon]] (1497–1560). Through his writings about the [[Reformation]] Simons articulated and formalized the teachings of earlier Swiss Anabaptist founders as well as early teachings of the Mennonites founded on the belief in both the mission and [[ministry of Jesus]].{{Citation needed|reason=Your explanation here|date=February 2024}} Formal Mennonite beliefs were codified in the [[Dordrecht Confession of Faith]] (1632),<ref name="Kraybill2017">{{Cite book |last=Kraybill |first=Donald B. |title=Eastern Mennonite University |date=12 September 2017 |publisher=Penn State University Press |isbn=9780271080581 |page=94 |language=en}}</ref> which affirmed "the baptism of believers only, the washing of the feet as a symbol of servanthood, church discipline, the shunning of the excommunicated, the non-swearing of oaths, marriage within the same church", [[nonresistance]], and in general, more emphasis on "true Christianity" involving "being Christian and obeying Christ" as they interpret it from the [[Holy Bible]].<ref name="Hartzler2013">{{cite book |last1=Hartzler |first1=Rachel Nafziger |title=No Strings Attached: Boundary Lines in Pleasant Places: A History of Warren Street / Pleasant Oaks Mennonite Church |date=30 April 2013 |publisher=Wipf and Stock Publishers |isbn=978-1-62189-635-7 |language=English}}</ref> |
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The majority of the early Mennonite followers, rather than fighting, survived by fleeing to neighboring states where ruling families were tolerant of their belief in [[believer's baptism]]. Over the years, Mennonites have become known as one of the historic [[peace churches]], due to their commitment to [[Christian pacifism|pacifism]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Historic Peace Churches |url=http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/H59ME.html |access-date=12 January 2013 |publisher=Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online |archive-date=15 April 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100415233916/http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/H59ME.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Mennonites seek to emphasize the teachings of [[early Christianity]] in their beliefs, worship and lifestyle.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bregman |first1=Lucy |title=Religion, Death, and Dying |date=25 November 2009 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing USA |isbn=978-0-313-35174-7 |page=160 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="NSMC">{{cite web |title=What We Believe |url=https://northsidemennonitechurch.com/?page_id=91 |publisher=North Side Mennonite Church |access-date=14 May 2024 |archive-date=14 May 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240514031633/https://northsidemennonitechurch.com/?page_id=91 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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There are about 1.3 million Mennonites worldwide as of 2006. Mennonite congregations worldwide embody the full scope of Mennonite practice from old fashioned 'plain' people to those who appear no different in dress from other people. The largest population of Mennonites is in the United States but Mennonites congregrate in tight-knit communities in at least 51 countries on six continents as well. |
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Congregations worldwide embody various approaches to Mennonite practice, ranging from [[Old Order Mennonite]]s (who practice a lifestyle without certain elements of modern technology) to [[Conservative Mennonites]] (who hold to traditional theological distinctives, wear [[plain dress]] and use modern conveniences) to mainline Mennonites (those who are indistinguishable in dress and appearance from the general population).<ref name="Smucker2006">{{cite book |last1=Smucker |first1=Donovan E. |title=The Sociology of Mennonites, Hutterites and Amish: A Bibliography with Annotations, Volume II 1977-1990 |date=1 January 2006 |publisher=Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press |isbn=978-0-88920-605-2 |pages=xviii-xix |language=English |quote=There are educated, professionalized, affluent Mennonites, conservative Mennonites who still wear plain clothes, restrain education but drive cars and tractors, and use electricity, and there are Old Order Mennonites who differ from the Amish only by the absence of beards and the use of plain, austere church buildings instead of the Amish house church. Transportation is by horse and buggy.}}</ref> Mennonites can be found in communities in 87 countries on six continents.<ref name="MWC stats"/> Seven [[Ordinance (Christianity)|ordinances]] have been taught in many traditional Mennonite churches, which include "baptism, communion, footwashing, marriage, anointing with oil, the holy kiss, and the prayer covering."<ref name="Hartzler2013"/><ref>{{cite book|title=Manual of Bible Doctrines|url=https://archive.org/details/manualofbibledoc00kauf|first=Daniel|last=Kauffman|date=1898|publisher=Mennonite Publishing Co.|location=[[Elkhart, Indiana|Elkhart]]|pages=147–159}}</ref> The largest populations of Mennonites are found in Canada, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, India, and the United States.<ref name="MWC stats"/> There are Mennonite settlements in Argentina, Belize, Bolivia,<ref>{{Cite news |title=Bolivian Reforms Raise Anxiety on Mennonite Frontier |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=21 December 2006 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/21/world/americas/21bolivia.html |access-date=5 April 2015 |last1=Romero |first1=Simon |archive-date=22 June 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130622233205/http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/21/world/americas/21bolivia.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Brazil, Mexico, Peru,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Nuevos alemanes en la selva de Peru, Los Menonitas llegaron a colonizar la selva (Reportaje) |website=[[YouTube]] |date=29 November 2015 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjejLy43uTA&t=8s |access-date=8 August 2022 |archive-date=8 August 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220808161924/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjejLy43uTA&t=8s |url-status=live }}</ref> Uruguay,<ref>{{Cite web |date=1 November 2012 |title=Aus Montevideo: Galizische Mennoniten in Uruguay |trans-title=Mennonites from Galitzia in Uruguay |url=http://www.galizien.org/de/galizien/27-mennoniten-in-galizien/28--aus-montevideo-galizische-mennoniten-in-uruguay.html?showall=1 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120801065414/http://www.galizien.org/de/galizien/27-mennoniten-in-galizien/28--aus-montevideo-galizische-mennoniten-in-uruguay.html?showall=1 |archive-date=1 August 2012 |access-date=6 November 2012 |publisher=Galizien.org }}</ref> Paraguay,<ref>{{Cite web |last=De La Cova |first=Antonio |date=28 December 1999 |title=Paraguay's Mennonites resent 'fast buck' outsiders |url=http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/paraguay/mennonites.htm |access-date=29 October 2011 |publisher=Latinamericanstudies.org |archive-date=12 July 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100712210031/http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/paraguay/mennonites.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> and Colombia.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.caracoltv.com/los-informantes/menonitas-en-colombia-asi-vive-la-misteriosa-comunidad-religiosa-en-los-llanos-orientales|title=Menonitas en Colombia: así vive la misteriosa comunidad religiosa en los Llanos Orientales|date=15 August 2021|website=Caracol TV|accessdate=21 August 2021|archive-date=23 January 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220123003746/https://www.caracoltv.com/los-informantes/menonitas-en-colombia-asi-vive-la-misteriosa-comunidad-religiosa-en-los-llanos-orientales|url-status=live}}</ref> The [[Mennonites in the Netherlands|Mennonite Church in the Netherlands]] still continues where Simons was born.<ref name="WCC ADS">{{Cite web |title=Member Churches – Mennonite Church in the Netherlands |url=http://www.oikoumene.org/en/member-churches/mennonite-church-in-the-netherlands |access-date=21 September 2016 |website=World Council of Churches |date=January 1948 |archive-date=18 February 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200218073817/https://www.oikoumene.org/en/member-churches/mennonite-church-in-the-netherlands |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Mennonites are prominent among denominations in [[disaster relief]], often being the first to arrive with aid after hurricanes, floods and other disasters. In the last few decades they have also become more actively involved with [[peace]] and [[social justice]] issues, helping to found [[Christian Peacemaker Teams]], Mennonite Conciliation Service, and the [[Mennonite Central Committee]]. |
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Though Mennonites are a global denomination with church membership from Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas, certain Mennonite communities with ethno-cultural origins in Switzerland and the Netherlands bear the designation of [[ethnic Mennonites]].<ref name="Dueck2017">{{cite book |last1=Dueck |first1=Jonathan |title=Congregational Music, Conflict and Community |date=28 April 2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-134-78605-3 |language=English |quote=But Mennonites ... are from many places and diverse in terms of belief, drawing, historically, on European diasporic histories, and at present, negotiating a much broader variety of diasporic histories, perhaps especially in Asia (Indonesia, for example), Latin America (Colombia, Brazil, Mexico, among others) and Africa (Congo, for example). A subset of these groups of Mennonites--Swiss Mennonites and [[Russian Mennonites]]--sometimes identify or are identified as 'ethnic Mennonites'.}}</ref> Across Latin America, Mennonite colonization has been seen as a driver of environmental damage, notably [[deforestation of the Amazon rainforest]] through land clearance for agriculture.<ref name=lePolain2021/><ref name=Hanners2016/><ref name=MAAP112/> |
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==Theology== |
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Mennonite theology emphasizes the primacy of the teachings of [[Jesus]] as recorded in [[New Testament]] scripture. They hold in common the ideal of a religious community based on New Testament models and imbued with the spirit of the [[Sermon on the Mount]]. Their core beliefs deriving from Anabaptist traditions are: |
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== History == |
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*The authority of Scripture and the Holy Spirit. |
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{{Main|Radical Reformation}} |
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*Salvation through conversion by the Spirit of God |
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[[File:Spread of the Anabaptists 1525-1550.png|thumb|Spread of the early Anabaptists, 1525–1550]] |
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*[[Believer's baptism]] understood as threefold: ''Baptism by the spirit'' (internal change of heart), ''baptism by water'' (public demonstration of witness), and ''baptism by blood'' (martyrdom and asceticism or the practice of strict self-denial as a measure of personal and especially spiritual discipline). |
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*Discipleship understood as an outward sign of an inward change. |
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*Discipline in the church, informed by New Testament teaching, particularly of Jesus (for example Matthew 18:15-18). Some Mennonite churches practice ''[[Excommunication#Amish and Mennonite|the Ban]]'' ([[shunning]]). |
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*The [[Lord's Supper]] understood as a memorial rather than as a [[sacrament]] or Christian rite, ideally shared by baptized believers within the unity and discipline of the church.<ref>In connection with the Lord's supper, some Mennonites practice [[feet washing]] as continuing outer sign of humility within the church. Feet washing was not originally an Anabaptist practice. Pilgram Marpeck before 1556 included it, and it became widespread in the late 1500s and the 1600s. Today it is practiced by some as a memorial sacrament, in memory of Christ washing the feet of his disciples as recorded in the thirteenth chapter of the Gospel of John.</ref> |
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The early history of the Mennonites starts with the Anabaptists in the German and Dutch-speaking regions of central Europe. The German term is ''Täufer'' (Baptist) or ''Wiedertäufer'' ("re-Baptizers" or "Anabaptists" using the Greek ''ana'' ["again"]), as their persecutors called them.<ref>Donald B. Kraybill, ''Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites'', JHU Press, US, 2010, p. 12.</ref> These forerunners of modern Mennonites were part of the [[Protestant Reformation]], a broad reaction against the practices and theology of the [[Roman Catholic Church]]. Its most distinguishing feature is the rejection of infant [[baptism]], an act that had both religious and political meaning since almost every infant born in western Europe was baptized in the Roman Catholic Church{{Citation needed|reason=Your explanation here|date=February 2024}}. Other significant theological views of the Mennonites developed in opposition to Roman Catholic views or to the views of Protestant reformers such as [[Martin Luther]] and [[Huldrych Zwingli]]. |
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One of the earliest expressions of their faith was the [[Schleitheim Confession]], adopted in [[1527-02-24]]. Its seven articles covered: |
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*Believer's baptism |
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*The Ban ([[excommunication]]) |
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*Breaking of bread ([[The Lord's Supper|Communion]]) |
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*Separation from the [[abomination]] (the [[Roman Catholic Church]]) |
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*[[Pastor]]s in the church |
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*Renunciation of the [[sword]] ([[nonviolence]] and [[pacifism]]) |
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*Renunciation of the [[oath]] (swearing as proof of truth) |
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Some of the followers of Zwingli's [[Reformed churches|Reformed church]] thought that requiring church membership beginning at birth was inconsistent with the [[New Testament]] example. They believed that the church should be completely removed from government (the proto–[[free church]] tradition), and that individuals should join only when willing to publicly acknowledge belief in [[Jesus]] and the desire to live in accordance with his teachings. At a small meeting in Zurich on 21 January 1525, [[Conrad Grebel]], [[Felix Manz]], and [[George Blaurock]], along with twelve others, baptized each other.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Strasser |first=Rolf Christoph |year=2006 |title=Die Zürcher Täufer 1525 |trans-title=The Zurich Anabaptists 1525 |url=http://texte.efb.ch/wparchives/zh1525.pdf |access-date=28 January 2012 |publisher=EFB Verlag [[Wetzikon]] |page=30 |language=de |archive-date=24 February 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210224162503/http://texte.efb.ch/wparchives/zh1525.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> This meeting marks the beginning of the Anabaptist movement. In the spirit of the times, other groups came to preach about reducing hierarchy, relations with the state, [[eschatology]], and sexual license, running from utter abandon to extreme [[chastity]]. These movements are together referred to as the "[[Radical Reformation]]". |
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The Dordrecht Confession of Faith was adopted on [[1632-04-21]], by Dutch Mennonites, by Alsatian Mennonites in 1660, and by North American Mennonites in 1725. There is no concrete [[creed]] or [[catechism]] of which acceptance is required by congregations or members. However there are structures and traditions taught as in the [http://www.mcusa-archives.org/library/resolutions/1995/index.html Confession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective] of [[Mennonite Church Canada]] and [[Mennonite Church USA]]. |
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Many government and religious leaders, both Protestant and Roman Catholic, considered voluntary church membership to be dangerous—the concern of some deepened by reports of the [[Münster Rebellion]], led by a violent sect of Anabaptists. They joined forces to fight the movement, using methods such as banishment, torture, burning, drowning or beheading.<ref name="Murray">{{Cite book |last=Murray |first=Stuart |title=The Naked Anabaptist: The Bare Essentials of a Radical Faith |publisher=Herald Press |year=2010 |isbn=978-0-8361-9517-0}}</ref>{{rp|142}} |
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Despite strong repressive efforts of the state churches, the movement spread slowly around western Europe, primarily along the [[Rhine]]{{Citation needed|reason=Your explanation here|date=February 2024}}. Officials killed many of the earliest Anabaptist leaders in an attempt to purge Europe of the new sect.<ref name="Murray" />{{rp|142}} By 1530, most of the founding leaders had been killed for refusing to renounce their beliefs. Many believed that God did not condone killing or the use of force for any reason and were, therefore, unwilling to fight for their lives. The non-resistant branches often survived by seeking refuge in neutral cities or nations, such as [[Strasbourg]]. Their safety was often tenuous, as a shift in alliances or an invasion could mean resumed persecution. Other groups of Anabaptists, such as the [[Batenburgers]], were eventually destroyed by their unwillingness to fight. This played a large part in the evolution of Anabaptist theology. They believed that Jesus taught that any use of force to get back at anyone was wrong, and taught to forgive.{{Citation needed|reason=Your explanation here|date=February 2024}} |
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[[File:Menno Simons.jpg|thumb|Menno Simons]] |
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==History== |
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In the early days of the Anabaptist movement, [[Menno Simons]], a Catholic priest in the [[Low Countries]], heard of the movement and started to rethink his Catholic faith. He questioned the doctrine of [[transubstantiation]] but was reluctant to leave the Roman Catholic Church. His brother, a member of an Anabaptist group, was killed when he and his companions were attacked and refused to defend themselves.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Carey |first=Patrick W |year=2000 |title=Menno Simons |journal=Biography Reference Bank}}</ref> In 1536, at the age of 40, Simons left the Roman Catholic Church. He soon became a leader within the Anabaptist movement and was wanted by authorities for the rest of his life. His name became associated with scattered groups of nonviolent Anabaptists whom he helped to organize and consolidate.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Menno Simons {{!}} Dutch priest |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Menno-Simons |access-date=1 February 2019 |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |archive-date=15 February 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220215231437/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Menno-Simons |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>Mark Juergensmeyer, Wade Clark Roof, ''Encyclopedia of Global Religion, Volume 1'', Sage, 2012, p. 129 {{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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===Background=== |
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[[image:Ulrich_Zwingli.jpg|thumb| Ulrich Zwingli]] |
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From before the Middle Ages to the early 15th century, most Christianity in Western Europe was known alternately as the Universal or [[Catholic]] Church, headed by the [[Pope]]. Every Christian infant born in Europe was baptized. The Catholic Church was of paramount importance to the daily life of the average person. Church services were conducted in [[Latin]], which was the ecclesiastical language of the time. Because many common people were illiterate, the Church endeavored to instruct its members in the Christian faith by means of artwork in Church buildings: statues, paintings, and stained glass windows. |
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=== Fragmentation and variation === |
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When the printing press was invented around 1455, the Bible was one of the first books printed and mass-produced with [[Printing press|movable type]]. Although illiteracy was still widespread, more people could now read the Bible and interpret it for themselves, a factor leading to the Protestant [[Reformation]] in Europe. Key reformers [[Martin Luther]] and [[John Calvin]] broke with the Catholic Church, each forming a new state church. In Zurich, Switzerland, [[Ulrich Zwingli]] also left the priesthood to lead the reformation among the Swiss Cantons. |
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[[File:Altkirch, Église Évangélique Mennonite.jpg|thumb|An Evangelical Mennonite Church in [[Altkirch]]]] |
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[[File:TMP Stage 2018.jpg|thumb|[[Worship service (evangelicalism)|Worship service]] at [[The Meeting Place (church)|The Meeting Place]] in [[Winnipeg]], [[Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches]]]] |
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During the 16th century, the Mennonites and other Anabaptists were relentlessly [[Persecution of Christians|persecuted]]. This period of persecution has had a significant impact on Mennonite identity. ''[[Martyrs Mirror]]'', published in 1660, documents much of the persecution of Anabaptists and their predecessors, including accounts of over 4,000 [[death by burning|burnings of individuals]], and numerous [[stoning]]s, [[imprisonment]]s, and [[premature burial|live burials]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hostetler |first=John A. |title=Mennonite Life |date=1955 |publisher=Herald Press |location=Scottsdale, Pennsylvania |page=4}}</ref> Today, the book is still the most important book besides the Bible for many Mennonites and Amish, in particular for the Swiss-South German branch of the Mennonites. Persecution was still going on until 1710 in various parts of Switzerland.<ref>{{Cite CE1913|wstitle=Mennonites}}</ref> |
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In 1693, [[Jakob Ammann]] led an effort to reform the Mennonite church in Switzerland and South Germany to include [[shunning]], to hold communion more often, and other differences.<ref>Donald B. Kraybill, ''Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites'', JHU Press, US, 2010, p. 13.</ref> When the discussions fell through, Ammann and his followers split from the other Mennonite congregations. Ammann's followers became known as the [[Amish]] Mennonites or just Amish. In later years, other schisms among Amish resulted in such groups as the [[Amish|Old Order Amish]], [[New Order Amish]], [[Kauffman Amish Mennonite]], [[Swartzentruber Amish]], [[Rosedale Network of Churches|Conservative Mennonite Conference]] and [[Biblical Mennonite Alliance]]. For instance, near the beginning of the 20th century, some members in the Amish church wanted to begin having [[Sunday school]]s and participate in progressive Protestant-style para-church evangelism. Unable to persuade the rest of the Amish, they separated and formed a number of separate groups including the Conservative Mennonite Conference. Mennonites in Canada and other countries typically have independent denominations because of the practical considerations of distance and, in some cases, language. Many times these divisions took place along family lines, with each extended family supporting its own branch. |
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===Radical Reformation and the Anabaptists=== |
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Some of the followers of Zwingli's Reformed church felt that requiring church membership beginning at birth was inconsistent with the New Testament example. They felt that the church should be completely removed from government (the proto-[[free church]] tradition), and that people should join only once they were willing to publicly acknowledge that they believed in [[Jesus]] and wanted to live as he commanded. At a small meeting on [[January 21]], [[1525]], [[Conrad Grebel]], [[Felix Manz]], and [[George Blaurock]], along with twelve others, all baptized each other. This meeting became the birthplace of the [[Anabaptists]], or ''re-baptizers''. |
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Political rulers often admitted the Menists or Mennonites into their states because they were honest, hardworking and peaceful{{Citation needed|reason=Your explanation here|date=February 2024}}. When their practices upset the powerful state churches, princes would renege on exemptions for military service, or a new monarch would take power, and the Mennonites would be forced to flee again, usually leaving everything but their families behind. Often, another monarch in another state would grant them welcome, at least for a while. |
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The Protestant churches considered this radical idea of voluntary church membership to be dangerous. They joined forces to fight the movement. Laws were passed, and many people were persecuted, robbed of everything they had, driven from their homes and countries, and [[martyr|martyred]]. In the spirit of the times, many radical groups followed, preaching any number of ideas about hierarchy, the state, and various ideas on sexual license running from utter abandon to extreme chastity. These movements have been called by historians the [[Radical Reformation]]. Modern-day Mennonites, in addition to the [[Amish]] and Hutterites, are the direct descendants of the Radical Reformation Anabaptists - many do not consider themselves to be [[Protestant]]s (nor [[Roman Catholic]]), but rather a separate (radical) Reformation. |
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While Mennonites in [[Colonial America]] were enjoying considerable religious freedom, their counterparts in Europe continued to struggle with persecution and temporary refuge under certain ruling monarchs. They were sometimes invited to settle in areas of poor soil that no one else could farm. By contrast, in the Netherlands, the Mennonites enjoyed a relatively high degree of tolerance. Because the land still needed to be tended, the ruler would not drive out the Mennonites but would pass laws to force them to stay, while at the same time severely limiting their freedom. Mennonites had to build their churches facing onto back streets or alleys, and they were forbidden from announcing the beginning of services with the sound of a bell. |
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As the movement spread slowly around Europe (primarily along the Rhine River), despite the best efforts of the state churches, many of the earliest Anabaptist leaders - those whose beliefs were strongest, and who were the most educated - were killed in an effort to purge Europe of this dangerous idea. By 1530, most of the founding leaders had been killed for refusing to renounce their beliefs. Their unwillingness to fight for their lives was a direct reflection of their belief that God did not condone killing or use of force for any reason, and played a large part in the evolution of Anabaptist theology. When the most educated leaders of the movement were killed, they were sometimes replaced by people who did not fully understand their predecessors' philosophy, and who felt that they had to fight to protect their lives and beliefs. These branches were eventually destroyed by their very willingness to fight. At the same time, the branches that refused to engage the stronger enemy of the state churches still continued to be persecuted, robbed of their possessions and forcefully moved. |
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A strong emphasis on "community" was developed under these circumstances. It continues to be typical of Mennonite churches. As a result of frequently being required to give up possessions in order to retain individual freedoms, Mennonites learned to live very simply. This was reflected both in the home and at church, where their dress and their buildings were plain. The music at church, usually simple German chorales, was performed ''[[a cappella]]''. This style of music serves as a reminder to many Mennonites of their simple lives, as well as their history as a persecuted people. Some branches of Mennonites have retained this "plain" lifestyle into modern times. |
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===Fragmentation and variation=== |
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During the sixteenth century, the Mennonites and other Anabaptists were relentlessly [[Persecution of Christians|persecuted]]. By the seventeenth century, some of them joined the state church in [[Switzerland]], and persuaded the authorities to relent in their attacks. The Mennonites outside the [[state church]] were divided on whether to remain in communion with their brothers within the state church, and this led to a split. Those against remaining in communion with them became known as the [[Amish]], after their founder [[Jacob Amman]]. Those who remained in communion with them retained the name Mennonite. <!--this duplicates material below in the "Jacob Amman and the Amish" section --> This period of persecution has had a significant impact on Mennonite identity. [[Martyrs Mirror]], published in 1660, documents much of the persecution of Anabaptists and their predecessors. Today, the book is still the most important book besides the Bible for many Mennonites and Amish, in particular for the Swiss-South German branch of Mennonitism. |
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=== Statistics === |
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Other disagreements over the years have led to other splits; sometimes the reasons were theological, sometimes practical, sometimes geographical. For instance, near the beginning of the twentieth century, there were some members in the Amish church who wanted to begin having [[Sunday School]]s and evangelize. Unable to persuade the rest of the Amish, they separated and formed the [[Conservative Mennonite Conference]]. Mennonites in Canada and other countries typically have independent denominations due to the practical considerations of distance and, in some cases, language. |
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The [[Mennonite World Conference]] was founded at the first conference in [[Basel]], Switzerland, in 1925 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of [[Anabaptism]].<ref>J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann, ''Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices'', ABC-CLIO, US, 2010, p. 1859.</ref> In 2022, the organization had 109 member denominations in 59 countries, and 1.47 million baptized members in 10,300 churches.<ref>Mennonite World Conference, [https://mwc-cmm.org/about-mwc About MWC] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210305201523/https://mwc-cmm.org/about-mwc |date=5 March 2021 }}, mwc-cmm.org, Canada, retrieved 5 November 2022</ref> |
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== Beliefs and practices == |
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===Menno Simons=== |
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{{Main|Anabaptist theology}} |
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[[Image:Menno_Simons.jpg|thumb| Menno Simons]] |
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The beliefs of the movement are those of the [[Believers' Church]].<ref>Donald B. Kraybill, ''Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites'', JHU Press, USA, 2010, p. 25</ref> |
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{{main|Menno Simons}} |
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In the early days of the Anabaptist movement, [[Menno Simons]], a Catholic priest in the Netherlands, heard of the movement and started to rethink his Catholic faith. He questioned the doctrine of [[transubstantiation]], but was reluctant to leave the Roman Catholic Church. His thinking was influenced by the death of his brother, who, as a member of an Anabaptist group, was killed when he and his companions were attacked and refused to defend themselves. In 1536, at the age of 40, Simons left the Roman Catholic Church. Soon thereafter he became a leader within the Anabaptist movement. He would become a hunted man with a price on his head for the rest of his life. His name became associated with scattered groups of nonviolent Anabaptists he helped to organize and consolidate. |
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One of the earliest expressions of Mennonite Anabaptist faith was the [[Schleitheim Confession]], adopted on 24 February 1527.<ref>J. Philip Wogaman, Douglas M. Strong, ''Readings in Christian Ethics: A Historical Sourcebook'', Westminster John Knox Press, US, 1996, p. 141</ref> Its seven articles covered: |
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===Persecution, Welcoming Monarchs, and Early America=== |
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* The Ban ([[excommunication]]) |
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The first recorded account of this group is in a written order by Countess Anne, who ruled a small province in central Europe. The presence of some small groups of violent Anabaptists was causing political and religious turmoil in her state, so she decreed that all Anabaptists were to be driven from her state. The order made an exception though, for the non-violent branch known at that time as the ''Menists''. This order set the precedent that was to be repeated many times throughout history, where a political ruler would allow the Menists or Mennonites into his/her state because they were honest, hardworking and peaceful. However, inevitably, their presence would ruffle the feathers of the powerful state churches, or a new monarch would take power, and the Mennonites would once again be forced to flee for their lives, usually leaving everything but their families behind. Often, another monarch in another state would grant them welcome, at least for a while. |
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* Breaking of bread ([[Eucharist|Communion]]) |
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* Separation from and shunning of the [[Abomination (Bible)|abomination]] (the Roman Catholic Church and other "worldly" groups and practices) |
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* Believer's baptism |
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* [[Pastor]]s in the church |
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* Renunciation of the sword ([[Christian pacifism]]) |
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* Renunciation of the oath (swearing as proof of truth) |
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The [[Dordrecht Confession of Faith]] was adopted on 21 April 1632, by Dutch Mennonites, by Alsatian Mennonites in 1660, and by North American Mennonites in 1725. It has been followed by many Mennonite groups over the centuries.<ref name="Kraybill2003">{{cite book |last1=Kraybill |first1=Donald B. |title=The Riddle of Amish Culture |date=1 May 2003 |publisher=JHU Press |isbn=978-0-8018-7631-8 |language=English}}</ref> With regard to [[salvation in Christianity|salvation]], Mennonites believe:<ref name="MCUSA2022"/> |
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An example was the ruling Queen of [[England]], [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]]. There, in a small village in Britain, a group of Dutch Anabaptists made the acquaintance of a congregation led by [[John Smyth (1570-1612)|John Smythe]], who would later lead his [[Pilgrims]] to the Netherlands and then to the [[United States|America]]. The Pilgrims' exposure to the Dutch Mennonite congregation probably influenced some of their teachings, including the freedom of each branch to regulate itself; although the Pilgrims, known today as the [[Congregational Church]], kept their practice of infant baptism despite the Mennonites' belief that baptism should take place only once the person had the capacity and willingness to accept Jesus as their Lord and savior. In addition to the Mennonites' impact on the first American Pilgrims, religious historians have traced their impact to other religious teachings. This included the [[Baptist|Baptist's]] emphasis of adult [[baptism]] upon confession of [[faith]], and the [[Religious Society of Friends]]' (Quakers) strong stance against war. The dissemination of Anabaptist beliefs helped build the religious freedom that is enjoyed in America today. |
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{{blockquote|When we hear the good news of the love of God, the Holy Spirit moves us to accept the gift of salvation. God brings us into right relationship without coercion. Our response includes yielding to God's grace, placing full trust in God alone, repenting of sin, turning from evil, joining the fellowship of the redeemed, and showing forth the obedience of faith in word and deed. When we who once were God's enemies are reconciled with God through Christ, we also experience reconciliation with others, especially within the church. In baptism we publicly testify to our salvation and pledge allegiance to the one true God and to the people of God, the church. As we experience grace and the new birth, we are adopted into the family of God and become more and more transformed into the image of Christ. We thus respond in faith to Christ and seek to walk faithfully in the way of Christ.<ref name="MCUSA2022">{{cite web |title=Article 8. Salvation |url=https://www.mennoniteusa.org/who-are-mennonites/what-we-believe/confession-of-faith/salvation/ |publisher=[[Mennonite Church USA]] |access-date=6 May 2022 |language=English |archive-date=16 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220516114328/https://www.mennoniteusa.org/who-are-mennonites/what-we-believe/confession-of-faith/salvation/ |url-status=live }}</ref>}} |
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Traditionally, Mennonites sought to continue the beliefs of [[early Christianity]] and thus practice the [[lovefeast]] (which includes [[footwashing]], the [[holy kiss]] and [[Holy Communion|communion]]), [[Christian headcovering|headcovering]], [[nonresistance]], the sharing of possessions and [[nonconformity to the world]]; these things are heavily emphasized in [[Old Order Mennonite]] and [[Conservative Mennonite]] denominations.<ref name="Kurian1999">{{cite book |last1=Kurian |first1=George |title=Encyclopedia of Religion in American Politics |date=1999 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-1-57356-130-3 |page=160 |language=English}}</ref><ref name="Eicher2013">{{cite book |last1=Eicher |first1=Jerry S. |title=My Amish Childhood: A True Story of Faith, Family, and the Simple Life |date=1 February 2013 |publisher=Harvest House Publishers |isbn=978-0-7369-5007-7 |page=214 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Scott1996">{{cite book |last1=Scott |first1=Stephen |title=Introduction to Old Order and Conservative Mennonite Groups: People's Place Book No. 12 |date=1 January 1996 |publisher=Simon and Schuster |isbn=978-1-68099-243-4 |language=English}}</ref> |
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===The Netherlands: Origins of Community and Simplicity=== |
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While Mennonites in colonial America were enjoying a large degree of religious freedom, their counterparts in Europe were in largely the same situation they always had been. Their well-being still depended on a ruling monarch, who would often extend an invitation only when there was poor soil that no one else could farm. The exception to this rule being in The Netherlands, where the Mennonites enjoyed a relatively high degree of tolerance. The Mennonites would reclaim this land through hard work and good sense, in exchange for exemption from mandatory military service. However, once the land was arable again, this arrangement would often change and the persecution would again set in. Because the land still needed to be tended, the ruler would not drive the Mennonites out, but would actually pass laws to force them to stay, while at the same time severely limiting their freedom. Mennonites had to build their churches facing onto back streets or alleys (which began the habit of meeting in someone's home rather than a formal church), and they were forbidden from announcing the beginning of services with the sound of a bell. |
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Seven [[Ordinance (Christianity)|ordinances]] have been taught in many traditional Mennonite churches, which include "baptism, communion, footwashing, marriage, anointing with oil, the holy kiss, and the prayer covering."<ref name="Hartzler2013"/> |
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In addition, high taxes were enacted in exchange for both continuing the military service exemption, and to keep the states' best farmers from leaving. Usually however, in the tradition established by the earliest [[martyrs]], the Mennonites were willing to pay any price rather than give up their freedom of conscience. In some cases, the entire congregation would give up their belongings to pay the tax to be allowed to leave. If one member of the group or one family couldn't afford the tax, the other members of the group happily paid that burden. |
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In 1911, the Mennonite church in the Netherlands ({{lang|nl|Doopsgezinde Kerk}}) was the first Dutch church to have a female pastor authorized; she was [[Anne Zernike]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mankes-Zernike, Anna (1887–1972) |url=http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mankes-Zernike,_Anna_(1887-1972) |access-date=10 April 2016 |publisher=gameo.org |archive-date=19 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160319164548/http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mankes-Zernike,_Anna_(1887-1972) |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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This strong sense of community remains to this day one of the strongest ties that binds Mennonites together as a community. In addition, by having to often give up every earthly possession in order to retain individual freedoms, the Mennonites learned to live very simply. This was reflected both in the home and at church, where not only dress, but the buildings themselves were very plain. Even the music at church, which was usually simple German chorales, were performed with no more elaborate instrument than the human voice. |
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There is a wide scope of worship, doctrine and traditions among Mennonites today. This section shows the ''main'' types of Mennonites as seen from North America. It is far from a specific study of all Mennonite classifications worldwide but it does show a somewhat representative sample of the complicated classifications within the Mennonite faith worldwide. |
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=== Jacob Amman and the Amish === |
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{{main|Amish}} |
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Mennonites suffered the first church split while still in an area between France and Germany known as [[Alsace]] in 1693. [[Jacob Amman]] led an effort to reform the Mennonite church: to include a stronger ''ban,'' to have communion more often, and other differences. When the discussions fell through, Jacob and his followers left the Mennonite church to form the Amish church. Though the difference was originally theological, the many [[Plain sects|plain sects]] that are lumped together as the Amish church have come to be recognized for the practice of accepting technology selectively - for instance, many sects accept battery-powered cellphones but strictly limit wired telephones and power line electricity - in order to comply with the demands of Romans 12:2 - "And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what [is] that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God." |
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Moderate Mennonites include the largest denominations, the [[Mennonite Brethren]] and the Mennonite Church. In most forms of worship and practice, they differ very little from many Protestant congregations. There is no special form of dress and no restrictions on use of technology. Worship styles vary greatly between different congregations. There is no formal liturgy; services typically consist of singing, scripture reading, prayer and a sermon. Some churches prefer hymns and choirs; others make use of contemporary Christian music with electronic instruments. Mennonite congregations are self-supporting and appoint their own ministers. There is no requirement for ministers to be approved by the denomination, and sometimes ministers from other denominations will be appointed. A small sum, based on membership numbers, is paid to the denomination, which is used to support central functions such as the publication of newsletters and interactions with other denominations and other countries. |
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Though the plain sects in southeast Pennsylvania are sometimes referred to as the [[Pennsylvania Dutch]], that term actually encompasses a much larger cultural/linguistic group than just the Amish, including Mennonites and non-plain German Reformed Church groups as well. As they do not proselytize, Amish are almost always part of the larger [[Pennsylvania Dutch|Pennsylvania German]] ethnic group that emigrated to Pennsylvania in the 1720s and 30s. |
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The distinguishing characteristics of moderate Mennonite churches tend to be ones of emphasis rather than rule. There is an emphasis on peace, community and service. However, members do not live in a separate community—they participate in the general community as "salt and light" to the world ([[Matthew 5]]:13,14). The main elements of Menno Simons' doctrine are retained but in a moderated form. Banning is rarely practiced and would, in any event, have much less effect than in those denominations where the community is more tightly knit. Excommunication can occur and was notably applied by the Mennonite Brethren to members who joined the military during the Second World War. Service in the military is generally not permitted, but service in the legal profession or law enforcement is acceptable. Outreach and help to the wider community at home and abroad is encouraged. The Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) is a leader in foreign aid provision. |
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===Mennonite schisms=== |
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Many orthodox, ultra-conservative, and conservative Mennonite churches left what became the modern Mennonite churches begining before the end of eighteenth century and continuing through the 1960s and 1970s. During that time, modern groups were abandoning traditional Mennonite practices such as the headship veiling for women, modesty and simplicity in dress, ordination from the laity, and nonparticipation in government. In the years since, the groups that have held to a literal interpretation of Biblical Mennonite practices such as the headship veiling have actually increased at a much more rapid rate than those groups that have rejected these standards. |
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Traditionally, very modest dress was expected, particularly in [[Conservative Mennonite]] circles. As the Mennonite population has become urbanized and more integrated into the wider culture, this visible difference has disappeared outside of Conservative Mennonite groups. |
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===The Russian Mennonites=== |
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{{main|Russian Mennonites}} |
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[[Catherine the Great]] of [[Russia]], who acquired a great deal of land north of the [[Black Sea]] (in the present-day [[Ukraine]]) in 1768 following a war with the [[Ottoman Empire|Turks]], invited those Mennonites living in [[Prussia]] to come farm the cold, tough soil of the Russian steppes in exchange for religious freedom and military exemption. The arrangement remained in place for many years during her rule, until she died and the next monarch came to power. The Mennonites that had settled in Russia during that time have come to be known to history as the [[Russian Mennonites]]. |
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The [[Reformed Mennonite]] Church, with members in the United States and Canada, represents the first division in the original North American Mennonite body. Called the "First Keepers of the Old Way" by author [[Stephen Scott (writer)|Stephen Scott]], the Reformed Mennonite Church formed in the very early 19th century. Reformed Mennonites see themselves as true followers of Menno Simons' teachings and of the teachings of the [[New Testament]]. They have no church rules, but they rely solely on the [[Bible]] as their guide. They insist on strict separation from all other forms of worship and dress in conservative plain garb that preserves 18th century Mennonite details. However, they refrain from forcing their Mennonite faith on their children, allow their children to attend public schools, and have permitted the use of automobiles. They are notable for being the church of [[Milton S. Hershey]]'s mother and famous for the long and bitter ban of Robert Bear, a Pennsylvania farmer who rebelled against what he saw as dishonesty and disunity in the leadership. |
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Avoiding the worldliness of the outside world remains another important keystone in the foundation of the Mennonite faith. However, as with all groups, worldliness is virtually impossible to keep out. In the Mennonite colonies of Russia, the Mennonites grew financially prosperous, in sharp contrast to the ex-serfs around them. Industrial operations were started and grew. Farms grew large and successful. With prosperity came a certain amount of licentiousness, including reported fondness for alcohol and greed. Although by no means accepted by all, these habits created strife within communities, especially when leadership was unwilling to ask for changes in behaviour. Occasionally, Pietist movements, often influenced by Baptist missionaries from Germany, formed groups opposed to the accepted community ways; one particular group formed was the [[Mennonite Brethren]], who left to form their own colonies. Eventually, after many years of prosperity, the colonies of Russian Mennonites were torn apart by war, famine, disease and finally mass expulsions under the [[Soviet Union]]. |
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The [[Church of God in Christ, Mennonite]], a group often called Holdeman Mennonites after their founder John Holdeman, was founded from a schism in 1859.<ref name="GAMEO-CGCM">{{Cite web |last=Hiebert |first=P. G. |year=1955 |title=Church of God in Christ, Mennonite (CGC) |url=http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Church_of_God_in_Christ,_Mennonite_(CGC)&stableid=135547 |access-date=15 September 2015 |website=Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online |publisher=GAMEO |archive-date=25 September 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160925003043/http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Church_of_God_in_Christ,_Mennonite_(CGC)&stableid=135547 |url-status=live }}</ref> They emphasize Evangelical conversion and strict church discipline. They stay separate from other Mennonite groups because of their emphasis on the one-true-church doctrine and their use of avoidance toward their own excommunicated members. The Holdeman Mennonites do not believe that the use of modern technology is a sin in itself, but they discourage too intensive a use of the Internet and avoid television, cameras and radio.<ref>{{Cite web |date=14 December 2015 |title=Holdeman Mennonites discuss 'challenges of entertainment' |url=http://mennoworld.org/2015/12/14/news/holdeman-mennonites-discuss-challenges-of-entertainment/ |access-date=26 May 2020 |website=Mennonite World Review |archive-date=25 May 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200525153931/http://mennoworld.org/2015/12/14/news/holdeman-mennonites-discuss-challenges-of-entertainment/ |url-status=live }}</ref> The group had 24,400 baptized members in 2013.<ref name="CGCM WhereWeAre">{{Cite web |title=Where we are |url=http://www.churchofgodinchristmennonite.net/en/content/where-we-are-0 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160916185400/http://www.churchofgodinchristmennonite.net/en/content/where-we-are-0 |archive-date=16 September 2016 |access-date=15 September 2016 |website=Church of God in Christ, Mennonite }}</ref> |
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The state of [[Kansas]] owes its reputation as a wheat-producing state to its early Mennonite settlers. As a result of their time on the Russian steppes under Catherine the Great, they were familiar with a strain of wheat known as winter wheat that was resistant to the cold of the American plains. It was planted in the fall and harvested in the following summer, and was therefore ideally suited to hot, dry Kansas summers. They brought it with them when the railroads were seeking farmers for the land owned on either side of the tracks, and today Kansas is a top producer of wheat in America. Swiss Volhynian Mennonites settled in the[[ Moundridge, Kansas]] and[[ Pretty Prairie, Kansas]] areas. The Swiss Mennonite Cultural and Historical Association tells their story. Mennonites of Dutch-Prussian ([[Plautdietsch|Low German]]) descent settled much of South Central Kansas. One of the largest churches with Low German roots is the [[Alexanderwohl Mennonite Church]] in [[Goessel, Kansas]]. |
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After 1870 many [[Russian Mennonites]], fearing state influence on their education systems, emigrated to the Plains States of the US and the Western Provinces of Canada. They brought with them many of their institutions and practices, including separate denominations heretofore unseen in North America, like the [[Mennonite Brethren]]. The largest group of [[Russian Mennonites]] came out of Russia after the bloody strife following the various [[Russian Revolution of 1917|Russian revolutions]] and the aftermath of [[WWI]]. These people, having lost everything they had known, found their way to settlements in [[Alberta]], [[Saskatchewan]], [[Manitoba]], [[British Columbia]] and [[Ontario]] and in many regions of the [[United States]]. Some joined with previous Mennonite groups, while others formed their own. From there, many groups, fearing state persecution and searching for a way to "live quietly on the land," have left to form groups in [[Paraguay]], [[Belize]] and [[Mexico]] beginning in the 1920s. Old Colony Mennonites went from Mexico and Belize in the early 1970's and to Argentina in 1986. A smaller number of [[Russian Mennonites]] emigrated as refugees along with the retreating German army after the failed [[Operation Barbarossa|German]] campaign of [[World War II]]. |
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[[File:Mennonite and carriage publ.jpg|thumb|Old Order Mennonite horse and carriage]] |
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=== Mennonites in early American history=== |
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[[Old Order Mennonites]] cover several distinct groups. Some groups use horse and buggy for transportation and speak German while others drive cars and speak English. What most Old Orders share in common is conservative doctrine, dress, and traditions, common roots in 19th-century and early 20th-century schisms, and a refusal to participate in politics and other so-called "sins of the world". Most Old Order groups also school their children in Mennonite-operated schools. |
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Persecution and the search for employment forced Mennonites out of the Netherlands eastward to Germany in the 17th century. As Quaker evangelists moved into Germany they received a sympathetc audiance among the larger of these Dutch-Mennonite congregations around Krefeld, Altona-Hamburg, Gronau and Emden.<ref>Smith p.139</ref> It was among this group of Quakers and Mennonites, living under ongoing discrimination, that [[William Penn]] solicited settlers for his new colony. The first permanent settlement of Mennonites in the American Colonies consisted of one Mennonite family and twelve Mennonite-Quaker<ref>Smith p.360. Smith uses ''Mennonite-Quaker'' to refer to Quakers who were formerly Mennonite and retained distinctive Mennonite beliefs and practices.</ref> families of Dutch extraction who arrived from [[Krefeld]], Germany in 1683 and settled in [[Germantown, Pennsylvania]]. Among these early settlers was William Rittenhouse, a lay minister and owner of the first American [[paper mill]]. This early group of Mennonites and Mennonite-Quakers wrote the first formal protest against slavery in America. The treatise was addressed to slave-holding Quakers in an effort to persuade them to change their ways.<ref>See [http://www.qhpress.org/texts/oldqwhp/as-1688.htm ''A Minute Against Slavery, Addressed to Germantown Monthly Meeting, 1688''] for text of the meetings message.</ref> |
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* Horse and Buggy Old Order Mennonites came from the main series of Old Order schisms that began in 1872 and ended in 1901 in Ontario, Pennsylvania, and the U.S. Midwest, as conservative Mennonites fought the radical changes that the influence of 19th century American Revivalism had on Mennonite worship. Most Horse and Buggy Old Order Mennonites allow the use of tractors for farming, although some groups insist on steel-wheeled tractors to prevent tractors from being used for road transportation. Like the Stauffer or Pike Mennonites (origin 1845 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania), the [[Groffdale Conference Mennonite Church|Groffdale Conference]], and the Old Order Mennonite Conference of Ontario, they stress separation from the world, excommunication, and the wearing of plain clothes. Some Old Order Mennonite groups are unlike the Stauffer or Pike Mennonites in that their form of the ban is less severe because the ex-communicant is not shunned, and is therefore not excluded from the family table, shunned by their spouse, or cut off from business dealings. |
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* Automobile [[Old Order Mennonites]], also known as Weaverland Conference Mennonites (having their origins in the Weaverland District of the Lancaster Conference—also calling "Horning"), or Wisler Mennonites in the U.S. Midwest, or the [[Markham-Waterloo Mennonite Conference]] having its origins from the Old Order Mennonites of Ontario, Canada, also evolved from the main series of Old Order schisms from 1872 to 1901. They often share the same meeting houses with, and adhere to almost identical forms of Old Order worship as their Horse and Buggy Old Order brethren with whom they parted ways in the early 20th century. Although this group began using cars in 1927, the cars were required to be plain and painted black. The largest group of Automobile Old Orders are still known today as [[Black-bumper Mennonite|"Black Bumper" Mennonites]] because some members still paint their chrome bumpers black. |
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[[Stauffer Mennonite]]s, or Pike Mennonites, represent one of the first and most conservative forms of North American Horse and Buggy Mennonites. They were founded in 1845, following conflicts about how to discipline children and [[spousal abuse]] by a few Mennonite Church members. They almost immediately began to split into separate churches themselves. Today these groups are among the most conservative of all Swiss Mennonites outside the Amish. They stress strict separation from "the world", adhere to "strict withdrawal from and shunning of apostate and separated members", forbid and limit cars and technology and wear plain clothing. |
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In the 18th century, 100,000 Germans from the [[Rhenish Palatinate|Palatinate]], collectively known as the [[Pennsylvania Dutch]], immigrated to Pennsylvania. Of these around 2500 were Mennonites and 500 Amish.<ref>Pannabacker p. 7.</ref> This group settled farther west than the first group, choosing less expensive land in the [[Lancaster, Pennsylvania]] area. A member of this second group, [[Christopher Dock]], authored ''Pedagogy'', the first American monograph on education. |
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[[Conservative Mennonites]] are generally considered those Mennonites who maintain somewhat conservative dress, although carefully accepting other technology. They are not a unified group and are divided into various independent conferences and fellowships such as the Eastern Pennsylvania Mennonite Church Conference. Despite the rapid changes that precipitated the Old Order schisms in the last quarter of the 19th century, most Mennonites in the United States and Canada retained a core of traditional beliefs based on a literal interpretation of the New Testament scriptures as well as more external "plain" practices into the beginning of the 20th century. However, disagreements in the United States and Canada between [[Christian fundamentalism|conservative]] and progressive (i.e. less emphasis on literal interpretation of scriptures) leaders began in the first half of the 20th century and continue to some extent today. |
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During the colonial period Mennonites were distinguished from other Pennslvania Germans in three ways:<ref>Pannabacker p. 12.</ref> their opposition to the Revolutionary War, resistance to public education and disapproval of religious revivalism. Contributions of Mennonites during this period include the idea of separation of church and state and opposition to [[slavery]]. |
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Following World War II, a conservative movement emerged from scattered separatist groups as a reaction to the Mennonite churches drifting away from their historical traditions. "Plain" became passé as open criticisms of traditional beliefs and practices broke out in the 1950s and 1960s.{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}} The first conservative withdrawals from the progressive group began in the 1950s. These withdrawals continue to the present day in what is now the growing Conservative Movement formed from Mennonite schisms and from combinations with progressive Amish groups. While moderate and progressive Mennonite congregations have dwindled in size, the Conservative Movement congregations continue to exhibit considerable growth.{{Citation needed|date=October 2010}} Other conservative Mennonite groups descended from the former Amish-Mennonite churches which split, like the Wisler Mennonites, from the Old Order Amish in the latter part of the 19th century. (The Wisler Mennonites are a grouping descended from the Old Mennonite Church.) Other Conservative Mennonite churches descended from more recent groups that have left the Amish, like the [[Beachy Amish]] or the Tennessee Brotherhood Churches. |
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From 1812 to 1860 another wave of immigrants settled farther west in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Missouri. These Swiss-German speaking Mennonites, along with Amish, came from Switzerland, and the [[Alsace-Lorraine]] area. |
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In North America, there are structures and traditions taught as in the Confession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective<ref>{{Cite web |title=Confession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective |url=http://www.mcusa-archives.org/library/resolutions/1995/index.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070529210000/http://www.mcusa-archives.org/library/resolutions/1995/index.html |archive-date=29 May 2007 |access-date=30 May 2007}}</ref> of Mennonite Church Canada and Mennonite Church USA. |
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===Oberholtzer and the General Conference=== |
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One of the more recent branches was initiated involuntarily by [[John H. Oberholtzer]] in the mid 1800s. He believed strongly in the right of each congregation to regulate itself, and felt that many of the church leaders were trying to gain too much control over the individual congregations. They were mandating issues as small as style of dress, and splitting when such trivial issues couldn't be agreed upon. In his effort to reunite the church under a General Conference, he gained support of numerous congregations and pastors, but not the entire church. The result was that the congregations who supported Oberholtzer's idea came to be known as the [[Mennonite Church USA#General Conference Mennonite Church|General Conference Mennonite Church]], organized in 1860. |
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Many [[Progressive Christianity|Progressive]] Mennonite churches allow [[LGBTQ+]] members to worship as church members. In some more moderate congregations and conferences, people who identify as LGBTQ+ have been banned from membership, and leading worship. The Germantown Mennonite Church in Germantown, Pennsylvania is one example of such a progressive Mennonite church.<ref>{{Cite web |title=CNN - Mennonite church expelled for accepting gays - Nov. 5, 1997 |website=[[CNN]] |url=http://www.cnn.com/us/9711/05/gay.mennonite/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081206124036/http://www.cnn.com/US/9711/05/gay.mennonite/ |archive-date=6 December 2008 |access-date=25 January 2006}}</ref> |
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One of the General Conference's greatest contributions was the idea that if a person didn't agree with the leadership of his particular congregation, he was allowed simply to change membership to another without embarrassment or scandal of any kind. This idea, along with many others unique to the General Conference Mennonites made membership more attractive to newer European and Russian Mennonites, who tended to join the General Conference rather than the (Old) Mennonites. |
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Most progressive Mennonite Churches place a great emphasis on the Mennonite tradition's teachings on [[Christian pacifism|pacifism]] and [[non-violence]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=1 February 2011 |title=Confessions of a modern day pacifist |url=https://themennonite.org/feature/confessions-modern-day-pacifist/ |access-date=28 May 2019 |website=The Mennonite: A Publication of Mennonite Church USA Providing Anabaptist Content |archive-date=17 April 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170417233945/https://themennonite.org/feature/confessions-modern-day-pacifist/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Some progressive Mennonite Churches are part of moderate Mennonite denominations (such as the [[Mennonite Church USA]]) while others are independent congregations. |
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The other major outgrowth of the General Conference Mennonites was to fulfill John Oberholtzer's passion of working together in outreach and mission. He felt that with all the Mennonite churches working together, they could accomplish great things in mission. Even though he failed to unite all churches under this cause, the General Conference supported more service, including more missionaries to various parts of the world. In the years since the formation of the General Conference, several service organizations were created which drew on support from several Mennonite denominations. These included the [[Mennonite Central Committee]] (MCC), founded in 1920, and Voluntary Service (VS) programs sponsored by the Mennonite Board of Missions, as well as Mennonite Mutual Aid. |
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=== Sexuality, marriage, and family mores === |
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===World War II=== |
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Most Mennonite denominations hold a conservative position on homosexuality.<ref name="Donald B. Kraybill 2010, p. 108">Donald B. Kraybill, ''Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites'', JHU Press, USA, 2010, p. 108</ref> |
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Mennonites in Canada were automatically exempt from any type of service during World War I by provisions of the [[Order in Council]] of 1873. During World War II, Mennonite [[conscientious objectors]] were given the options of noncombatant military service, serving in the medical or dental corps under military control or working in parks and on roads under civilian supervision. Over 95% chose the latter and were placed in Alternative Service camps.<ref>Gingerich p. 420.</ref> Initially the men worked on road building, forestry and firefighting projects. After May 1943, as the labor shortaged developed within the nation, men were shifted into agriculture, education and industry. The 10,700 Canadian objectors were mostly Mennonites (63%) and [[Doukhobor|Dukhobors]] (20%).<ref>Krahn, pp. 76-78.</ref> |
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The Brethren Mennonite Council for LGBT Interests was founded in 1976 in the United States and has member churches of different denominations in the United States and Canada.<ref name="Donald B. Kraybill 2010, p. 108"/> |
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[[Image:CPS141ratpoison.jpg|thumb|right|Mennonite conscientious objector Harry Lantz distributes rat poison for [[Endemic typhus|typhus]] control in [[Gulfport, Mississippi]].]] |
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In the United States, [[Civilian Public Service]] (CPS) provided an alternative to military service during World War II. From 1941 to 1947, 4665 Mennonites, Amish and [[Brethren in Christ]]<ref>Gingerich p. 452.</ref> were among nearly 12,000 conscientious objectors who performed ''work of national importance'' in 152 CPS camps throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. The draftees worked in areas such as soil conservation, forestry, fire fighting, agriculture, social services and mental health. |
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The [[Mennonite Church Canada]] leaves the choice to each church for [[same-sex marriage]].<ref>Dan Dyck et Dick Benner, [https://canadianmennonite.org/stories/delegates-vote-allow-space-differences Delegates vote to allow space for differences] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201109054016/https://canadianmennonite.org/stories/delegates-vote-allow-space-differences |date=9 November 2020 }}, canadianmennonite.org, Canada, 20 July 2016</ref> |
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The CPS men served without wages and minimal support from the federal government. The cost of maintaining the CPS camps and providing for the needs of the men was the responsibility of their congregations and families. Mennonite Central Committee coordinated the operation of the Mennonite camps. CPS men served longer than regular draftees, not being released until well past the end of the war. Initially skeptical of the program, government agencies learned to appreciate the men's service and requested more workers from the program. CPS made significant contributions to forest fire prevention, erosion and flood control, medical science and reform of the mental health system. |
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The [[Mennonites in the Netherlands|Mennonite Church in the Netherlands]] and the [[Mennonite Church USA]] which had 62,000 members in 2021, about 12% of American Mennonites,<ref>mennoniteusa.org</ref> permit [[same-sex marriage]].<ref>Susan M. Shaw, ''Women and Religion: Global Lives in Focus'', ABC-CLIO, USA, 2021, p. 96</ref><ref>Paul Schrag, [https://anabaptistworld.org/delegates-repeal-membership-guidelines-pass-lgbtq-affirming-resolution/ Delegates repeal Membership Guidelines, pass LGBTQ-affirming resolution] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221205201312/https://anabaptistworld.org/delegates-repeal-membership-guidelines-pass-lgbtq-affirming-resolution/ |date=5 December 2022 }}, anabaptistworld.org, USA, 29 May 2022</ref> |
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==Types of worship, doctrine, and traditions today== |
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== Russian Mennonites == |
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===Orthodox=== |
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{{Main|Russian Mennonite}} |
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The [[Church of God in Christ, Mennonite]] church is the largest of the orthodox churches with a membership of about 18,000 members worldwide. It represents worship, doctrine and traditions typical of early Mennonite churches with an ''atypical'' cult of personality. |
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{{More citations needed section|date=January 2022}} |
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The "Russian Mennonites" (German: "Russlandmennoniten")<ref>{{Cite web |date=8 October 1926 |title=Ukrainian Mennonite General Conference – GAMEO |url=http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/U397.html |access-date=13 November 2012 |publisher=Gameo.org |archive-date=8 July 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130708122411/http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/U397.html |url-status=live }}. For a history of the Russian Mennonites, cf. Arnold Neufeldt-Fast, [https://russianmennonites.blogspot.com/ History of the Russian Mennonites] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231104144137/https://russianmennonites.blogspot.com/ |date=4 November 2023 }}</ref> today are descended from Dutch [[Anabaptists]], who came from the Netherlands and started around 1530 to settle around Danzig and in [[West Prussia]], where they lived for about 250 years. Starting in 1791 they established colonies in the south-west of the [[Russian Empire]] and beginning in 1854 also in [[Volga region]] and [[Orenburg Governorate]]. Their ethno-language is [[Plautdietsch]], a Germanic dialect of the [[East Low German]] group, with some [[Dutch language|Dutch]] admixture. Today, many traditional Russian Mennonites use [[Standard German]] in church and for reading and writing. |
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===Ultra-conservative=== |
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In the 1770s [[Catherine the Great]] of the [[Russian Empire]] acquired a great deal of land north of the [[Black Sea]] (in present-day [[Ukraine]]) following the [[Russo-Turkish War (1768–74)|Russo-Turkish War]] and the takeover of the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] vassal, the [[Crimean Khanate]]. Russian government officials invited Mennonites living in the [[Kingdom of Prussia]] to farm the Ukrainian steppes depopulated by [[Crimean-Nogai raids into East Slavic lands|Tatar raids]] in exchange for religious freedom and military exemption. Over the years Mennonite farmers and businesses were very successful. |
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===Conservative=== |
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Some Mennonite communities conscientiously reject the use of modern [[technology]], such as [[electricity]] or motor transport, much the same as the [[Amish]] denominations, to whom they are related. Such Mennonites are often referred to as [[Old Order Mennonites]] (although the term strictly refers to a particular church within that group) in order to distinguish them from Mennonite denominations that fully accept modern [[invention]]s. They also reject modern notions of [[insurance]], preferring to rely on their neighbors when disaster strikes. Old Order Mennonites have a distinctive form of dress which they call "Plain," often looking rather like [[Central Europe]]an countrymen. In addition to Old Order Mennonites throughout the United States and Canada, there are many groups of conservative Mennonites whose practice of New Testament teachings makes them distinct from the larger Western culture. |
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In 1854, according to the new Russian government official invitation, Mennonites from Prussia established colonies in Russia's [[Volga region]], and later in [[Orenburg Governorate]] ([[Neu Samara Colony]]). |
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===Moderate=== |
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Between 1874 and 1880 some 16,000 Mennonites of approximately 45,000 left Russia. About nine thousand departed for the United States (mainly Kansas and Nebraska) and seven thousand for Canada (mainly Manitoba). In the 1920s, Russian Mennonites from Canada started to migrate to Latin America (Mexico and Paraguay), soon followed by Mennonite refugees from the [[Soviet Union|Union of Soviet Socialist Republics]]. Further migrations of these Mennonites led to settlements in Peru, Brazil, Uruguay, Belize, Bolivia and Argentina. |
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===Progressive=== |
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By the beginning of the 20th century, the Mennonites in Russia owned large agricultural estates and some had become successful as industrial entrepreneurs in the cities, employing wage labor. After the [[Russian Revolution of 1917]] and the [[Russian Civil War]] (1917–1921), all of these farms (whose owners were called [[Kulak]]s) and enterprises were expropriated by local peasants or the Soviet government. Beyond [[Confiscation|expropriation]], Mennonites suffered severe persecution during the course of the Civil War, at the hands of workers, the [[Bolsheviks]] and, particularly, the [[Anarcho-Communism|Anarcho-Communists]] of [[Nestor Makhno]], who considered the Mennonites to be privileged foreigners of the upper class and targeted them. During expropriation, hundreds of Mennonite men, women and children were murdered in these attacks.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Rempel |first=John G. |year=1957 |title=Makhno, Nestor (1888–1934) |url=http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/M3490.html |access-date=1 November 2010 |publisher=[[Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online]] |quote=Two hundred forty names appear on a list of November 1919 of those murdered in Zagradovka. In Borzenkovo in the village of Ebenfeld alone 63 persons were murdered, and in Steinbach of the same settlement 58 persons. |archive-date=27 June 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130627172229/http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/M3490.html |url-status=live }}</ref> After the [[Ukrainian–Soviet War]] and the takeover of Ukraine by the Soviet [[Bolsheviks]], people who openly practiced religion were in many cases imprisoned by the Soviet government. This led to a wave of Mennonite emigration to the Americas (U.S., Canada and Paraguay). |
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==Membership== |
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When the German army invaded the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941 during World War II, many in the Mennonite community perceived them as liberators from the communist regime under which they had suffered. Many Russian Mennonites actively collaborated with the Nazis, including in the rounding up and extermination of their Jewish neighbors, although some also resisted them.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jantzen |first1=Mark |last2=Thiesen |first2=John D. |title=European Mennonites and the Holocaust |date=2020 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto |isbn=9781487537241}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Goossen |first1=Ben |title=The Real History of the Mennonites and the Holocaust |url=https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/history/articles/heinrich-hamm-mennonite-holocaust |newspaper=Tablet Magazine |date=17 November 2020 |access-date=4 January 2022 |archive-date=4 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220104214354/https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/history/articles/heinrich-hamm-mennonite-holocaust |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Schroeder |first1=Steve |title=Mennonite-Nazi Collaboration and Coming to Terms With the Past: European Mennonites and the MCC, 1945-1950 |journal=Conrad Grebel Review |date=Spring 2003 |pages=6–16 |url=https://uwaterloo.ca/grebel/publications/conrad-grebel-review/issues/spring-2003/mennonite-nazi-collaboration-and-coming-terms-past-european%26usg%3DAOvVaw1tJJZ7gx_HT21Npe3-PbLx |access-date=4 January 2022 |archive-date=4 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220104214403/https://uwaterloo.ca/grebel/publications/conrad-grebel-review/issues/spring-2003/mennonite-nazi-collaboration-and-coming-terms-past-european%26usg%3DAOvVaw1tJJZ7gx_HT21Npe3-PbLx |url-status=dead }}</ref> When the tide of war turned, many of the Mennonites fled with the German army back to Germany where they were accepted as ''[[Volksdeutsche]]''. The Soviet government believed that the Mennonites had "collectively collaborated" with the Germans. After the war, many Mennonites in the Soviet Union were forcibly relocated to [[Siberia]] and Kazakhstan. Many were sent to [[gulag]]s as part of the [[Population transfer in the Soviet Union|Soviet program of mass internal deportations]] of various ethnic groups whose loyalty was seen as questionable. Many German-Russian Mennonites who lived to the east (not in Ukraine) were deported to Siberia before the German army's invasion and were also often placed in [[labor camp]]s. In the decades that followed, as the Soviet regime became less brutal, a number of Mennonites returned to Ukraine and Western Russia where they had formerly lived. In the 1990s the governments of Kazakhstan, Russia and Ukraine gave these people the opportunity to emigrate, and the vast majority emigrated to Germany. The Russian Mennonite immigrants in Germany from the 1990s outnumber the pre-1989 community of Mennonites by three to one. |
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===Distribution=== |
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In 2003, there were about 1.2 million Mennonites, worldwide. North America had the highest number of Mennonites (about 444,000) closely followed by Africa with about 406,000 members. The third largest concentration of Mennonites was in the Asia/Pacific region with about 184,000 members while the fourth largest region was South/Central America and the Caribbean with about 112,000 members. Europe, the birthplace of Mennonites, fell a distant last with about 58,000 members. |
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By 2015, the majority of Russian Mennonites and their descendants live in Latin America, Germany and Canada. |
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===Change in membership=== |
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With the fastest growth rate ''by far'', Africa seems poised to overtake North America within the decade as the continent with the largest number of Mennonites. Growth in Mennonite membership is slow but steady in North America, the Asia/Pacific region, and the South/Central America and Caribbean region. Europe has seen a slow and accelerating ''decline'' in Mennonite membership since about 1980. |
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The world's most conservative Mennonites (in terms of culture and technology) are the Mennonites affiliated with the [[Barton Creek (Belize)|Lower and Upper Barton Creek Colonies]] in Belize. Lower Barton is inhabited by Plautdietsch speaking Russian Mennonites, whereas Upper Barton Creek is mainly inhabited by [[Pennsylvania Dutch language]]-speaking Mennonites from North America. Neither group uses motors or paint.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Altkolonier-Mennoniten in Belize |url=http://www.taeufergeschichte.net/index.php?id=altkolonier_mennoniten_in_belize |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924112819/http://www.taeufergeschichte.net/index.php?id=altkolonier_mennoniten_in_belize |archive-date=24 September 2015 |access-date=4 October 2014 |publisher=Taeufergeschichte.net}}</ref> |
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===Organization: worldwide (under construction)=== |
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There is no ''single'' authorized organization that includes ''all'' Mennonite members worldwide. Instead, there are a host of automomous conferences that contain groups of churches along with a host of automonous churches with no particular responsibility to a conference or any other church. Worship, church discipline and lifestyles vary widely between progressive, moderate, conservative and orthodox Mennonites in a vast panopoly of distinct, independent, and widely dispersed classifications. Thus, there is no single group of Mennonites anywhere who can credibly claim to represent, speak for, or lead ''all'' Mennonites worldwide. |
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== North America == |
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A majority of Mennonites, worldwide, belong to governing groups called 'Churches' or 'Conferences'. The ten largest of these independent groups in descending order are: |
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[[File:Germantown Mennonite Meeting.JPG|thumb|Germantown [[Mennonite Meetinghouse]], built 1770]] |
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# [[Mennonite Brethren]] (300,000 members on 6 continents worldwide) |
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[[File:Ten Thousand Villages store in New Hamburg, Ontario.jpg|thumb|[[Ten Thousand Villages]] Store in New Hamburg, Ontario]] |
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# [[Mennonite Church USA]] with 114,000 members in the United States |
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[[File:Mennonite Church P8290029.JPG|thumb|Valparaiso Mennonite Church, in [[Valparaiso, Indiana]] in the United States.]] |
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# [[Brethren in Christ]] with 100,000 US and worldwide members |
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# Meserete Kristos Church in Ethiopia (98,000) |
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# Communauté Mennonite au Congo (87,000). |
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# Kanisa La Mennonite Tanzania with 50,000 members in 240 congregations |
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#[[Mennonite Church Canada]] with 35,000 members in Canada (seems automomous?) |
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# [[Church of God in Christ, Mennonite]] a single ''church'' with 16,000? members in 240 US churches and 2000? members in 13 other countries (1995 data) |
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# [[Beachy Amish]] Mennonite, a ''church'' with 10,000 US members (159 congregrations) plus many international locations. |
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# [[Conservative Mennonite Conference]], 10,000 members in the US (?? others elsewhere, and affilliates?) |
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Persecution and the search for employment forced Mennonites out of the Netherlands eastward to Germany in the 17th century. As [[Quakers|Quaker]] Evangelists moved into Germany they received a sympathetic audience among the larger of these German-Mennonite congregations around [[Krefeld]], [[Altona, Hamburg]], [[Gronau, North Rhine-Westphalia|Gronau]] and [[Emden]].<ref>Smith p.139</ref> It was among this group of Quakers and Mennonites, living under ongoing discrimination, that [[William Penn]] solicited settlers for his new colony. The first permanent settlement of Mennonites in the American colonies consisted of one Mennonite family and twelve Mennonite-Quaker<ref>Smith p.360. Smith uses ''Mennonite-Quaker'' to refer to Quakers who were formerly Mennonite and retained distinctive Mennonite beliefs and practices.</ref> families of German extraction who arrived from [[Krefeld]], Germany, in 1683 and settled in [[Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Germantown, Pennsylvania]]. Among these early settlers was [[William Rittenhouse]], a lay minister and owner of the first American paper mill. [[Jacob Gottschalk]] was the first bishop of this Germantown congregation. Four members of that early group of Mennonites and Mennonite-Quaker, [[Francis Daniel Pastorius]], [[Abraham op den Graeff]], [[Derick op den Graeff]] (both cousins to William Penn) and [[Garret Hendericks]] signed the [[1688 Germantown Quaker Petition Against Slavery|first formal protest against slavery in the United States]] in 1688. The treatise was addressed to slave-holding Quakers in an effort to persuade them to change their ways.<ref>{{Cite web |title=First Protest Against Slavery, 1688 |url=http://www.qhpress.org/texts/oldqwhp/as-1688.htm |access-date=5 April 2015 |publisher=Qhpress.org |archive-date=24 February 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210224131339/http://www.qhpress.org/texts/oldqwhp/as-1688.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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The remaining 20? other smaller independent Churches, and Conferences numbering only a few churches and a few hundred members.<ref>Mennonite & Brethren in Christ World Directory 2003</ref> Finally, there are 100? small independent churches with one or a few congregations numbering from as high as 2000 members to as low as a 40? members. |
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In the early 18th century, 100,000 Germans from the [[Palatinate region|Palatinate]] emigrated to Pennsylvania, where they became known collectively as the Pennsylvania Dutch (from the Anglicization of ''[[German language|Deutsch]]'', which now means German but used to mean West Germanic). The Palatinate region had been repeatedly overrun by the French in religious wars, and Queen Anne had invited the Germans to go to the British colonies. Of these immigrants, around 2,500 were Mennonites and 500 were Amish.<ref>Pannabecker p. 7.</ref> This group settled farther west than the first group, choosing less expensive land in the [[Lancaster, Pennsylvania|Lancaster]] area. The oldest Mennonite meetinghouse in the United States is the [[Hans Herr House]] in [[West Lampeter Township, Pennsylvania|West Lampeter Township]].<ref name="arch">{{Cite web |title=National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania |url=https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/ce/SelectWelcome.asp |publisher=CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System |format=Searchable database |access-date=20 February 2012 |archive-date=21 July 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070721014609/https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/ce/SelectWelcome.asp |url-status=dead }} ''Note:'' This includes {{cite web| url = https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/ce_imagery/phmc_scans/H001090_01H.pdf| title = National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Hans Herr House| access-date = 18 February 2012| author = J. Michael Sausman| date = August 1970| url-status = dead| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20121114173329/https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/ce_imagery/phmc_scans/H001090_01H.pdf| archive-date = 14 November 2012| df = mdy-all}}</ref> A member of this second group, [[Christopher Dock]], authored ''Pedagogy'', the first American monograph on education. Today, Mennonites also reside in [[Kishacoquillas Valley]] (also known as Big Valley), a valley in [[Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania|Huntingdon]] and [[Mifflin County, PA|Mifflin]] counties in Pennsylvania. |
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The largest Mennonite Churches or Conferences are typically divided into ''area'' conferences along geographical lines. The Mennonite Brethren have conferences in India, Africa, Japan, the United States, and Japan along with independent congregations in Germany. The Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada are broken down into around twenty regional conferences, in the United States and Canada. The [[Conservative Mennonite Conference]] has international affiliate ''national'' Churches and Conferences worldwide. |
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During [[Colonial America]], Mennonites were distinguished from other Pennsylvania [[Germans]] in three ways:<ref>Pannabecker p. 12.</ref> their opposition to the [[American Revolutionary War]] in which other German settlers participated on both sides; their resistance to public education; and their disapproval of religious revivalism. Contributions of Mennonites during their period include the idea of [[separation of church and state]] and opposition to [[slavery]]. |
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The [[Mennonite World Conference]] is a global community of 95 Mennonite and Brethen in Christ Mennonite national Churches from 51 countries on six continents. It exists to "facilitate community between Anabaptist-related churches worldwide, and relate to other Christian world communions and organizations", but it is not a 'governing body' of any kind. It is a voluntary community of faith whose decisions are not binding on member churches. The member churches of Mennonite World Conference include the [[Mennonite Brethren]], the [[Mennonite Church USA]], and the [[Mennonite Church Canada]] with a combined total membership of at least 400,000 or about 30% of Mennonites worldwide |
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From 1812 to 1860, another wave of Mennonite immigrants settled farther west in [[Ohio]], [[Indiana]], [[Illinois]] and [[Missouri]]. These Swiss-German speaking Mennonites, along with Amish, came from [[Switzerland]] and [[Alsace-Lorraine]], along with the Amish of northern [[New York State]], formed the nucleus of the [[Apostolic Christian Church]] in the United States. |
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===Organization: North America=== |
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In the United States in 2003, there were around 325,000 Mennonites in the United States. About 110,000 were members of [[Mennonite Church USA]] churches, while about 26,000 were members of [[Mennonite Brethren]] churches. About 30,000 (according to Scott) were members of conservative, ultra-conservative, or orthodox churches. (That leaves about 159,000 Mennonites unaccounted for in other United States' churches) |
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There were also Mennonite settlements in Canada from those who emigrated there chiefly from the United States ([[Upstate New York]], Maryland, and Pennsylvania): |
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Total membership in [[Mennonite Church USA]] denominations decreased from about 133,000, before the merger in 1998, to about 114,000 after the merger in 2003. The Mennonite Church USA has begun profiling potential members and has been successful at recruiting inner-city minorities into the church in several large cities in the United States. Significant growth in the conservative churches seems to be occurring by itself in the already existing communities. |
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* [[Niagara region]] ([[Bertie Township|Bertie]], [[Willoughby Township, Ontario|Willoughby]], and [[Humberstone, Ontario|Humberstone]] townships), Ontario c. [https://sites.google.com/site/niagarasettlers/home 1780s–1790s] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201011234647/https://sites.google.com/site/niagarasettlers/home |date=11 October 2020 }} |
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* [[St. Jacobs, Ontario]] c.1819 |
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In Canada, in 2003 there were around 130,000 Mennonites. About 37,000 of those were members of [[Mennonite Church Canada]] churches and about another 35,000 of those were members of [[Mennonite Brethren churches. About 5,000 belonged to conservative [[Old Order Mennonite]] churches, or other ultra-conservative and orthodox churches. (That leaves about 55,000 Mennonites unaccounted for in other Canadian churches) |
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* [[Kitchener, Ontario]]/[[Waterloo, Ontario]] c. 1800s |
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* [[Cambridge, Ontario]] c. 1830s |
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* [[Markham, Ontario]], c. 1800–1820s |
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* [[Whitchurch–Stouffville|Stouffville, Ontario]] c. 1803–1805 |
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According to a 2017 report,<ref name="10-things">{{cite web |url=https://canadianmennonite.org/stories/10-things-know-about-mennonites-canada |title=10 things to know about Mennonites in Canada |date=12 January 2017 |publisher=Canadian Mennonite |access-date=6 December 2020 |quote=it is in many ways, an option of last resort and it's something we only do when we think we have a critical threat to the community's safety and we need immediate action |archive-date=28 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210428123814/https://canadianmennonite.org/stories/10-things-know-about-mennonites-canada |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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In Mexico, there were about ?? Mennonites in 2003. |
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<blockquote>"there are two basic strains of Mennonites in Canada: the Swiss-South German Mennonites came via Pennsylvania, and the Dutch-North German Mennonites came via Russia (Ukraine). In the late 1700s and early 1800s "Swiss" Mennonites from Pennsylvania settled in southern Ontario. In the 1870s, a large group of "Russian" Mennonites from Ukraine moved to southern Manitoba. Further waves of "Russian" Mennonites came to Canada in the 1920s and 1940s". In the last 50 years, Mennonites have been coming to Canada from Mexico. </blockquote> |
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During the 1880s, smaller Mennonite groups settled as far west as [[California]], especially around the [[Paso Robles]] area.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Paso Robles First Mennonite Church (Paso Robles, California, USA) |url=https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Paso_Robles_First_Mennonite_Church_(Paso_Robles,_California,_USA) |website=gameo.org |access-date=14 July 2019 |archive-date=4 January 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200104230012/https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Paso_Robles_First_Mennonite_Church_(Paso_Robles,_California,_USA) |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=San Marcos Mennonite Church (Paso Robles, California, USA)|url=https://gameo.org/index.php?title=San_Marcos_Mennonite_Church_(Paso_Robles,_California,_USA)|website=gameo.org|access-date=14 July 2019|archive-date=14 January 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200114021227/https://gameo.org/index.php?title=San_Marcos_Mennonite_Church_(Paso_Robles,_California,_USA)|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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Old Order Mennonites and Amish are often grouped together in the popular press. That is incorrect, according to a 2017 report by Canadian Mennonite magazine:<ref name="10-things"/> <blockquote>The customs of Old Order Mennonites, the Amish communities and Old Colony Mennonites have a number of similarities, but the cultural differences are significant enough so that members of one group would not feel comfortable moving to another group. The Old Order Mennonites and Amish have the same European roots and the language spoken in their homes is the same German dialect. Old Colony Mennonites use Low German, a different German dialect.</blockquote> |
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=== Moderate to progressive Mennonites === |
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==== "Old" Mennonite Church (MC) ==== |
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The Swiss-German Mennonites who immigrated to North America in the 18th and 19th centuries and settled first in Pennsylvania, then across the [[Midwestern United States|midwestern states]] (initially Ohio, Indiana, and [[Kansas]]), are the root of the former Mennonite Church denomination (MC), colloquially called the "Old Mennonite Church". This denomination had offices in [[Elkhart, Indiana|Elkhart]], Indiana, and was the most populous progressive Mennonite denomination before merging with the General Conference Mennonite Church (GCMC) in 2002. |
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==== Mennonite Brethren Church ==== |
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{{main|Mennonite Brethren Church}} |
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The Mennonite Brethren Church was established among Plautdietsch-speaking Russian Mennonites in 1860, and has congregations in more than 20 countries, representing about 500,000 members as of 2019. |
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==== Mennonite Church USA ==== |
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{{main|Mennonite Church USA}} |
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The Mennonite Church USA (MCUSA) and the [[Mennonite Church Canada]] are the resulting denominations of the 2002 merger of the (General Assembly) Mennonite Church and the General Conference Mennonite Church. Total membership in Mennonite Church USA denominations decreased from about 133,000, before the merger in 1998, to a total membership of 120,381 in the Mennonite Church USA in 2001.<ref name="mwc">{{Cite web |year=2006 |title=North America |url=http://www.mwc-cmm.org/en15/PDF-PPT/2006namerica.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606003934/http://www.mwc-cmm.org/en15/PDF-PPT/2006namerica.pdf |archive-date=6 June 2011 |access-date=3 December 2009 |publisher=[[Mennonite World Conference]]}}</ref> In 2013, membership had fallen to 97,737 members in 839 congregations.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Bender |first1=Harold S. |url=http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Church_(MC)&oldid=120422 |title=Mennonite Church (MC) |last2=Stauffer Hostetler |first2=Beulah |date=January 2013 |work=Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online |access-date=2 May 2015 |archive-date=6 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150906214111/http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Church_(MC)&oldid=120422 |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2016, it had fallen to 78,892 members after the withdrawal of the [[Lancaster Mennonite Conference]].<ref name="Shrinking Rolls">{{Cite news |last=Huber |first=Tim |date=26 January 2016 |title=Lancaster's distancing shrinks roll: A few churches want to stay with MC USA; others are dropped from denomination's membership number |publisher=Mennonite World Review |url=http://mennoworld.org/2016/01/26/news/lancasters-distancing-shrinks-roll/ |access-date=31 August 2016 |quote="MC USA's new, lower membership total is based on only 1,091 members from LMC"(Lancaster Mennonite Conference) |archive-date=28 August 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160828225730/http://mennoworld.org/2016/01/26/news/lancasters-distancing-shrinks-roll/ |url-status=live }}</ref> In May 2021 the main page of their website stated a membership of about 62,000.<ref>[https://www.mennoniteusa.org/ Main Page] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220502171520/https://www.mennoniteusa.org/ |date=2 May 2022 }} at mennoniteusa.org.</ref> |
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Pennsylvania remains the hub of the denomination but there are also large numbers of members in Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, and Illinois.<ref name="RCMS">{{Cite web |title=2000 Religious Congregations and Membership Study |url=http://www.thearda.com/Denoms/D_1056_d.asp |access-date=16 December 2009 |publisher=Glenmary Research Center |archive-date=11 April 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100411110659/http://www.thearda.com/Denoms/D_1056_d.asp |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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In 1983, the ''[[Mennonite Church USA#(General Assembly) Mennonite Church (MC)|General Assembly of the Mennonite Church]]'' met jointly with the ''[[General Conference Mennonite Church]]'' in [[Bethlehem, Pennsylvania]], in celebration of 300 years in the Americas. Beginning in 1989, a series of consultations, discussions, proposals, and sessions (and a vote in 1995 in favor of merger) led to the unification of these two major North American Mennonite bodies into one denomination organized on two fronts – the Mennonite Church USA and the [[Mennonite Church Canada]]. The merger was "finalized" at a joint session in [[St. Louis, Missouri]] in 1999, and the Canadian branch moved quickly ahead. The United States branch did not complete their organization until the meeting in [[Nashville, Tennessee]] in 2001, which became effective 1 February 2002. |
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The merger of 1999–2002 at least partially fulfilled the desire of the founders of the General Conference Mennonite Church to create an organization under which all Mennonites could unite. Yet not all Mennonites favored the merger. The [[Alliance of Mennonite Evangelical Congregations]] represents one expression of the disappointment with the merger and the events that led up to it. |
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==== Mennonite Church Canada ==== |
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{{main|Mennonite Church Canada}} |
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Mennonite Church Canada is a conference of Mennonites in Canada, with head offices in [[Winnipeg]], [[Manitoba]]. As of 2003, the body had about 35,000 members in 235 churches. Beginning in 1989, a series of consultations, discussions, proposals, and sessions led to the unification of two North American bodies (the ''Mennonite Church & [[General Conference Mennonite Church]]'') and the related Canadian Conference of Mennonites in Canada into the [[Mennonite Church USA]] and the Mennonite Church Canada in 2000. |
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The organizational structure is divided into five regional conferences. Denominational work is administered through a board elected by the delegates to the annual assembly. MC Canada participates in the Canadian Council of Churches, the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, and the [[Mennonite World Conference]]. |
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=== Conservative Mennonites === |
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{{main|Conservative Mennonites}} |
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[[Conservative Mennonites]] include numerous groups that identify with the more conservative or traditional element among Mennonite or Anabaptist groups but not necessarily Old Order groups. The majority of Conservative Mennonite churches historically has an Amish and not a Mennonite background. They emerged mostly from the middle group between the Old Order Amish and [[Amish Mennonite]]s. For more, see [[Amish Mennonite#Division 1850–1878|Amish Mennonite: Division 1850–1878]].<ref>"An Introduction to Old Order and Conservative Mennonite Groups", Intercourse PA 1996, pages 122–123.</ref> |
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Those identifying with this group drive automobiles, have telephones and use electricity, and some may have personal computers. They also have Sunday school, hold revival meetings, and operate their own Christian schools/parochial schools. |
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According to a [[University of Waterloo]] report, "of the estimated 59,000 Mennonites in Ontario, only about twenty percent are members of conservative groups". The same report estimated that "there are about 175,000 Mennonites in Canada".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://uwaterloo.ca/grebel/academics/continuing/institute-anabaptist-and-mennonite-studies/who-are-mennonites |title=Who Are the Mennonites |date=15 November 2017 |publisher=Conrad Grebel College |access-date=6 December 2020 |archive-date=7 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210107021208/https://uwaterloo.ca/grebel/academics/continuing/institute-anabaptist-and-mennonite-studies/who-are-mennonites |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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=== Old Colony Mennonites === |
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{{main|Old Colony Mennonites}} |
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Old Colony Mennonites are conservative Mennonite groups who are the majority of German speaking so-called [[Russian Mennonite]]s that originated in the Chortitza Colony in Russia, including the Chortitza, Reinlander, and Sommerfelder groups, which are now most common in Latin America and Canada. There are some 400,000 Russian Mennonites in the world, including children and not yet baptized young people. They should not be confused with Old Order Mennonites with whom they have some similarities. |
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=== Old Order Mennonites === |
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{{main|Old Order Mennonite}} |
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The Old Order Mennonite are living a lifestyle similar to or a bit more liberal than the Old Order [[Amish]]. There were more than 27,000 adult, baptized members of Old Order Mennonites in North America and Belize in 2008/9. The total population of Old Order Mennonites groups including children and adults not yet baptized normally is two to three times larger than the number of baptized, adult members, which indicates that the population of Old Order Mennonites was roughly between 60,000 and 80,000 in 2008/9. |
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=== Alternative service === |
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[[File:CPS141ratpoison.jpg|thumb|Mennonite conscientious objector Harry Lantz distributes rat poison for [[Endemic typhus|typhus]] control in [[Gulfport, Mississippi|Gulfport]], Mississippi (1946).]] |
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During [[World War II]], Mennonite [[conscientious objectors]] were given the options of noncombatant military service, serving in the medical or dental corps under military control, or working in parks and on roads under civilian supervision. Over 95% chose the latter and were placed in Alternative Service camps.<ref>Gingerich p. 420.</ref> Initially the men worked on road building, forestry and firefighting projects. After May 1943, as a labor shortage developed within the nation, men were shifted into agriculture, education and industry. The 10,700 Canadian objectors were mostly Mennonites (63%) and [[Doukhobor]]s (20%).<ref>Krahn, pp. 76–78.</ref> |
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In the United States, [[Civilian Public Service]] (CPS) provided an alternative to military service during World War II. From 1941 to 1947, 4,665 Mennonites, Amish and [[Brethren in Christ]]<ref>Gingerich p. 452.</ref> were among nearly 12,000 conscientious objectors who performed ''work of national importance'' in 152 CPS camps throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. The draftees worked in areas such as soil conservation, forestry, fire fighting, agriculture, social services and mental health. |
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The CPS men served without wages and with minimal support from the federal government. The cost of maintaining the CPS camps and providing for the needs of the men was the responsibility of their congregations and families. Mennonite Central Committee coordinated the operation of the Mennonite camps. CPS men served longer than regular draftees, not being released until well past the end of the war. Initially skeptical of the program, government agencies learned to appreciate the men's service and requested more workers from the program. CPS made significant contributions to forest fire prevention, erosion and flood control, medical science and reform of the mental health system. |
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=== Schisms === |
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Prior to emigration to America, Anabaptists in Europe were divided between those of Dutch/North German and Swiss/South German background. At first, the Dutch/North German group took their name from Menno Simons, who led them in their early years. Later the Swiss/South German group also adopted the name "Mennonites". A third group of early Anabaptists, mainly from south-east Germany and Austria were organized by [[Jakob Hutter]] and became the [[Hutterite]]s. The vast majority of Anabaptists of Swiss/South German ancestry today lives in the US and Canada, while the largest group of Dutch/North German Anabaptists are the [[Russian Mennonites]], who live today mostly in Latin America. |
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A trickle of North German Mennonites began the migration to America in 1683, followed by a much larger migration of Swiss/South German Mennonites beginning in 1707.<ref>Sydney E. Ahlstrom, ''A Religious History of the American People''. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1975, I, 292–293.</ref> The [[Amish]] are an early split from the Swiss/South German, that occurred in 1693. Over the centuries many Amish individuals and whole churches left the Amish and became Mennonites again. |
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After immigration to America, many of the early Mennonites split from the main body of North American Mennonites and formed their own separate and distinct churches. The first schism in America occurred in 1778 when Bishop Christian Funk's support of the American Revolution led to his excommunication and the formation of a separate Mennonite group known as [[Funkite]]s. In 1785 the Orthodox Reformed Mennonite Church was formed, and other schisms occurred into the 21st century. Many of these churches were formed as a response to deep disagreements about theology, doctrine, and church discipline as evolution both inside and outside the Mennonite faith occurred. Many of the modern churches are descended from those groups that abandoned traditional Mennonite practices. |
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Larger groups of Dutch/North German Mennonites came to North America from the [[Russian Empire]] after 1873, especially to [[Kansas]] and [[Manitoba]]. While the more progressive element of these Mennonites assimilated into mainstream society, the more conservative element emigrated to Latin America. Since then there has been a steady flow of Mennonite emigrants from Latin America to North America.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014|reason=a steady flow?}} |
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These historical schisms have had an influence on creating the distinct Mennonite denominations, sometimes using mild or severe [[shunning]] to show its disapproval of other Mennonite groups.<!-- If the following is so "widely reported", then it shouldn't be hard to come up with a valid citation: One widely reported example of this is the expulsion of the Germantown Mennonite Church in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]] from the [[Franconia Mennonite Conference|Franconia Conference]] and later the [[Mennonite Church USA]] denomination for welcoming [[LGBT]] people as church members. --> |
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Some expelled congregations were affiliated both with the Mennonite Church and the General Conference Mennonite Church. The latter did not expel the same congregations. When these two Mennonite denominations formally completed their merger in 2002 to become the new Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada denominations, it was still not clear, whether the congregations that were expelled from one denomination, yet included in the other, are considered to be "inside" or "outside" of the new merged denomination. Some Mennonite conferences have chosen to maintain such "disciplined" congregations as "associate" or "affiliate" congregations in the conferences, rather than to expel such congregations. In virtually every case, a dialogue continues between the disciplined congregations and the denomination, as well as their current or former conferences.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Homosexual and bisexual orientation among Mennonites |url=http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_men.htm |access-date=5 April 2015 |publisher=Religioustolerance.org |archive-date=12 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150412041232/http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_men.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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== Schools == |
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[[File:Goshen College Music Center.JPG|thumb|250px|left|The [[Goshen College]] Music Center in [[Goshen, Indiana]], [[Mennonite Church USA]].]] |
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Several Mennonite groups established schools, universities and seminaries.<ref>Donald B. Kraybill, ''Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites'', JHU Press, USA, 2010, p. 104</ref> Conservative groups, like the Holdeman, have not only their own schools, but their own curriculum and teaching staff (usually, but not exclusively, young unmarried women). |
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[[File:Mennonite Classroom Pennsylvania 1942.jpg|thumb|Mennonite teacher holding class in a one-room, eight-grade school house, [[Hinkletown, Pennsylvania|Hinkletown]], Pennsylvania, March 1942]] |
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== Ethnic Mennonites == |
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Though Mennonites are a global denomination with church membership from Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas, certain Mennonite communities that are descended from émigrés from Switzerland and Russia bear the designation of [[ethnic Mennonites]].<ref name="Dueck2017"/> |
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In contemporary society, Mennonites are described either as a religious denomination with members of different ethnic origins,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Who are the Mennonites? |url=http://www.thirdway.com/menno/?Topic=23%7cBasic+Beliefs |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130130235115/http://www.thirdway.com/menno/?Topic=23%7CBasic+Beliefs |archive-date=30 January 2013 |access-date=12 January 2013 |publisher=Third Way Cafe}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Did you know... |url=http://www.mhsc.ca/index.php?content=http://www.mhsc.ca/mennos/wdid_you_know.html |access-date=12 January 2013 |publisher=Mennonite Historical Society of Canada |archive-date=27 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210727161312/https://mhsc.ca/index.php?content=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mhsc.ca%2Fmennos%2Fwdid_you_know.html |url-status=live }}</ref> or as both an ethnic group and a religious denomination. There is controversy among Mennonites about this issue, with some insisting that they are simply a religious group, while others argue that they form a distinct ethnic group.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mennonite Game |url=http://www.mhsc.ca/mennos/cmennonit.html |access-date=12 January 2013 |publisher=Mennonite Historical Society of Canada |archive-date=23 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220123005047/https://mhsc.ca/mennos/cmennonit.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Historians and sociologists have increasingly started to treat Mennonites as an [[ethno-religious group]],<ref name="MulticultCanada1">{{Cite web |title=Multicultural Canada: Mennonites |url=http://www.multiculturalcanada.ca/ecp/content/mennonites.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20070516094344/http://www.multiculturalcanada.ca/ecp/content/mennonites.html |archive-date=16 May 2007 |access-date=13 September 2016 |publisher=Multiculturalcanada.ca }}</ref> while others have begun to challenge that perception.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ethnicity |url=http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/E846ME.html |access-date=12 January 2013 |publisher=Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online |archive-date=13 May 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130513134446/http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/E846ME.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Discussion also exists as to the term "[[ethnic Mennonite]]"; conservative Mennonite groups, who speak [[Pennsylvania Dutch language|Pennsylvania Dutch]], [[Plautdietsch]] (Low German), or [[Bernese German]] fit well into the definition of an ethnic group, while more liberal groups and converts in developing countries do not. |
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== List of Mennonites surnames == |
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This is a list of surnames common among Mennonites in Canada originating (indirectly) from Russia, in descending frequency. The number in brackets indicates the number of places they are higher than on a 20-entry list of surnames of Mennonites in Canada originating (indirectly) from Russia. This list only includes surnames higher on the list concerning West Prussian Mennonites than on the list of surnames of Mennonites in Canada.{{sfnp|Penner|2009}} |
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*[[Penner (disambiguation)|Penner]] (4) |
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*[[Wiens (disambiguation)|Wiens]]* |
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*[[Janzen]] (12) |
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*[[Enns (surname)|Enns]] (6) |
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*[[Janz]]* |
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*[[Froese]]* |
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*[[Regehr]]* |
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*[[Harder (surname)|Harder]] (8) |
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*[[Ewert]]* |
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*[[Pauls (surname)|Pauls]]* |
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*[[Fast (disambiguation)|Fast]]* |
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*[[Franz (surname)|Franz]]* |
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*[[Epp (surname)|Epp]]* |
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*Fieguth* |
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*[[Albrecht]]* |
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<nowiki>*</nowiki> name not on the 20-entry list |
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Surnames of Frisians include [[Abrahams]], [[Arens]], [[Behrends]], [[Cornelius (name)|Cornelius]], [[Daniels (surname)|Daniels]], [[Dirksen]], [[Doercksen]], [[Frantzen]], [[Goertzen]], [[Gossen (disambiguation)|Gossen]], [[Harms]], [[Heinrichs]], [[Jantzen (disambiguation)|Jantzen]], [[Pauls (surname)|Pauls]], [[Peters (surname)|Peters]], [[Siemens (surname)|Siemens]], and [[Woelms]].{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=71}} Surnames that mostly occur in Frisian congregations include Adrian, Brandt, Buller, Caspar, Flaming, Hamm, Harms, Isaak, Kettler, Kliewer, Knels, Stobbe, Teus, Töws, and Toews;{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=152}} additionally, Pauls,{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=67}} Peters,{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|pp=67,68}} Unruh,{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=67}} and Fransen and Schmidt.{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=67}} Nickel also is a name mainly of [[Frisian Mennonites]] denomination.{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=72}} Unger is a name in congregation of [[Frisian Mennonites]] denomination.{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=73}} Foth/Vodt and Arentsen are most likely of Frisian congregations.{{sfnp|Unruh|1955|p=156}} |
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==Environmental impacts== |
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<span class="anchor" id="environmental damage"></span>[[File:Loading Logs At Puerto Casado (5981666132).jpg|thumb|Loading logs at [[Puerto Casado]] in the Paraguayan Chaco (photograph from the [[Harold S. Bender|H. S. Bender collection]]). There is a long history of American countries facilitating remote [[Settler|settlements]] of skilled and determined Mennonite farmers as a convenient way of clearing land for agriculture.<ref name=lePolain2021/>]] |
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Across Latin America, Mennonite colonization has been seen as a driver of environmental damage associated with land clearance in countries including [[Environmental issues in Belize|Belize]], [[Deforestation in Bolivia|Bolivia]], [[Deforestation in Colombia|Colombia]], [[Geography of Mexico#Environmental conditions|Mexico]], [[Deforestation in Paraguay|Paraguay]],<ref name=Hanners2016>{{cite journal |vauthors=Hanners SM |title=Promised lands: the Anabaptist immigration to Paraguay and Bolivia and its unintended consequences for the environment |journal=The University of Miami Inter-American Law Review |date=2016 |volume=48 |issue=2 |pages=186–223 |url=https://repository.law.miami.edu/umialr/vol48/iss2/8/ |issn=0884-1756 |jstor= |access-date=18 December 2023 |archive-date=18 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231218120403/https://repository.law.miami.edu/umialr/vol48/iss2/8/ |url-status=live }}</ref> and [[Deforestation in Peru|Peru]],<ref name=lePolain2021/> while [[indigenous peoples in Suriname]] have expressed similar concerns.<ref name=Pinas2023>{{cite news |last1=Pinas |first1=Jason |title='We live off the forest': fears rise in Suriname as Mennonites look to settle |url=https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2023/dec/15/suriname-indigenous-tensions-mennonite-christian-sect-farm-settle-amazon-deforestation |work=The Guardian |date=15 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231215143452/https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2023/dec/15/suriname-indigenous-tensions-mennonite-christian-sect-farm-settle-amazon-deforestation |archive-date=15 December 2023 |url-status=live }}</ref> Since the early- to mid-twentieth century, Mennonite colonization has brought a characteristic, religious approach to cultivation (not generally found in either [[Peasant#Latin American farmers|peasant]] or [[Corporate farming|corporate]] farming) and the potential to impact a range of different [[biome]]s.<ref name=lePolain2021/> Mennonite farmers have cleared large areas of [[wilderness]] (greater than the size of the Netherlands) across major transnational regions of Latin America such as the [[Gran Chaco]], the [[Chiquitano dry forests|Chiquitano]], and the [[Amazon rainforest]].<ref name=lePolain2021/> In the process, they have unintentionally devastated many [[Ecosystem|precious natural habitats]], often leading to conflict with [[indigenous peoples]].<ref name=lePolain2021>{{cite journal |vauthors=le Polain de Waroux Y, Neumann J, O'Driscoll A, Schreiber K |title=Pious pioneers: the expansion of Mennonite colonies in Latin America |journal=Journal of Land Use Science |date=2021 |volume=16 |issue=1 |pages=1–17 |doi=10.1080/1747423X.2020.1855266 |bibcode=2021JLUS...16....1L |s2cid=230589810 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1747423X.2020.1855266 |language=en |issn=1747-423X |access-date=18 December 2023 |archive-date=2 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240102201943/https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1747423X.2020.1855266 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=Hanners2016/> Their commercial success in transforming previously wild lands to make way for [[Soybean#Environmental issues|soybean]] production and [[Ranch#Ranching in South America|cattle ranching]] appears to have provided inspiration for others, including some [[Conglomerate (company)|conglomerates]] that have reproduced the model on a massive scale.<ref name=Hanners2016/> While habitat destruction by Mennonite colonies has been on a smaller scale overall than that recently<!-- ie "recently" with respect to the much longer history of Mennonite-related damage --> inflicted by a few very large corporations, the environmental damage is increasingly being contested,<ref name=lePolain2021/> sometimes in the form of legal challenges.<ref name=MAAP118/> |
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The Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP), conducted by the [[Amazon Conservation Association]], has identified Mennonite colonization as a new driver of [[Deforestation of the Amazon rainforest|deforestation]] in Bolivia and Peru.<ref name=MAAP112>{{cite journal|title=Mennonite colonies - new deforestation driver in the Amazon |url=https://www.amazonconservation.org/2019-mennonite/ |journal=MAAP |publisher=Amazon Conservation Association |date=2019 |issue=#112 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230323011555/https://www.amazonconservation.org/2019-mennonite/ |archive-date=23 March 2023 |url-status=live}}</ref> In Peru, MAAP has identified over 7,000 hectares (27 square miles) of rainforest lost to deforestation between 2017 and 2023 following the arrival of Mennonite settlers,<ref name=MAAP118>{{cite journal |vauthors=Finer M, Mamani N |title=Mennonite colonies continue major deforestation in the Peruvian Amazon |journal=MAAP |publisher=Amazon Conservation Association |date=2023 |issue=#188 |url=https://www.maaproject.org/2023/mennonites-peru/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231114202240/https://www.maaproject.org/2023/mennonites-peru/ |archive-date=14 November 2023 |url-status=live}}</ref> and their colonies have been charged with illegal deforestation.<ref name=Pinas2023/><ref name=Collyns2022>{{cite news |last1=Collyns |first1=Dan |title=The Mennonites being accused of deforestation in the Peruvian Amazon |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/sep/11/mennonites-peru-deforestation-permits |work=The Observer |date=10 September 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230227110016/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/sep/11/mennonites-peru-deforestation-permits |archive-date=27 February 2023 |url-status=live}}</ref> |
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<span class="anchor" id="Mexico deforestation"></span>On the [[Yucatán Peninsula#Ecology|Yucatán Peninsula]] in Mexico, agricultural expansion following Mennonite settlement has been a driver of deforestation of the native [[tropical rainforest]].<ref name=Ellis2017>{{cite journal |vauthors=Ellis EA, Romero Montero JA, Hernández Gómez IU, Porter-Bolland L, Ellis PW |title=Private property and Mennonites are major drivers of forest cover loss in central Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico |journal=Land Use Policy |date=2017 |volume=69 |pages=474–484 |doi=10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.09.048 |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S026483771730265X |issn=0264-8377 |access-date=19 December 2023 |archive-date=19 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231219160100/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S026483771730265X |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Mongabay"/> In July 2018, Mexican Mennonites were fined $500,000 for unauthorized [[Logging#Environmental impact|logging]] on 1,445 hectares (5½ square miles) of forested [[ejido]]s (shared ownership lands) in [[Quintana Roo]].<ref name="Mongabay">{{Cite news |last1=Canul |first1=Robin |last2=Contreras |first2=Valeria |translator=Matthew Rose |series=Forest trackers |url=https://news.mongabay.com/2023/03/deforestation-on-the-rise-in-southern-mexico-as-mennonite-communities-move-in/ |title=Deforestation on the rise in Quintana Roo, Mexico, as Mennonite communities move in |date=15 March 2023 |work=[[Mongabay]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230315191705/https://news.mongabay.com/2023/03/deforestation-on-the-rise-in-southern-mexico-as-mennonite-communities-move-in/ |archive-date=15 March 2023 |url-status=live}}</ref> |
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== Controversies == |
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As of 2007, the [[Quebec]] government imposed a standard curriculum on all schools (public and private). While private schools may add optional material to the compulsory curriculum, they may not replace it. The Quebec curriculum was unacceptable to the parents of the only Mennonite school in the province.<ref>{{Cite web |date=16 August 2007 |title=Mennonites leaving Quebec after government closes school |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/mennonites-leaving-quebec-after-government-closes-school-1.641343 |access-date=30 August 2019 |publisher=[[CBC News]] |archive-date=19 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201019160213/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/mennonites-leaving-quebec-after-government-closes-school-1.641343 |url-status=live }}</ref> They said they would leave Quebec after the Education Ministry threatened legal actions. The province threatened to invoke youth protection services if the Mennonite children were not registered with the Education Ministry; they either had to be home-schooled using the government-approved material, or attend a "sanctioned" school. The local population and its mayor supported<ref>{{Cite web |date=16 August 2007 |title=Townsfolk sad to see Mennonites move away |url=http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=8aa6f3f4-45fd-42d3-ad45-38b1106bddfc |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121109125147/http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=8aa6f3f4-45fd-42d3-ad45-38b1106bddfc |archive-date=9 November 2012 |access-date=29 October 2011 |website=The Gazette |publisher=Canada.com}}</ref> the local Mennonites. The [[Evangelical Fellowship of Canada]] wrote that year to the Quebec government to express its concerns<ref>{{Cite web |last=Hutchinson |first=Don |date=8 September 2007 |title=Faith-Based Education May Result in Loss of House and Home in Quebec |url=http://www.christianity.ca/news/national/2007/09.000.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070908233429/http://www.christianity.ca/news/national/2007/09.000.html |archive-date=8 September 2007 |access-date=29 October 2011 |publisher=christianity.ca}}</ref> about this situation. By September 2007, some Mennonite families had already left Quebec.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2007-09-04 |title=Quebec Mennonites moving to Ontario for faith-based teaching |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/quebec-mennonites-moving-to-ontario-for-faith-based-teaching/article1081765/ |access-date=2024-08-26 |work=The Globe and Mail |language=en-CA}}</ref> |
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Between 2005 and 2009, more than 100 girls and women in the [[Manitoba Colony, Bolivia|Manitoba Colony of Bolivia]] were [[Bolivian Mennonite gas-facilitated rapes|raped at night in their homes]] by a group of colony men who sedated them with animal anesthetic.<ref>{{cite web|title=Mennonite Community of Manitoba, Bolivia|publisher=Insider|url=https://www.insider.com/mennonite-community-bolivia-men-accused-rape-sexual-assault-women-talking-2023-1#the-mennonites-of-manitoba-colony-are-a-remote-religious-community-of-european-descent-living-in-bolivia-they-have-strict-ultraconservative-christian-beliefs-and-mostly-eschew-modernity-in-their-practices-to-preserve-their-own-traditions-2}}</ref> Girls and women, including elderly women and relatives to the perpetrators, reported these attacks, but were at first dismissed as "wild female imagination", or else attributed to ghosts or demons. Eventually a group of colony men were caught in the act. The colony elders, deciding that the case was too difficult to handle themselves, called local police to take the perpetrators into custody in 2011.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2087711,00.html | work=Time Magazine | first=Jean | last=Friedman-Rudovsky | title=A Verdict in Bolivia's Shocking Case of the Mennonite Rapes | date=26 August 2011 | access-date=21 January 2023 | archive-date=22 December 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221222153030/https://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2087711,00.html | url-status=live }}</ref> The youngest victim was three years old, and the oldest was 65.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Ghost Rapes of Bolivia |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/4w7gqj/the-ghost-rapes-of-bolivia-000300-v20n8 |access-date=15 December 2022 |website=www.vice.com |date=23 December 2013 |language=en |archive-date=15 December 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221215154417/https://www.vice.com/en/article/4w7gqj/the-ghost-rapes-of-bolivia-000300-v20n8 |url-status=live }}</ref> The offenders used a type of gas used by veterinarians to sedate animals during medical procedures. Despite long custodial sentences for the convicted men, an investigation in 2013 reported continuing cases of similar assaults and other sexual abuses. Canadian author [[Miriam Toews]] has made these crimes the center of her 2018 novel ''Women Talking''.<ref>Schwartz, Alexandra (28 March 2019). [https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/03/25/a-beloved-canadian-novelist-reckons-with-her-mennonite-past A Beloved Canadian Novelist Reckons with Her Mennonite Past] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200409175446/https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/03/25/a-beloved-canadian-novelist-reckons-with-her-mennonite-past |date=9 April 2020 }}, ''[[The New Yorker]]''. Retrieved 11 April 2020.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/the-ghost-rapes-of-bolivia-000300-v20n8?Contentpage=-1|work=Vice|title=The Ghost Rapes of Bolivia|author=Friedman-Rudovsky, Jean|date=28 December 2013|accessdate=6 January 2014|archive-date=6 January 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140106032041/http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/the-ghost-rapes-of-bolivia-000300-v20n8?Contentpage=-1|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Pressly">{{Cite news |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-48265703 |title=The rapes haunting a community that shuns 21st Century |last=Pressly |first=Linda |date=16 May 2019 |work=[[BBC News]] |access-date=16 May 2019 |archive-date=16 May 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190516001801/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-48265703 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Connections between farmers and Mexican drug cartels in the state of [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]] have seen their parallels across Mexico throughout the [[Mexican drug war]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Gurney |first1=Kyra |title=Why Mennonite Links to Mexico Cartels Are Nothing New |url=https://insightcrime.org/news/brief/why-mennonite-links-to-mexico-cartels-are-nothing-new/ |access-date=4 June 2024 |publisher=InSight Crime |date=1 May 2024 |archive-date=4 June 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240604224634/https://insightcrime.org/news/brief/why-mennonite-links-to-mexico-cartels-are-nothing-new/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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===Sexual misconduct cases=== |
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{{main|Anabaptist/Mennonite Church sexual misconduct cases}} |
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== Service projects == |
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The [[Mennonite Disaster Service]], based in North America, is a volunteer network of Anabaptist churches which provide both immediate and long-term responses to hurricanes, floods, and other disasters in the U.S. and Canada.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mennonite Disaster Service |url=http://www.mds.mennonite.net/ |access-date=30 May 2007 |archive-date=1 June 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070601115555/http://www.mds.mennonite.net/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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[[Mennonite Central Committee]] (MCC), founded on 27 September 1920, in [[Chicago, Illinois]],<ref>Gingerich, Melvin, ''Service for Peace, A History of Mennonite Civilian Public Service, Mennonite Central Committee'' (1949) p. 16.</ref> provides disaster relief around the world alongside their long-term international development programs. In 1972, Mennonites in Altona, Manitoba, established the MCC Thrift Shops<ref>{{Cite web |title=MCC Thrift Shops |url=http://thrift.mcc.org/about/ |access-date=13 September 2016 |publisher=Thrift.mcc.org |archive-date=12 September 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160912004550/http://thrift.mcc.org/about |url-status=dead }}</ref> which has grown to become a worldwide source of assistance to the needy.<ref>CBC, ''The World at Six'', 17 March 2012</ref> |
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Since the latter part of the 20th century, some Mennonite groups have become more actively involved with peace and social justice issues, helping to found [[Christian Peacemaker Teams]] and Mennonite Conciliation Service.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mennonite Conciliation Service |url=http://conciliationserv.mennonite.net/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070513145148/http://conciliationserv.mennonite.net/ |archive-date=13 May 2007 |access-date=30 May 2007}}</ref> |
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== Membership == |
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{{Further|List of Mennonites}} |
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[[File:Menonite Children.JPG|thumb|Children in an Old Order Mennonite community selling peanuts near [[Lamanai]] in Belize]] |
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According to a 2018 census by the [[Mennonite World Conference]] (MWC), it has 107 member denominations in 58 countries, and 1.47 million baptized members.<ref>Mennonite World Conference, [https://mwc-cmm.org/about-mwc About MWC] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210305201523/https://mwc-cmm.org/about-mwc |date=5 March 2021 }}, mwc-cmm.org, Canada, retrieved 5 December 2020</ref> Their membership in 2023 included 108 denominations from 60 countries, and around 1.45 million baptized members in over 10,180 congregations. As of 2023, 84% of baptized members in MWC member churches were African, Asian or Latin American, and 16% were located in Europe and North America.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=About MWC |url=https://mwc-cmm.org/en/about-mwc |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240419212710/https://mwc-cmm.org/en/about-mwc |archive-date=April 19, 2024 |access-date=August 12, 2024 |website=Mennonite World Conference|date=29 July 2019 }}</ref> |
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Africa has the highest membership growth rate by far, with an increase of 10% to 12% every year, particularly in Ethiopia due to new conversions. African Mennonite churches underwent a dramatic 228% increase in membership during the 1980s and 1990s, attracting thousands of new converts in Tanzania, Kenya, and the Congo.<ref name="Kraybill">{{Cite book |last=B. Kraybill |first=Donald |title=Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites and Mennonites |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |year=2010 |pages=3–4}}</ref> Programs were also founded in Botswana and Swaziland during the 1960s.<ref name="Herr">Robert Herr and Judy Zimmermann Herr, "Building peace in South Africa: A case study in the Mennonite program" in ''From the Ground Up – Mennonite Contributions to International Peacebuilding'' ([[Oxford U. Press]], 2000), edited by Cynthia Sampson and John Paul Lederach, pp. 59–69.</ref> Mennonite organizations in South Africa, initially stifled under [[apartheid]] due to the [[Afrikaner]] government's distrust of foreign pacifist churches, have expanded substantially since 1994.<ref name="Herr" /> In recognition of the dramatic increase in the proportion of African adherents, the Mennonite World Conference held its assembly in [[Bulawayo]], Zimbabwe, in 2003.<ref name="Kraybill" /> |
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In Latin America growth is not as high as in Africa, but strong because of the high birth rates of traditional Mennonites of German ancestry. Growth in Mennonite membership is steady and has outpaced total population growth in North America, the Asia/Pacific region and Caribbean region. Europe has seen a slow and accelerating decline in Mennonite membership since about 1980.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://mwc-cmm.org/sites/default/files/resource-uploads/directory2018statistics.pdf |title=2018 Mennonite Church Membership Statistics |access-date=21 September 2020 |archive-date=1 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201001165733/https://mwc-cmm.org/sites/default/files/resource-uploads/directory2018statistics.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="mcusaMembershipStats">{{Cite web |title=Mennonite Church Membership Statistics |url=http://www.mcusa-archives.org/Resources/membership.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150108072014/http://www.mcusa-archives.org/resources/membership.html |archive-date=8 January 2015 |access-date=5 April 2015 |publisher=Mcusa-archives.org}}</ref> |
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=== Organization worldwide === |
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[[File:Henderson, Nebraska Bethesda Mennonite from SW 1.JPG|thumb|Bethesda Mennonite Church in Henderson, [[Nebraska]], U.S.]] |
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[[File:San Ignacio.jpg|thumb|Old Order Mennonite children from San Ignacio, Paraguay.]] |
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The most basic unit of organization among Mennonites is the church. There are hundreds or thousands of Mennonite churches and groups, many of which are separate from all others. Some churches are members of regional or area conferences. And some regional or area conferences are affiliated with larger national or international conferences. There is no single world authority on among Mennonites, however there is a Mennonite World Committee (MWC) includes Mennonites from 60 countries.<ref name=":0" /> The MWC does not make binding decisions on behalf of members but coordinates Mennonite causes aligning with the MWC's shared convictions. |
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For the most part, there is a host of independent Mennonite churches along with a myriad of separate conferences with no particular responsibility to any other group. Independent churches can contain as few as fifty members or as many as 20,000 members. Similar size differences occur among separate conferences. Worship, church discipline and lifestyles vary widely between progressive, moderate, conservative, Old Order and orthodox Mennonites in a vast panoply of distinct, independent, and widely dispersed classifications. There is no central authority that claims to speak for all Mennonites, as the 20th century passed, cultural distinctiveness between Mennonite groups has decreased.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Mennonite – North America|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Mennonite|access-date=9 March 2021|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|language=en|archive-date=2 June 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230602150313/https://www.britannica.com/topic/Mennonite|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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The largest Mennonite/Anabaptist groups are: |
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# [[Mennonite Brethren]] (426,581 members in 2010 worldwide)<ref name="GAMEO-MB">{{Cite web |last=Lohrenz |first=John H. |date=April 2011 |title=Mennonite Brethren Church |url=http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Brethren_Church&oldid=131032 |access-date=11 October 2016 |website=Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online |publisher=GAMEO |archive-date=12 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161012083341/http://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Brethren_Church&oldid=131032 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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# [[Amish|Old Order Amish]] (383,565 members in 2023 worldwide)<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://groups.etown.edu/amishstudies/statistics/population-2023/ |title=Amish Population Profile, 2023 |date=2 September 2023 |website=Elizabethtown College, the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies |access-date=2 September 2023 |archive-date=2 September 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230902140849/https://groups.etown.edu/amishstudies/statistics/population-2023/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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# [[Meserete Kristos Church]] in Ethiopia (295,500 members in 2017; over 500,000 attendance)<ref>{{Cite web |title=In this Issue July 2017 |url=https://www.goshen.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/75/2017/09/3In-This-IssueJuly2017Final06032017.pdf |access-date=August 12, 2024 |website=Goshen College}}</ref> |
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# [[Old Colony Mennonites|Old Colony Mennonite Church]] (120,000 in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Bolivia, Paraguay, Belize and Argentina) |
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# ''Communauté Mennonite au Congo'' (86,600 members)<ref>{{Cite web |date=January 1, 2006 |title=Church of Christ in Congo - Mennonite Community in Congo |url=https://www.oikoumene.org/en/member-churches/church-of-christ-in-congo-mennonite-community-in-congo |access-date=August 12, 2024 |website=Oikoumene}}</ref> |
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# [[Old Order Mennonite]]s (60,000 to 80,000 members in the U.S., Canada and Belize) |
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# [[Mennonite Church USA]] (about 62,000 members in the United States)<ref>[https://www.mennoniteusa.org/who-are-mennonites/ Mennonite Church USA: ''Who Are The Mennonites''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220516130046/https://www.mennoniteusa.org/who-are-mennonites/ |date=16 May 2022 }}, at mennoniteusa.org.</ref> |
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# ''Kanisa La Mennonite'' Tanzania (50,000 members in 240 congregations) |
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# [[Conservative Mennonites]] (30,000 members in over 500 U.S. churches)<ref name="2008 CLP church directory">2008 CLP church directory</ref> |
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# [[Mennonite Church Canada]] (26,000 members in 2018)<ref>Mennonite World Conference, [https://mwc-cmm.org/global-map Global map] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230205233104/https://mwc-cmm.org/global-map |date=5 February 2023 }}, mwc-cmm.org, Canada, retrieved 19 September 2022</ref> |
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# [[Church of God in Christ, Mennonite]] (24,400 members, of whom 14,804 (2013 data) were in U.S., 5,081 in Canada, and the remainder in Africa, Asia, Central and South America, the Caribbean, and Europe)<ref name="CGCM WhereWeAre" /> |
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=== Organization: North America === |
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[[File:alexanderwohl-church.jpg|thumb|[[Alexanderwohl Mennonite Church]] in rural [[Goessel, Kansas]]]] |
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[[File:Bethel-administration.jpg|thumb|Bethel College, North Newton Kansas]] |
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In 2015, there were 538,839 baptized members organized into 41 bodies in the United States, according to the Mennonite World Conference.<ref name="MWC stats" /> The largest group of that number is the Old Order Amish. According to the [[Association of Religion Data Archives]], in 2001 there were 80,820 Old Order Amish church members living in the United States.<ref>{{cite web |title=Groups - Religious Profiles {{!}} US Religion |url=https://www.thearda.com/us-religion/group-profiles/groups?D=607 |website=www.thearda.com |access-date=17 December 2024}}</ref> The [[U.S. Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches]] comprises 34,500 members.<ref name="GAMEO-MB" /> 27,000 are part of a larger group known collectively as [[Old Order Mennonite]]s.<ref>[[Stephen Scott (writer)|Stephen Scott]]: ''An Introduction to Old Order: and Conservative Mennonite Groups'', Intercourse, PA 1996.</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=B. Kraybill |first=Donald |title=Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites and Mennonites |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |year=2010 |pages=251–258}}</ref> Another 78,892 of that number are from the Mennonite Church USA.<ref name="Shrinking Rolls" /> |
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Total membership in Mennonite Church USA denominations decreased from about 133,000, before the MC-GC merger in 1998, to about 114,000 after the merger in 2003. In 2016 it had fallen to under 79,000. Membership of the Mennonite Church USA is on the decline.<ref name="Shrinking Rolls" /><ref name="mcusaMembershipStats" /> |
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Canada had 143,720 Mennonites in 16 organized bodies as of 2015.<ref name="MWC stats" /> Of that number, the Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches had 37,508 baptized members<ref name="GAMEO-MB" /> and the Mennonite Church Canada had 31,000 members.<ref name="MC-Canada">{{Cite web |title=About Mennonite Church Canada |url=http://home.mennonitechurch.ca/about |access-date=11 October 2016 |website=Mennonite Church Canada |archive-date=5 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161005095048/http://home.mennonitechurch.ca/about |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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As of 2012, there were an estimated 100,000 Old Colony Mennonites in Mexico.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Cascante |first=Manuel M. |date=8 August 2012 |title=Los menonitas dejan México |language=es |work=ABC |url=http://www.abc.es/20121007/sociedad/abci-menonitas-mexico-201210071635.html |access-date=19 February 2013 |quote=Los cien mil miembros de esta comunidad anabaptista, establecida en Chihuahua desde 1922, se plantean emigrar a la república rusa de Tartaristán, que se ofrece a acogerlos |archive-date=29 April 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190429070618/https://www.abc.es/20121007/sociedad/abci-menonitas-mexico-201210071635.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mennonite Old Colony Vision: ''Under siege in Mexico and the Canadian Connection'' |url=http://www.hshs.mb.ca/mennonite_old_colony_vision.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130404152020/http://www.hshs.mb.ca/mennonite_old_colony_vision.pdf |archive-date=4 April 2013 |access-date=10 September 2014 }}</ref> These Mennonites descend from a mass migration in the 1920s of roughly 6,000 Old Colony Mennonites from the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In 1921, a Canadian Mennonite delegation arriving in Mexico received a ''privilegium'', a promise of non-interference, from the Mexican government. This guarantee of many freedoms was the impetus that created the two original Old Colony settlements near Patos [[Nuevo Ideal]], [[Durango]], [[Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua]] and La Honda, [[Zacatecas]].<ref>[http://www.gameo.org/index.asp?content=http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/O533ME.html] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927014327/http://www.gameo.org/index.asp?content=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.gameo.org%2Fencyclopedia%2Fcontents%2FO533ME.html|date=27 September 2007}}</ref> |
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On the other hand, the Mennonite World Conference cites only 33,881 Mennonites organized into 14 bodies in Mexico.<ref name="MWC stats" /> |
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=== Organization: Africa === |
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{{Main|Black Mennonites}} |
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=== Organization: Europe === |
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[[File:Mennonitenkirche zu Hamburg und Altona.JPG|thumb|Mennonite Church in Hamburg-Altona, Germany]] |
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Germany has the largest contingent of Mennonites in Europe. The Mennonite World Conference counts 47,202 baptized members within 7 organized bodies in 2015.<ref name="MWC stats">{{Cite web |title=Statistics |url=https://www.mwc-cmm.org/sites/default/files/website_files/mwc_world_directory_2015_statistics.pdf |access-date=21 September 2016 |website=Mennonite World Conference |publisher=MWC-CMM.org |archive-date=23 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220123005111/https://mwc-cmm.org/sites/default/files/website_files/mwc_world_directory_2015_statistics.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> The largest group is the ''Bruderschaft der Christengemeinde in Deutschland'' (Mennonite Brethren), which had 20,000 members in 2010.<ref name="GAMEO-MB" /> Another such body is the Union of German Mennonite Congregations or ''Vereinigung der Deutschen Mennonitengemeinden''. Founded in 1886, it has 27 Congregations with 5,724 members and is part of the larger "Arbeitsgemeinschaft Mennonitischer Gemeinden in Deutschland" or AMG (Assembly/Council of Mennonite Churches in Germany),<ref name="WCC AMG">{{Cite web |title=Member Churches – Mennonite Church in Germany |url=http://www.oikoumene.org/en/member-churches/mennonite-church-in-germany |access-date=21 September 2016 |website=World Council of Churches |date=January 1948 }}</ref> which claims 40,000 overall members from various groups. Other AMG member groups include: ''Rußland-Deutschen Mennoniten'', ''Mennoniten-Brüdergemeinden''(Independent Mennonite Brethren congregations), ''WEBB-Gemeinden'', and the ''Mennonitischen Heimatmission''.<ref name="AMGD">{{Cite web |title=Mennoniten in Deutschland |url=http://www.mennoniten.de/deutschland.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120428185957/http://www.mennoniten.de/deutschland.html |archive-date=28 April 2012 |access-date=6 November 2012 |publisher=Mennoniten.de}}</ref> However, not all German Mennonites belong to this larger AMG body. Upwards of 40,000 Mennonites emigrated from Russia to Germany starting in the 1970s.<ref name="WCC AMG" /> |
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The Mennonite presence remaining in the Netherlands, ''Algemene Doopsgezinde Societeit'' or ADS (translated as ''General Mennonite Society''), maintains a seminary, as well as organizing relief, peace, and mission work, the latter primarily in Central Java and New Guinea. They have 121 congregations with 10,200 members according to the [[World Council of Churches]],<ref name="WCC ADS" /> although the Mennonite World Conference cites only 7680 members.<ref name="MWC stats" /> |
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Switzerland had 1800 Mennonites belonging to 14 Congregations which are part of the ''Konferenz der Mennoniten der Schweiz (Alttäufer), Conférence mennonite suisse (Anabaptiste)'' ([[Swiss Mennonite Conference]]).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Switzerland |url=http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1205# |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160927215228/http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1205 |archive-date=27 September 2016 |access-date=21 September 2016 |publisher=MWC-CMM.org}}</ref> |
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In 2015, there were 2078 [[Mennonites in France]]. The country's 32 autonomous Mennonite congregations have formed the ''Association des Églises Évangéliques Mennonites de France''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=France |url=http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1076# |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160927214645/http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1076 |archive-date=27 September 2016 |access-date=21 September 2016 |publisher=MWC-CMM.org}}</ref> |
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While Ukraine was once home to tens of thousands of Mennonites, in 2015 the number totalled just 499. They are organized among three denominations: ''Association of Mennonite Brethren Churches of Ukraine'', ''Church of God in Christ, Mennonite (Ukraine)'', and ''Evangelical Mennonite Churches of Ukraine (Beachy Amish Church – Ukraine)''.<ref name="MWC-Ukraine">{{Cite web |title=Ukraine |url=http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1224# |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160927201255/http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1224 |archive-date=27 September 2016 |access-date=21 September 2016 |publisher=MWC-CMM.org}}</ref> |
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The U.K. had but 326 members within two organized bodies as of 2015.<ref name="MWC stats" /> There is the Nationwide Fellowship Churches (UK) and the larger Brethren in Christ Church United Kingdom.<ref>{{Cite web |title=United Kingdom |url=http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1226# |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160927214454/http://www.mwc-cmm.org/mwc_map/country/1226 |archive-date=27 September 2016 |access-date=21 September 2016 |publisher=MWC-CMM.org}}</ref> Additionally, there is the registered charity, ''The Mennonite Trust'' (formerly known as "London Mennonite Centre"), which seeks to promote understanding of Mennonite and Anabaptist practices and values.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mennonite Trust |url=http://www.menno.org.uk/ |access-date=21 September 2016 |publisher=Menno.org |archive-date=3 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161003222114/http://menno.org.uk/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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== In popular culture == |
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Mennonites have been portrayed in many areas of popular culture, especially [[Mennonite literature|literature]], film, and television.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Carpenter |first=Steven P. |title=Mennonites and Media: Mentioned in it, Maligned by it, and Makers of It |date=2015 |publisher=Wipf and Stock Publishers}}</ref> Notable novels about or written by Mennonites include ''[[A Complicated Kindness]]'' by [[Miriam Toews]], ''[[Peace Shall Destroy Many]]'' by [[Rudy Wiebe]], ''[[The Salvation of Yasch Siemens]]'' by [[Armin Wiebe]], ''The Russlander'' by [[Sandra Birdsell]], ''[[A Year of Lesser]]'' by [[David Bergen]], ''A Dream of a Woman'' by [[Casey Plett]], and ''[[Once Removed (novel)|Once Removed]]'' by [[Andrew Unger]].<ref name="gameo.org">{{Cite web |title=Literature, North American Mennonite (1960s–2010s) |url=https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Literature,_North_American_Mennonite_(1960s-2010s) |access-date=26 November 2018 |publisher=Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online |archive-date=26 November 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181126221707/https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Literature,_North_American_Mennonite_(1960s-2010s) |url-status=live }}</ref> [[Rhoda Janzen]]'s memoir ''Mennonite in a Little Black Dress'' was a best-seller.<ref name="gameo.org"/> In 1975 [[Victor Davies]] composed the Mennonite Piano Concerto and in 1977 composer [[Glenn Gould]] featured Manitoba Mennonites in his experimental radio documentary ''The Quiet in the Land'', part three of his [[Solitude Trilogy]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Making Believe: Questions About Mennonites and Art|author=Magdalene Redekop|publisher=University of Manitoba Press|date=2020}}</ref> In the 1990s, photographer [[Larry Towell]] documented the lives of Canadian and Mexican Mennonites, subsequently published in a volume by [[Phaidon Press]].<ref>{{cite web|title=The 19 Best Photobooks of 2014|publisher=Mother Jones|url=https://www.motherjones.com/media/2014/12/favorite-photobooks-2014/|accessdate=1 July 2022|archive-date=1 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220701052250/https://www.motherjones.com/media/2014/12/favorite-photobooks-2014/|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2007, Mexican director [[Carlos Reygadas]] directed ''[[Silent Light]]'', the first ever feature film in the Russian Mennonite dialect of [[Plautdietsch]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Motion Pictures and Amish, Hutterites, and Mennonites |url=https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Motion_Pictures_and_Amish,_Hutterites,_and_Mennonites |access-date=26 November 2018 |publisher=Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online |archive-date=26 November 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181126221736/https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Motion_Pictures_and_Amish,_Hutterites,_and_Mennonites |url-status=live }}</ref> Other films depicting Mennonites include ''[[I Propose We Never See Each Other Again After Tonight]]'', as well as ''[[All My Puny Sorrows (film)|All My Puny Sorrows]]'' and the [[Academy Awards|Oscar]]-winning ''[[Women Talking (film)|Women Talking]]'', both based on Miriam Toews novels. Mennonites have also been depicted on television, including the show ''[[Pure (Canadian TV series)|Pure]]'', and in episodes of ''[[Schitt's Creek]]'', ''[[Letterkenny (TV series)|Letterkenny]]''<ref>{{Citation|last=Tierney|first=Jacob|title=Dyck's Slip Out|date=25 December 2018|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9499948/?ref_=ttep_ep5|type=Comedy|others=Jared Keeso, Nathan Dales, Michelle Mylett, K. Trevor Wilson|access-date=21 February 2021|archive-date=9 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210309025514/https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9499948/?ref_=ttep_ep5|url-status=live}}</ref> and ''[[The Simpsons]]'', which was created by [[Matt Groening]], himself of Russian Mennonite descent.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Groenings, the Simpsons and the Mennonites |date=28 August 2007 |url=https://themennonite.org/groenings-simpsons-mennonites |access-date=26 November 2018 |publisher=The Mennonites |archive-date=29 November 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181129065017/https://themennonite.org/groenings-simpsons-mennonites/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Andrew Unger's satirical news website ''[[The Daily Bonnet|The Unger Review]]'' (formerly called ''The Daily Bonnet'') pokes fun at Mennonite culture and traditions.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Downey Sawatzky |first=Beth |date=24 August 2016 |title=Familiarity breeds good content |work=The Canadian Mennonite |url=http://www.canadianmennonite.org/stories/familiarity-breeds-good-content/ |access-date=26 November 2018 |archive-date=27 November 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181127110316/https://www.canadianmennonite.org/stories/familiarity-breeds-good-content/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Huber |first=Tim |date=4 July 2016 |title=Satire news site pokes fun at Mennonite quirks |work=Mennonite World Review |url=http://mennoworld.org/2016/07/04/feature/satire-site-pokes-fun-at-mennonite-quirks/ |access-date=26 November 2018 |archive-date=26 November 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181126221441/http://mennoworld.org/2016/07/04/feature/satire-site-pokes-fun-at-mennonite-quirks/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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== See also == |
== See also == |
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{{Portal|Christianity}} |
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* [[Anabaptism]] |
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{{div col|colwidth=20em}} |
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* [[Amish]] |
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* [[Bible Mennonite Fellowship]] |
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* [[Hutterites]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Bruderhof Communities]] |
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* [[Church of God in Christ, Mennonite]] |
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* [[John Howard Yoder]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Eastern Mennonite Missions]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Vincent Harding]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Guy Hershberger]] |
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* [[ |
* [[List of Mennonites]] |
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* [[Mennonite Church USA Archives]] |
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* [[Shunning]] |
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* [[Mennonite cuisine]] |
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* [[:Category:Mennonite denominations|Mennonite denominations]] |
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* [[Mennonites in Argentina]] |
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* [[Mennonites in Belize]] |
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* [[Mennonites in Bolivia]] |
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* [[Mennonites in Mexico]] |
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* [[Mennonites in Paraguay]] |
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* [[Russian Mennonites|Mennonites in Russia]] |
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* [[Mennonites in Uruguay]] |
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* [[Mennonite literature]] |
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* [[Mennonite settlements of Altai]] |
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* ''[[More-with-Less Cookbook]]'' |
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* ''[[Portrait of a Man in a Wide-Brimmed Hat]]'' |
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* [[Rot-Front|Rot-Front, Kazakhstan]] |
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* [[Simple living]] |
* [[Simple living]] |
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* [[Virginia Mennonite Missions]] |
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{{div col end}} |
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== Notes == |
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<references/> |
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==References== |
== References == |
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{{Reflist}} |
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*Gingerich, Melvin (1949), ''Service for Peace, A History of Mennonite Civilian Public Service'', Mennonite Central Committee. |
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*Juhnke, James, ''Vision, Doctrine, War: Mennonite Identity and Organization in America, 1890-1930'', (The Mennonite Experience in America #3.) Scottdale, Pa., Herald, Pp 393, 1989. |
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== Bibliography == |
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*Krahn, Cornelius, Gingerich, Melvin & Harms, Orlando (Eds.) (1955). ''The Mennonite Encyclopedia'', Volume I, pp. 76-78. Mennoniite Publishing House. |
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{{refbegin|2}} |
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*Mennonite & Brethren in Christ World Directory 2003. Available On-line at http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/index.htm |
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* {{cite thesis |last1=Penner |first1=Nikolai |title=The High German of Russian Mennonites in Ontario |location=Waterloo, Ontario, Canada |publisher=University of Waterloo |year=2009 |url=https://uwspace.uwaterloo.ca/bitstream/handle/10012/4953/RMHG_in_Ontario_january_20_2010.pdf |access-date=10 January 2021 |archive-date=31 August 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831224431/https://uwspace.uwaterloo.ca/bitstream/handle/10012/4953/RMHG_in_Ontario_january_20_2010.pdf |url-status=live }} |
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*Pannabecker, Samuel Floyd (1975), ''Open Doors: A History of the General Conference Mennonite Church'', Faith and Life Press. ISBN 0-87303-636-0 |
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* {{cite book|editor1-last=Unruh |editor1-first=Benjamin Heinrich |title=Die niederländisch-niederdeutschen Hintergründe der mennonitischen Ostwanderungen im 16., 18. und 19. Jahrhundert|publisher= |year=1955 |language=German}} |
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*Smith, C. Henry (1981), ''Smith's Story of the Mennonites'' Fifth Edition, Faith and Life Press. ISBN 0-87303-060-5 |
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{{refend}} |
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==Further reading== |
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* [http://www.herizons.ca/magazine/issues/sum05/ ''A Complicated Kind of Author''] |
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== Further reading == |
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* [http://www.sfbg.com/lit/jan03/exfiles.html ''The ex files: A San Francisco writer reimagines his Amish roots'' (review of Amish and Mennonite literature)] |
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* Epp, Marlene ''Mennonites in Ontario.'' Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario, 2012. {{ISBN|0969604637}} |
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* [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3749/is_199810/ai_n8818175 ''Influence of Culture on Pretend Play: the Case of Mennonite Children''] |
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* Epp, Marlene ''Mennonite Women in Canada: A History'' (Winnipeg, University of Manitoba Press, 2008. xiii + 378 pp.) {{ISBN|9780887551826}} |
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* [http://www.theholdemans.com/Compare.htm Comparing the One True Churches (Holdeman Mennonite and other non-Mennonite churches from cult exiter sources)] |
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* Epp, Marlene ''Women without Men: Mennonite Refugees of the Second World War.'' University of Toronto Press, 2000. {{ISBN|0802082688}} |
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* [http://www.cnn.com/us/9711/05/gay.mennonite/ CNN:''Mennonite Church Expelled for Accepting Gays''] |
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* Epp, Maureen. ''Sound in the Lands: Mennonite Music Across Borders'' (Kitchener, ON: Pandora Press, 2011).{{ISBN|978-1926599199}} |
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* Espenshade, Linda, ''Silenced by Shame: Leaders Willing to Lift the Shame and Reconsider'', '''Lancaster (PA) Intelligencer Journal''', 7/15/04, (4-part series on domestic violence, child abuse and incest). |
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* Gingerich, Melvin (1949), ''Service for Peace, A History of Mennonite Civilian Public Service'', Mennonite Central Committee.{{ASIN|B0007DXNN6}} |
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* D'anna, Lynnette, ''Post-Mennonite Women Congregate to Address Abuse'' (Winnipeg, Canada), '''Herizons''', 3/1/93. |
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* Harder, Helmut and Miller, Larry, "Mennonite Engagement in International Ecumenical Conversations: Experiences, Perspectives, and Guiding Principles," ''Mennonite Quarterly Review'' 90(3) (2016), 345–71. |
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* Holmes, Kristin E., ''Tradition Ends as Mennonites Choose Woman: Election is Radical Change'', '''Buffalo News''', Buffalo, NY, Aug 28, 1993. pg. A.5. |
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* Heisey, M. J. [http://jms.uwinnipeg.ca/index.php/jms/article/download/1030/1029 {{"'}}Mennonite Religion was a Family Religion': A Historiography,"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181126221446/http://jms.uwinnipeg.ca/index.php/jms/article/download/1030/1029 |date=26 November 2018 }} ''Journal of Mennonite Studies'' (2005), Vol. 23 pp. 9–22. |
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* Sherk, Mary, ''Pennsylvania Dutch Country? Well, Yes--but It's in Ontario'', '''Boston Globe''', Boston, MA: Jul 5, 1992, pg. A5. |
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* Hinojosa, Felipe (2014). ''Latino Mennonites: Civil Rights, Faith, and Evangelical Culture.'' Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.{{ISBN|978-1421412832}} |
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* Laurie, Georing, ''Land-Poor Indians Unsettle Paraguay's Mennonites'', '''Chicago Tribune''', Chicago, IL: Apr 29, 1996. pg.11, 2 pgs. |
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* Horsch, James E. (Ed.) (1999), ''Mennonite Directory'', Herald Press. {{ISBN|0836194543}} |
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* Allen, Eddie B Jr., ''Mennonites Work to Convert Africans, Americans'', '''Detroit News''', Detroit, MI: Mar 13, 992. pg. B3 |
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* Kinberg, Clare. "Mennonites." om ''Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America,'' edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 3, Gale, 2014), pp. 171–182. [https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3273300121/GPS?u=wikipedia&sid=GPS&xid=7afe56c7 Online] |
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* Goldman, Ari L., ''Mennonites Finding Vitality in Minority Converts'', '''New York Times'''. (Late Edition (East Coast)), New York, NY: Aug 7 1989. pg. A11 |
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* [[Pamela Klassen|Klassen, Pamela E.]] ''Going by the Moon and the Stars: Stories of Two Russian Mennonite Women''. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1994. {{ISBN|0889202443}} |
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* Tony Smith, ''Paraguay Mennonites Find Success a Mixed Blessing'', '''New York Times''', 8/10/03, pg. 1.4. |
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* Krahn, Cornelius, Gingerich, Melvin & Harms, Orlando (Eds.) (1955). ''The Mennonite Encyclopedia'', Volume I, pp. 76–78. Mennonite Publishing House.{{ASIN|B002Q3LGMU}} |
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* K. Connie Kang, ''Mennonites in Mexico Battle Temptations: The Austere Sect Sought to Escape the World but Worldly Vices--Alcohol, Drugs--Are a Forbidden Fascination Now to Some.'', '''Los Angeles Times''', 4/30/05, B.2. |
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* Kraybill, D. B. ''Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites'' (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010).{{ISBN|978-0801896576}} |
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* Arthur, Linda, B., ''Deviance, Agency, and the Social Control of Women's Bodies in a Mennonite Community'', NWSA Journal, v10.n2 (Summer 1998): pp75(25). |
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* Mennonite & Brethren in Christ World Directory 2003. Available On-line at [https://web.archive.org/web/20060203202348/http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/index.htm MWC – World Directory] |
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* Toews, Miriam, ''A Complicated Kindness'', Counterpoint, 2004. |
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* Pannabecker, Samuel Floyd (1975), ''Open Doors: A History of the General Conference Mennonite Church'', Faith and Life Press. {{ISBN|0873036360}} |
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* {{Cite book |last=Miller Shearer |first=Tobin |title=Daily Demonstrators: The Civil Rights Movement in Mennonite Homes and Sanctuaries |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |year=2010 |isbn=978-0801897009 |page=392}} |
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* [[Stephen Scott (writer)|Scott, Stephen]] (1995), ''An Introduction to Old Order and Conservative Mennonite Groups'', Good Books, {{ISBN|1561481017}} |
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* Smith, C. Henry (1981), ''Smith's Story of the Mennonites'' (5th ed. Faith and Life Press). {{ISBN|0873030605}} |
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* Van Braght, Thielman J. (1660), ''Martyrs Mirror'' (2nd English ed. Herald Press) {{ISBN|083611390X}} |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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<!-- NOTE TO EDITORS: See the discussion "Proposal to clean up external links" on the talk page before adding new links here. --> |
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* [http://www.bibleviews.com/Dordrecht.html Dordrecht Confession of Faith] |
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* [http://www.gameo.org/ Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online] |
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* [http://www.mcusa-archives.org/Resources/membership.html United States and Worldwide Mennonite Membership Statistics] (source [[Mennonite Church USA]]) |
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* [http://www.gc.cuny.edu/faculty/research_studies/aris.pdf American Religious Identification Survey 2001] |
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* [http://www.teach12.com/ttc/assets/coursedescriptions/690.asp?id=690&d=History+of+Christianity+in+the+Reformation+Era&pc=Religion ''The History of Christianity in the Reformation Era''] |
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* [https://www.lmhs.org/ Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society, in Pennsylvania] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200212011059/https://www.lmhs.org/ |date=12 February 2020 }} |
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* [http://www.gameo.org/ Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online (GAMEO)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070114093526/http://www.gameo.org/ |date=14 January 2007 }} |
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* [https://anabaptistwiki.org/mediawiki/index.php?/ Global Anabaptist Wiki] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201014174834/https://anabaptistwiki.org/mediawiki/index.php?/ |date=14 October 2020 }} |
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* [http://www.mwc-cmm.org/ Mennonite World Conference] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090226051415/http://www.mwc-cmm.org/ |date=26 February 2009 }} |
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* [https://www.pilgrimministry.org/congregations/map Pilgrim Ministry: Conservative Mennonite church directory] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220523054747/https://www.pilgrimministry.org/congregations/map |date=23 May 2022 }} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20011110114034/http://www.swissmennonite.org/ The Swiss Mennonite Cultural and Historical Association] |
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Latest revision as of 10:27, 10 January 2025
Total population | |
---|---|
2.13 million (2018)[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
United States | 500,469[1] |
Ethiopia | 310,912[2] |
India | 257,029[2] |
Dem. Republic of the Congo | 225,581[2] |
Bolivia | 150,000[3] |
Canada | 149,422[1] |
Mexico | 110,000[4] |
Indonesia | 102,761[2] |
Tanzania | 92,350[2] |
Thailand | 63,998[2] |
Zimbabwe | 50,287[2] |
Germany | 47,492[4] |
Paraguay | 36,009[4] |
Kenya | 35,575[2] |
Angola | 30,555[2] |
Religions | |
Anabaptist | |
Scriptures | |
Bible |
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Mennonites are a group of Anabaptist Christian communities tracing their roots to the epoch of the Radical Reformation. The name Mennonites is derived from the cleric Menno Simons (1496–1561) of Friesland, part of the Holy Roman Empire, present day Netherlands. Menno Simons became a prominent leader within the wider Anabaptist movement and was a contemporary of Martin Luther (1483–1546) and Philip Melanchthon (1497–1560). Through his writings about the Reformation Simons articulated and formalized the teachings of earlier Swiss Anabaptist founders as well as early teachings of the Mennonites founded on the belief in both the mission and ministry of Jesus.[citation needed] Formal Mennonite beliefs were codified in the Dordrecht Confession of Faith (1632),[5] which affirmed "the baptism of believers only, the washing of the feet as a symbol of servanthood, church discipline, the shunning of the excommunicated, the non-swearing of oaths, marriage within the same church", nonresistance, and in general, more emphasis on "true Christianity" involving "being Christian and obeying Christ" as they interpret it from the Holy Bible.[6]
The majority of the early Mennonite followers, rather than fighting, survived by fleeing to neighboring states where ruling families were tolerant of their belief in believer's baptism. Over the years, Mennonites have become known as one of the historic peace churches, due to their commitment to pacifism.[7] Mennonites seek to emphasize the teachings of early Christianity in their beliefs, worship and lifestyle.[8][9]
Congregations worldwide embody various approaches to Mennonite practice, ranging from Old Order Mennonites (who practice a lifestyle without certain elements of modern technology) to Conservative Mennonites (who hold to traditional theological distinctives, wear plain dress and use modern conveniences) to mainline Mennonites (those who are indistinguishable in dress and appearance from the general population).[10] Mennonites can be found in communities in 87 countries on six continents.[11] Seven ordinances have been taught in many traditional Mennonite churches, which include "baptism, communion, footwashing, marriage, anointing with oil, the holy kiss, and the prayer covering."[6][12] The largest populations of Mennonites are found in Canada, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, India, and the United States.[11] There are Mennonite settlements in Argentina, Belize, Bolivia,[13] Brazil, Mexico, Peru,[14] Uruguay,[15] Paraguay,[16] and Colombia.[17] The Mennonite Church in the Netherlands still continues where Simons was born.[18]
Though Mennonites are a global denomination with church membership from Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas, certain Mennonite communities with ethno-cultural origins in Switzerland and the Netherlands bear the designation of ethnic Mennonites.[19] Across Latin America, Mennonite colonization has been seen as a driver of environmental damage, notably deforestation of the Amazon rainforest through land clearance for agriculture.[20][21][22]
History
[edit]The early history of the Mennonites starts with the Anabaptists in the German and Dutch-speaking regions of central Europe. The German term is Täufer (Baptist) or Wiedertäufer ("re-Baptizers" or "Anabaptists" using the Greek ana ["again"]), as their persecutors called them.[23] These forerunners of modern Mennonites were part of the Protestant Reformation, a broad reaction against the practices and theology of the Roman Catholic Church. Its most distinguishing feature is the rejection of infant baptism, an act that had both religious and political meaning since almost every infant born in western Europe was baptized in the Roman Catholic Church[citation needed]. Other significant theological views of the Mennonites developed in opposition to Roman Catholic views or to the views of Protestant reformers such as Martin Luther and Huldrych Zwingli.
Some of the followers of Zwingli's Reformed church thought that requiring church membership beginning at birth was inconsistent with the New Testament example. They believed that the church should be completely removed from government (the proto–free church tradition), and that individuals should join only when willing to publicly acknowledge belief in Jesus and the desire to live in accordance with his teachings. At a small meeting in Zurich on 21 January 1525, Conrad Grebel, Felix Manz, and George Blaurock, along with twelve others, baptized each other.[24] This meeting marks the beginning of the Anabaptist movement. In the spirit of the times, other groups came to preach about reducing hierarchy, relations with the state, eschatology, and sexual license, running from utter abandon to extreme chastity. These movements are together referred to as the "Radical Reformation".
Many government and religious leaders, both Protestant and Roman Catholic, considered voluntary church membership to be dangerous—the concern of some deepened by reports of the Münster Rebellion, led by a violent sect of Anabaptists. They joined forces to fight the movement, using methods such as banishment, torture, burning, drowning or beheading.[25]: 142
Despite strong repressive efforts of the state churches, the movement spread slowly around western Europe, primarily along the Rhine[citation needed]. Officials killed many of the earliest Anabaptist leaders in an attempt to purge Europe of the new sect.[25]: 142 By 1530, most of the founding leaders had been killed for refusing to renounce their beliefs. Many believed that God did not condone killing or the use of force for any reason and were, therefore, unwilling to fight for their lives. The non-resistant branches often survived by seeking refuge in neutral cities or nations, such as Strasbourg. Their safety was often tenuous, as a shift in alliances or an invasion could mean resumed persecution. Other groups of Anabaptists, such as the Batenburgers, were eventually destroyed by their unwillingness to fight. This played a large part in the evolution of Anabaptist theology. They believed that Jesus taught that any use of force to get back at anyone was wrong, and taught to forgive.[citation needed]
In the early days of the Anabaptist movement, Menno Simons, a Catholic priest in the Low Countries, heard of the movement and started to rethink his Catholic faith. He questioned the doctrine of transubstantiation but was reluctant to leave the Roman Catholic Church. His brother, a member of an Anabaptist group, was killed when he and his companions were attacked and refused to defend themselves.[26] In 1536, at the age of 40, Simons left the Roman Catholic Church. He soon became a leader within the Anabaptist movement and was wanted by authorities for the rest of his life. His name became associated with scattered groups of nonviolent Anabaptists whom he helped to organize and consolidate.[27][28]
Fragmentation and variation
[edit]During the 16th century, the Mennonites and other Anabaptists were relentlessly persecuted. This period of persecution has had a significant impact on Mennonite identity. Martyrs Mirror, published in 1660, documents much of the persecution of Anabaptists and their predecessors, including accounts of over 4,000 burnings of individuals, and numerous stonings, imprisonments, and live burials.[29] Today, the book is still the most important book besides the Bible for many Mennonites and Amish, in particular for the Swiss-South German branch of the Mennonites. Persecution was still going on until 1710 in various parts of Switzerland.[30]
In 1693, Jakob Ammann led an effort to reform the Mennonite church in Switzerland and South Germany to include shunning, to hold communion more often, and other differences.[31] When the discussions fell through, Ammann and his followers split from the other Mennonite congregations. Ammann's followers became known as the Amish Mennonites or just Amish. In later years, other schisms among Amish resulted in such groups as the Old Order Amish, New Order Amish, Kauffman Amish Mennonite, Swartzentruber Amish, Conservative Mennonite Conference and Biblical Mennonite Alliance. For instance, near the beginning of the 20th century, some members in the Amish church wanted to begin having Sunday schools and participate in progressive Protestant-style para-church evangelism. Unable to persuade the rest of the Amish, they separated and formed a number of separate groups including the Conservative Mennonite Conference. Mennonites in Canada and other countries typically have independent denominations because of the practical considerations of distance and, in some cases, language. Many times these divisions took place along family lines, with each extended family supporting its own branch.
Political rulers often admitted the Menists or Mennonites into their states because they were honest, hardworking and peaceful[citation needed]. When their practices upset the powerful state churches, princes would renege on exemptions for military service, or a new monarch would take power, and the Mennonites would be forced to flee again, usually leaving everything but their families behind. Often, another monarch in another state would grant them welcome, at least for a while.
While Mennonites in Colonial America were enjoying considerable religious freedom, their counterparts in Europe continued to struggle with persecution and temporary refuge under certain ruling monarchs. They were sometimes invited to settle in areas of poor soil that no one else could farm. By contrast, in the Netherlands, the Mennonites enjoyed a relatively high degree of tolerance. Because the land still needed to be tended, the ruler would not drive out the Mennonites but would pass laws to force them to stay, while at the same time severely limiting their freedom. Mennonites had to build their churches facing onto back streets or alleys, and they were forbidden from announcing the beginning of services with the sound of a bell.
A strong emphasis on "community" was developed under these circumstances. It continues to be typical of Mennonite churches. As a result of frequently being required to give up possessions in order to retain individual freedoms, Mennonites learned to live very simply. This was reflected both in the home and at church, where their dress and their buildings were plain. The music at church, usually simple German chorales, was performed a cappella. This style of music serves as a reminder to many Mennonites of their simple lives, as well as their history as a persecuted people. Some branches of Mennonites have retained this "plain" lifestyle into modern times.
Statistics
[edit]The Mennonite World Conference was founded at the first conference in Basel, Switzerland, in 1925 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Anabaptism.[32] In 2022, the organization had 109 member denominations in 59 countries, and 1.47 million baptized members in 10,300 churches.[33]
Beliefs and practices
[edit]The beliefs of the movement are those of the Believers' Church.[34]
One of the earliest expressions of Mennonite Anabaptist faith was the Schleitheim Confession, adopted on 24 February 1527.[35] Its seven articles covered:
- The Ban (excommunication)
- Breaking of bread (Communion)
- Separation from and shunning of the abomination (the Roman Catholic Church and other "worldly" groups and practices)
- Believer's baptism
- Pastors in the church
- Renunciation of the sword (Christian pacifism)
- Renunciation of the oath (swearing as proof of truth)
The Dordrecht Confession of Faith was adopted on 21 April 1632, by Dutch Mennonites, by Alsatian Mennonites in 1660, and by North American Mennonites in 1725. It has been followed by many Mennonite groups over the centuries.[36] With regard to salvation, Mennonites believe:[37]
When we hear the good news of the love of God, the Holy Spirit moves us to accept the gift of salvation. God brings us into right relationship without coercion. Our response includes yielding to God's grace, placing full trust in God alone, repenting of sin, turning from evil, joining the fellowship of the redeemed, and showing forth the obedience of faith in word and deed. When we who once were God's enemies are reconciled with God through Christ, we also experience reconciliation with others, especially within the church. In baptism we publicly testify to our salvation and pledge allegiance to the one true God and to the people of God, the church. As we experience grace and the new birth, we are adopted into the family of God and become more and more transformed into the image of Christ. We thus respond in faith to Christ and seek to walk faithfully in the way of Christ.[37]
Traditionally, Mennonites sought to continue the beliefs of early Christianity and thus practice the lovefeast (which includes footwashing, the holy kiss and communion), headcovering, nonresistance, the sharing of possessions and nonconformity to the world; these things are heavily emphasized in Old Order Mennonite and Conservative Mennonite denominations.[38][39][40]
Seven ordinances have been taught in many traditional Mennonite churches, which include "baptism, communion, footwashing, marriage, anointing with oil, the holy kiss, and the prayer covering."[6]
In 1911, the Mennonite church in the Netherlands (Doopsgezinde Kerk) was the first Dutch church to have a female pastor authorized; she was Anne Zernike.[41]
There is a wide scope of worship, doctrine and traditions among Mennonites today. This section shows the main types of Mennonites as seen from North America. It is far from a specific study of all Mennonite classifications worldwide but it does show a somewhat representative sample of the complicated classifications within the Mennonite faith worldwide.
Moderate Mennonites include the largest denominations, the Mennonite Brethren and the Mennonite Church. In most forms of worship and practice, they differ very little from many Protestant congregations. There is no special form of dress and no restrictions on use of technology. Worship styles vary greatly between different congregations. There is no formal liturgy; services typically consist of singing, scripture reading, prayer and a sermon. Some churches prefer hymns and choirs; others make use of contemporary Christian music with electronic instruments. Mennonite congregations are self-supporting and appoint their own ministers. There is no requirement for ministers to be approved by the denomination, and sometimes ministers from other denominations will be appointed. A small sum, based on membership numbers, is paid to the denomination, which is used to support central functions such as the publication of newsletters and interactions with other denominations and other countries.
The distinguishing characteristics of moderate Mennonite churches tend to be ones of emphasis rather than rule. There is an emphasis on peace, community and service. However, members do not live in a separate community—they participate in the general community as "salt and light" to the world (Matthew 5:13,14). The main elements of Menno Simons' doctrine are retained but in a moderated form. Banning is rarely practiced and would, in any event, have much less effect than in those denominations where the community is more tightly knit. Excommunication can occur and was notably applied by the Mennonite Brethren to members who joined the military during the Second World War. Service in the military is generally not permitted, but service in the legal profession or law enforcement is acceptable. Outreach and help to the wider community at home and abroad is encouraged. The Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) is a leader in foreign aid provision.
Traditionally, very modest dress was expected, particularly in Conservative Mennonite circles. As the Mennonite population has become urbanized and more integrated into the wider culture, this visible difference has disappeared outside of Conservative Mennonite groups.
The Reformed Mennonite Church, with members in the United States and Canada, represents the first division in the original North American Mennonite body. Called the "First Keepers of the Old Way" by author Stephen Scott, the Reformed Mennonite Church formed in the very early 19th century. Reformed Mennonites see themselves as true followers of Menno Simons' teachings and of the teachings of the New Testament. They have no church rules, but they rely solely on the Bible as their guide. They insist on strict separation from all other forms of worship and dress in conservative plain garb that preserves 18th century Mennonite details. However, they refrain from forcing their Mennonite faith on their children, allow their children to attend public schools, and have permitted the use of automobiles. They are notable for being the church of Milton S. Hershey's mother and famous for the long and bitter ban of Robert Bear, a Pennsylvania farmer who rebelled against what he saw as dishonesty and disunity in the leadership.
The Church of God in Christ, Mennonite, a group often called Holdeman Mennonites after their founder John Holdeman, was founded from a schism in 1859.[42] They emphasize Evangelical conversion and strict church discipline. They stay separate from other Mennonite groups because of their emphasis on the one-true-church doctrine and their use of avoidance toward their own excommunicated members. The Holdeman Mennonites do not believe that the use of modern technology is a sin in itself, but they discourage too intensive a use of the Internet and avoid television, cameras and radio.[43] The group had 24,400 baptized members in 2013.[44]
Old Order Mennonites cover several distinct groups. Some groups use horse and buggy for transportation and speak German while others drive cars and speak English. What most Old Orders share in common is conservative doctrine, dress, and traditions, common roots in 19th-century and early 20th-century schisms, and a refusal to participate in politics and other so-called "sins of the world". Most Old Order groups also school their children in Mennonite-operated schools.
- Horse and Buggy Old Order Mennonites came from the main series of Old Order schisms that began in 1872 and ended in 1901 in Ontario, Pennsylvania, and the U.S. Midwest, as conservative Mennonites fought the radical changes that the influence of 19th century American Revivalism had on Mennonite worship. Most Horse and Buggy Old Order Mennonites allow the use of tractors for farming, although some groups insist on steel-wheeled tractors to prevent tractors from being used for road transportation. Like the Stauffer or Pike Mennonites (origin 1845 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania), the Groffdale Conference, and the Old Order Mennonite Conference of Ontario, they stress separation from the world, excommunication, and the wearing of plain clothes. Some Old Order Mennonite groups are unlike the Stauffer or Pike Mennonites in that their form of the ban is less severe because the ex-communicant is not shunned, and is therefore not excluded from the family table, shunned by their spouse, or cut off from business dealings.
- Automobile Old Order Mennonites, also known as Weaverland Conference Mennonites (having their origins in the Weaverland District of the Lancaster Conference—also calling "Horning"), or Wisler Mennonites in the U.S. Midwest, or the Markham-Waterloo Mennonite Conference having its origins from the Old Order Mennonites of Ontario, Canada, also evolved from the main series of Old Order schisms from 1872 to 1901. They often share the same meeting houses with, and adhere to almost identical forms of Old Order worship as their Horse and Buggy Old Order brethren with whom they parted ways in the early 20th century. Although this group began using cars in 1927, the cars were required to be plain and painted black. The largest group of Automobile Old Orders are still known today as "Black Bumper" Mennonites because some members still paint their chrome bumpers black.
Stauffer Mennonites, or Pike Mennonites, represent one of the first and most conservative forms of North American Horse and Buggy Mennonites. They were founded in 1845, following conflicts about how to discipline children and spousal abuse by a few Mennonite Church members. They almost immediately began to split into separate churches themselves. Today these groups are among the most conservative of all Swiss Mennonites outside the Amish. They stress strict separation from "the world", adhere to "strict withdrawal from and shunning of apostate and separated members", forbid and limit cars and technology and wear plain clothing.
Conservative Mennonites are generally considered those Mennonites who maintain somewhat conservative dress, although carefully accepting other technology. They are not a unified group and are divided into various independent conferences and fellowships such as the Eastern Pennsylvania Mennonite Church Conference. Despite the rapid changes that precipitated the Old Order schisms in the last quarter of the 19th century, most Mennonites in the United States and Canada retained a core of traditional beliefs based on a literal interpretation of the New Testament scriptures as well as more external "plain" practices into the beginning of the 20th century. However, disagreements in the United States and Canada between conservative and progressive (i.e. less emphasis on literal interpretation of scriptures) leaders began in the first half of the 20th century and continue to some extent today.
Following World War II, a conservative movement emerged from scattered separatist groups as a reaction to the Mennonite churches drifting away from their historical traditions. "Plain" became passé as open criticisms of traditional beliefs and practices broke out in the 1950s and 1960s.[citation needed] The first conservative withdrawals from the progressive group began in the 1950s. These withdrawals continue to the present day in what is now the growing Conservative Movement formed from Mennonite schisms and from combinations with progressive Amish groups. While moderate and progressive Mennonite congregations have dwindled in size, the Conservative Movement congregations continue to exhibit considerable growth.[citation needed] Other conservative Mennonite groups descended from the former Amish-Mennonite churches which split, like the Wisler Mennonites, from the Old Order Amish in the latter part of the 19th century. (The Wisler Mennonites are a grouping descended from the Old Mennonite Church.) Other Conservative Mennonite churches descended from more recent groups that have left the Amish, like the Beachy Amish or the Tennessee Brotherhood Churches.
In North America, there are structures and traditions taught as in the Confession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective[45] of Mennonite Church Canada and Mennonite Church USA.
Many Progressive Mennonite churches allow LGBTQ+ members to worship as church members. In some more moderate congregations and conferences, people who identify as LGBTQ+ have been banned from membership, and leading worship. The Germantown Mennonite Church in Germantown, Pennsylvania is one example of such a progressive Mennonite church.[46]
Most progressive Mennonite Churches place a great emphasis on the Mennonite tradition's teachings on pacifism and non-violence.[47] Some progressive Mennonite Churches are part of moderate Mennonite denominations (such as the Mennonite Church USA) while others are independent congregations.
Sexuality, marriage, and family mores
[edit]Most Mennonite denominations hold a conservative position on homosexuality.[48]
The Brethren Mennonite Council for LGBT Interests was founded in 1976 in the United States and has member churches of different denominations in the United States and Canada.[48]
The Mennonite Church Canada leaves the choice to each church for same-sex marriage.[49]
The Mennonite Church in the Netherlands and the Mennonite Church USA which had 62,000 members in 2021, about 12% of American Mennonites,[50] permit same-sex marriage.[51][52]
Russian Mennonites
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (January 2022) |
The "Russian Mennonites" (German: "Russlandmennoniten")[53] today are descended from Dutch Anabaptists, who came from the Netherlands and started around 1530 to settle around Danzig and in West Prussia, where they lived for about 250 years. Starting in 1791 they established colonies in the south-west of the Russian Empire and beginning in 1854 also in Volga region and Orenburg Governorate. Their ethno-language is Plautdietsch, a Germanic dialect of the East Low German group, with some Dutch admixture. Today, many traditional Russian Mennonites use Standard German in church and for reading and writing.
In the 1770s Catherine the Great of the Russian Empire acquired a great deal of land north of the Black Sea (in present-day Ukraine) following the Russo-Turkish War and the takeover of the Ottoman vassal, the Crimean Khanate. Russian government officials invited Mennonites living in the Kingdom of Prussia to farm the Ukrainian steppes depopulated by Tatar raids in exchange for religious freedom and military exemption. Over the years Mennonite farmers and businesses were very successful.
In 1854, according to the new Russian government official invitation, Mennonites from Prussia established colonies in Russia's Volga region, and later in Orenburg Governorate (Neu Samara Colony).
Between 1874 and 1880 some 16,000 Mennonites of approximately 45,000 left Russia. About nine thousand departed for the United States (mainly Kansas and Nebraska) and seven thousand for Canada (mainly Manitoba). In the 1920s, Russian Mennonites from Canada started to migrate to Latin America (Mexico and Paraguay), soon followed by Mennonite refugees from the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Further migrations of these Mennonites led to settlements in Peru, Brazil, Uruguay, Belize, Bolivia and Argentina.
By the beginning of the 20th century, the Mennonites in Russia owned large agricultural estates and some had become successful as industrial entrepreneurs in the cities, employing wage labor. After the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the Russian Civil War (1917–1921), all of these farms (whose owners were called Kulaks) and enterprises were expropriated by local peasants or the Soviet government. Beyond expropriation, Mennonites suffered severe persecution during the course of the Civil War, at the hands of workers, the Bolsheviks and, particularly, the Anarcho-Communists of Nestor Makhno, who considered the Mennonites to be privileged foreigners of the upper class and targeted them. During expropriation, hundreds of Mennonite men, women and children were murdered in these attacks.[54] After the Ukrainian–Soviet War and the takeover of Ukraine by the Soviet Bolsheviks, people who openly practiced religion were in many cases imprisoned by the Soviet government. This led to a wave of Mennonite emigration to the Americas (U.S., Canada and Paraguay).
When the German army invaded the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941 during World War II, many in the Mennonite community perceived them as liberators from the communist regime under which they had suffered. Many Russian Mennonites actively collaborated with the Nazis, including in the rounding up and extermination of their Jewish neighbors, although some also resisted them.[55][56][57] When the tide of war turned, many of the Mennonites fled with the German army back to Germany where they were accepted as Volksdeutsche. The Soviet government believed that the Mennonites had "collectively collaborated" with the Germans. After the war, many Mennonites in the Soviet Union were forcibly relocated to Siberia and Kazakhstan. Many were sent to gulags as part of the Soviet program of mass internal deportations of various ethnic groups whose loyalty was seen as questionable. Many German-Russian Mennonites who lived to the east (not in Ukraine) were deported to Siberia before the German army's invasion and were also often placed in labor camps. In the decades that followed, as the Soviet regime became less brutal, a number of Mennonites returned to Ukraine and Western Russia where they had formerly lived. In the 1990s the governments of Kazakhstan, Russia and Ukraine gave these people the opportunity to emigrate, and the vast majority emigrated to Germany. The Russian Mennonite immigrants in Germany from the 1990s outnumber the pre-1989 community of Mennonites by three to one.
By 2015, the majority of Russian Mennonites and their descendants live in Latin America, Germany and Canada.
The world's most conservative Mennonites (in terms of culture and technology) are the Mennonites affiliated with the Lower and Upper Barton Creek Colonies in Belize. Lower Barton is inhabited by Plautdietsch speaking Russian Mennonites, whereas Upper Barton Creek is mainly inhabited by Pennsylvania Dutch language-speaking Mennonites from North America. Neither group uses motors or paint.[58]
North America
[edit]Persecution and the search for employment forced Mennonites out of the Netherlands eastward to Germany in the 17th century. As Quaker Evangelists moved into Germany they received a sympathetic audience among the larger of these German-Mennonite congregations around Krefeld, Altona, Hamburg, Gronau and Emden.[59] It was among this group of Quakers and Mennonites, living under ongoing discrimination, that William Penn solicited settlers for his new colony. The first permanent settlement of Mennonites in the American colonies consisted of one Mennonite family and twelve Mennonite-Quaker[60] families of German extraction who arrived from Krefeld, Germany, in 1683 and settled in Germantown, Pennsylvania. Among these early settlers was William Rittenhouse, a lay minister and owner of the first American paper mill. Jacob Gottschalk was the first bishop of this Germantown congregation. Four members of that early group of Mennonites and Mennonite-Quaker, Francis Daniel Pastorius, Abraham op den Graeff, Derick op den Graeff (both cousins to William Penn) and Garret Hendericks signed the first formal protest against slavery in the United States in 1688. The treatise was addressed to slave-holding Quakers in an effort to persuade them to change their ways.[61]
In the early 18th century, 100,000 Germans from the Palatinate emigrated to Pennsylvania, where they became known collectively as the Pennsylvania Dutch (from the Anglicization of Deutsch, which now means German but used to mean West Germanic). The Palatinate region had been repeatedly overrun by the French in religious wars, and Queen Anne had invited the Germans to go to the British colonies. Of these immigrants, around 2,500 were Mennonites and 500 were Amish.[62] This group settled farther west than the first group, choosing less expensive land in the Lancaster area. The oldest Mennonite meetinghouse in the United States is the Hans Herr House in West Lampeter Township.[63] A member of this second group, Christopher Dock, authored Pedagogy, the first American monograph on education. Today, Mennonites also reside in Kishacoquillas Valley (also known as Big Valley), a valley in Huntingdon and Mifflin counties in Pennsylvania.
During Colonial America, Mennonites were distinguished from other Pennsylvania Germans in three ways:[64] their opposition to the American Revolutionary War in which other German settlers participated on both sides; their resistance to public education; and their disapproval of religious revivalism. Contributions of Mennonites during their period include the idea of separation of church and state and opposition to slavery.
From 1812 to 1860, another wave of Mennonite immigrants settled farther west in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Missouri. These Swiss-German speaking Mennonites, along with Amish, came from Switzerland and Alsace-Lorraine, along with the Amish of northern New York State, formed the nucleus of the Apostolic Christian Church in the United States.
There were also Mennonite settlements in Canada from those who emigrated there chiefly from the United States (Upstate New York, Maryland, and Pennsylvania):
- Niagara region (Bertie, Willoughby, and Humberstone townships), Ontario c. 1780s–1790s Archived 11 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- St. Jacobs, Ontario c.1819
- Kitchener, Ontario/Waterloo, Ontario c. 1800s
- Cambridge, Ontario c. 1830s
- Markham, Ontario, c. 1800–1820s
- Stouffville, Ontario c. 1803–1805
According to a 2017 report,[65]
"there are two basic strains of Mennonites in Canada: the Swiss-South German Mennonites came via Pennsylvania, and the Dutch-North German Mennonites came via Russia (Ukraine). In the late 1700s and early 1800s "Swiss" Mennonites from Pennsylvania settled in southern Ontario. In the 1870s, a large group of "Russian" Mennonites from Ukraine moved to southern Manitoba. Further waves of "Russian" Mennonites came to Canada in the 1920s and 1940s". In the last 50 years, Mennonites have been coming to Canada from Mexico.
During the 1880s, smaller Mennonite groups settled as far west as California, especially around the Paso Robles area.[66][67]
Old Order Mennonites and Amish are often grouped together in the popular press. That is incorrect, according to a 2017 report by Canadian Mennonite magazine:[65]
The customs of Old Order Mennonites, the Amish communities and Old Colony Mennonites have a number of similarities, but the cultural differences are significant enough so that members of one group would not feel comfortable moving to another group. The Old Order Mennonites and Amish have the same European roots and the language spoken in their homes is the same German dialect. Old Colony Mennonites use Low German, a different German dialect.
Moderate to progressive Mennonites
[edit]"Old" Mennonite Church (MC)
[edit]The Swiss-German Mennonites who immigrated to North America in the 18th and 19th centuries and settled first in Pennsylvania, then across the midwestern states (initially Ohio, Indiana, and Kansas), are the root of the former Mennonite Church denomination (MC), colloquially called the "Old Mennonite Church". This denomination had offices in Elkhart, Indiana, and was the most populous progressive Mennonite denomination before merging with the General Conference Mennonite Church (GCMC) in 2002.
Mennonite Brethren Church
[edit]The Mennonite Brethren Church was established among Plautdietsch-speaking Russian Mennonites in 1860, and has congregations in more than 20 countries, representing about 500,000 members as of 2019.
Mennonite Church USA
[edit]The Mennonite Church USA (MCUSA) and the Mennonite Church Canada are the resulting denominations of the 2002 merger of the (General Assembly) Mennonite Church and the General Conference Mennonite Church. Total membership in Mennonite Church USA denominations decreased from about 133,000, before the merger in 1998, to a total membership of 120,381 in the Mennonite Church USA in 2001.[68] In 2013, membership had fallen to 97,737 members in 839 congregations.[69] In 2016, it had fallen to 78,892 members after the withdrawal of the Lancaster Mennonite Conference.[70] In May 2021 the main page of their website stated a membership of about 62,000.[71]
Pennsylvania remains the hub of the denomination but there are also large numbers of members in Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, and Illinois.[72]
In 1983, the General Assembly of the Mennonite Church met jointly with the General Conference Mennonite Church in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in celebration of 300 years in the Americas. Beginning in 1989, a series of consultations, discussions, proposals, and sessions (and a vote in 1995 in favor of merger) led to the unification of these two major North American Mennonite bodies into one denomination organized on two fronts – the Mennonite Church USA and the Mennonite Church Canada. The merger was "finalized" at a joint session in St. Louis, Missouri in 1999, and the Canadian branch moved quickly ahead. The United States branch did not complete their organization until the meeting in Nashville, Tennessee in 2001, which became effective 1 February 2002.
The merger of 1999–2002 at least partially fulfilled the desire of the founders of the General Conference Mennonite Church to create an organization under which all Mennonites could unite. Yet not all Mennonites favored the merger. The Alliance of Mennonite Evangelical Congregations represents one expression of the disappointment with the merger and the events that led up to it.
Mennonite Church Canada
[edit]Mennonite Church Canada is a conference of Mennonites in Canada, with head offices in Winnipeg, Manitoba. As of 2003, the body had about 35,000 members in 235 churches. Beginning in 1989, a series of consultations, discussions, proposals, and sessions led to the unification of two North American bodies (the Mennonite Church & General Conference Mennonite Church) and the related Canadian Conference of Mennonites in Canada into the Mennonite Church USA and the Mennonite Church Canada in 2000.
The organizational structure is divided into five regional conferences. Denominational work is administered through a board elected by the delegates to the annual assembly. MC Canada participates in the Canadian Council of Churches, the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, and the Mennonite World Conference.
Conservative Mennonites
[edit]Conservative Mennonites include numerous groups that identify with the more conservative or traditional element among Mennonite or Anabaptist groups but not necessarily Old Order groups. The majority of Conservative Mennonite churches historically has an Amish and not a Mennonite background. They emerged mostly from the middle group between the Old Order Amish and Amish Mennonites. For more, see Amish Mennonite: Division 1850–1878.[73]
Those identifying with this group drive automobiles, have telephones and use electricity, and some may have personal computers. They also have Sunday school, hold revival meetings, and operate their own Christian schools/parochial schools.
According to a University of Waterloo report, "of the estimated 59,000 Mennonites in Ontario, only about twenty percent are members of conservative groups". The same report estimated that "there are about 175,000 Mennonites in Canada".[74]
Old Colony Mennonites
[edit]Old Colony Mennonites are conservative Mennonite groups who are the majority of German speaking so-called Russian Mennonites that originated in the Chortitza Colony in Russia, including the Chortitza, Reinlander, and Sommerfelder groups, which are now most common in Latin America and Canada. There are some 400,000 Russian Mennonites in the world, including children and not yet baptized young people. They should not be confused with Old Order Mennonites with whom they have some similarities.
Old Order Mennonites
[edit]The Old Order Mennonite are living a lifestyle similar to or a bit more liberal than the Old Order Amish. There were more than 27,000 adult, baptized members of Old Order Mennonites in North America and Belize in 2008/9. The total population of Old Order Mennonites groups including children and adults not yet baptized normally is two to three times larger than the number of baptized, adult members, which indicates that the population of Old Order Mennonites was roughly between 60,000 and 80,000 in 2008/9.
Alternative service
[edit]During World War II, Mennonite conscientious objectors were given the options of noncombatant military service, serving in the medical or dental corps under military control, or working in parks and on roads under civilian supervision. Over 95% chose the latter and were placed in Alternative Service camps.[75] Initially the men worked on road building, forestry and firefighting projects. After May 1943, as a labor shortage developed within the nation, men were shifted into agriculture, education and industry. The 10,700 Canadian objectors were mostly Mennonites (63%) and Doukhobors (20%).[76]
In the United States, Civilian Public Service (CPS) provided an alternative to military service during World War II. From 1941 to 1947, 4,665 Mennonites, Amish and Brethren in Christ[77] were among nearly 12,000 conscientious objectors who performed work of national importance in 152 CPS camps throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. The draftees worked in areas such as soil conservation, forestry, fire fighting, agriculture, social services and mental health.
The CPS men served without wages and with minimal support from the federal government. The cost of maintaining the CPS camps and providing for the needs of the men was the responsibility of their congregations and families. Mennonite Central Committee coordinated the operation of the Mennonite camps. CPS men served longer than regular draftees, not being released until well past the end of the war. Initially skeptical of the program, government agencies learned to appreciate the men's service and requested more workers from the program. CPS made significant contributions to forest fire prevention, erosion and flood control, medical science and reform of the mental health system.
Schisms
[edit]Prior to emigration to America, Anabaptists in Europe were divided between those of Dutch/North German and Swiss/South German background. At first, the Dutch/North German group took their name from Menno Simons, who led them in their early years. Later the Swiss/South German group also adopted the name "Mennonites". A third group of early Anabaptists, mainly from south-east Germany and Austria were organized by Jakob Hutter and became the Hutterites. The vast majority of Anabaptists of Swiss/South German ancestry today lives in the US and Canada, while the largest group of Dutch/North German Anabaptists are the Russian Mennonites, who live today mostly in Latin America.
A trickle of North German Mennonites began the migration to America in 1683, followed by a much larger migration of Swiss/South German Mennonites beginning in 1707.[78] The Amish are an early split from the Swiss/South German, that occurred in 1693. Over the centuries many Amish individuals and whole churches left the Amish and became Mennonites again.
After immigration to America, many of the early Mennonites split from the main body of North American Mennonites and formed their own separate and distinct churches. The first schism in America occurred in 1778 when Bishop Christian Funk's support of the American Revolution led to his excommunication and the formation of a separate Mennonite group known as Funkites. In 1785 the Orthodox Reformed Mennonite Church was formed, and other schisms occurred into the 21st century. Many of these churches were formed as a response to deep disagreements about theology, doctrine, and church discipline as evolution both inside and outside the Mennonite faith occurred. Many of the modern churches are descended from those groups that abandoned traditional Mennonite practices.
Larger groups of Dutch/North German Mennonites came to North America from the Russian Empire after 1873, especially to Kansas and Manitoba. While the more progressive element of these Mennonites assimilated into mainstream society, the more conservative element emigrated to Latin America. Since then there has been a steady flow of Mennonite emigrants from Latin America to North America.[citation needed]
These historical schisms have had an influence on creating the distinct Mennonite denominations, sometimes using mild or severe shunning to show its disapproval of other Mennonite groups.
Some expelled congregations were affiliated both with the Mennonite Church and the General Conference Mennonite Church. The latter did not expel the same congregations. When these two Mennonite denominations formally completed their merger in 2002 to become the new Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada denominations, it was still not clear, whether the congregations that were expelled from one denomination, yet included in the other, are considered to be "inside" or "outside" of the new merged denomination. Some Mennonite conferences have chosen to maintain such "disciplined" congregations as "associate" or "affiliate" congregations in the conferences, rather than to expel such congregations. In virtually every case, a dialogue continues between the disciplined congregations and the denomination, as well as their current or former conferences.[79]
Schools
[edit]Several Mennonite groups established schools, universities and seminaries.[80] Conservative groups, like the Holdeman, have not only their own schools, but their own curriculum and teaching staff (usually, but not exclusively, young unmarried women).
Ethnic Mennonites
[edit]Though Mennonites are a global denomination with church membership from Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas, certain Mennonite communities that are descended from émigrés from Switzerland and Russia bear the designation of ethnic Mennonites.[19]
In contemporary society, Mennonites are described either as a religious denomination with members of different ethnic origins,[81][82] or as both an ethnic group and a religious denomination. There is controversy among Mennonites about this issue, with some insisting that they are simply a religious group, while others argue that they form a distinct ethnic group.[83] Historians and sociologists have increasingly started to treat Mennonites as an ethno-religious group,[84] while others have begun to challenge that perception.[85] Discussion also exists as to the term "ethnic Mennonite"; conservative Mennonite groups, who speak Pennsylvania Dutch, Plautdietsch (Low German), or Bernese German fit well into the definition of an ethnic group, while more liberal groups and converts in developing countries do not.
List of Mennonites surnames
[edit]This is a list of surnames common among Mennonites in Canada originating (indirectly) from Russia, in descending frequency. The number in brackets indicates the number of places they are higher than on a 20-entry list of surnames of Mennonites in Canada originating (indirectly) from Russia. This list only includes surnames higher on the list concerning West Prussian Mennonites than on the list of surnames of Mennonites in Canada.[86]
- Penner (4)
- Wiens*
- Janzen (12)
- Enns (6)
- Janz*
- Froese*
- Regehr*
- Harder (8)
- Ewert*
- Pauls*
- Fast*
- Franz*
- Epp*
- Fieguth*
- Albrecht*
* name not on the 20-entry list
Surnames of Frisians include Abrahams, Arens, Behrends, Cornelius, Daniels, Dirksen, Doercksen, Frantzen, Goertzen, Gossen, Harms, Heinrichs, Jantzen, Pauls, Peters, Siemens, and Woelms.[87] Surnames that mostly occur in Frisian congregations include Adrian, Brandt, Buller, Caspar, Flaming, Hamm, Harms, Isaak, Kettler, Kliewer, Knels, Stobbe, Teus, Töws, and Toews;[88] additionally, Pauls,[89] Peters,[90] Unruh,[89] and Fransen and Schmidt.[89] Nickel also is a name mainly of Frisian Mennonites denomination.[91] Unger is a name in congregation of Frisian Mennonites denomination.[92] Foth/Vodt and Arentsen are most likely of Frisian congregations.[93]
Environmental impacts
[edit]
Across Latin America, Mennonite colonization has been seen as a driver of environmental damage associated with land clearance in countries including Belize, Bolivia, Colombia, Mexico, Paraguay,[21] and Peru,[20] while indigenous peoples in Suriname have expressed similar concerns.[94] Since the early- to mid-twentieth century, Mennonite colonization has brought a characteristic, religious approach to cultivation (not generally found in either peasant or corporate farming) and the potential to impact a range of different biomes.[20] Mennonite farmers have cleared large areas of wilderness (greater than the size of the Netherlands) across major transnational regions of Latin America such as the Gran Chaco, the Chiquitano, and the Amazon rainforest.[20] In the process, they have unintentionally devastated many precious natural habitats, often leading to conflict with indigenous peoples.[20][21] Their commercial success in transforming previously wild lands to make way for soybean production and cattle ranching appears to have provided inspiration for others, including some conglomerates that have reproduced the model on a massive scale.[21] While habitat destruction by Mennonite colonies has been on a smaller scale overall than that recently inflicted by a few very large corporations, the environmental damage is increasingly being contested,[20] sometimes in the form of legal challenges.[95]
The Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP), conducted by the Amazon Conservation Association, has identified Mennonite colonization as a new driver of deforestation in Bolivia and Peru.[22] In Peru, MAAP has identified over 7,000 hectares (27 square miles) of rainforest lost to deforestation between 2017 and 2023 following the arrival of Mennonite settlers,[95] and their colonies have been charged with illegal deforestation.[94][96]
On the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico, agricultural expansion following Mennonite settlement has been a driver of deforestation of the native tropical rainforest.[97][98] In July 2018, Mexican Mennonites were fined $500,000 for unauthorized logging on 1,445 hectares (5½ square miles) of forested ejidos (shared ownership lands) in Quintana Roo.[98]
Controversies
[edit]As of 2007, the Quebec government imposed a standard curriculum on all schools (public and private). While private schools may add optional material to the compulsory curriculum, they may not replace it. The Quebec curriculum was unacceptable to the parents of the only Mennonite school in the province.[99] They said they would leave Quebec after the Education Ministry threatened legal actions. The province threatened to invoke youth protection services if the Mennonite children were not registered with the Education Ministry; they either had to be home-schooled using the government-approved material, or attend a "sanctioned" school. The local population and its mayor supported[100] the local Mennonites. The Evangelical Fellowship of Canada wrote that year to the Quebec government to express its concerns[101] about this situation. By September 2007, some Mennonite families had already left Quebec.[102]
Between 2005 and 2009, more than 100 girls and women in the Manitoba Colony of Bolivia were raped at night in their homes by a group of colony men who sedated them with animal anesthetic.[103] Girls and women, including elderly women and relatives to the perpetrators, reported these attacks, but were at first dismissed as "wild female imagination", or else attributed to ghosts or demons. Eventually a group of colony men were caught in the act. The colony elders, deciding that the case was too difficult to handle themselves, called local police to take the perpetrators into custody in 2011.[104] The youngest victim was three years old, and the oldest was 65.[105] The offenders used a type of gas used by veterinarians to sedate animals during medical procedures. Despite long custodial sentences for the convicted men, an investigation in 2013 reported continuing cases of similar assaults and other sexual abuses. Canadian author Miriam Toews has made these crimes the center of her 2018 novel Women Talking.[106][107][108] Connections between farmers and Mexican drug cartels in the state of Chihuahua have seen their parallels across Mexico throughout the Mexican drug war.[109]
Sexual misconduct cases
[edit]Service projects
[edit]The Mennonite Disaster Service, based in North America, is a volunteer network of Anabaptist churches which provide both immediate and long-term responses to hurricanes, floods, and other disasters in the U.S. and Canada.[110]
Mennonite Central Committee (MCC), founded on 27 September 1920, in Chicago, Illinois,[111] provides disaster relief around the world alongside their long-term international development programs. In 1972, Mennonites in Altona, Manitoba, established the MCC Thrift Shops[112] which has grown to become a worldwide source of assistance to the needy.[113]
Since the latter part of the 20th century, some Mennonite groups have become more actively involved with peace and social justice issues, helping to found Christian Peacemaker Teams and Mennonite Conciliation Service.[114]
Membership
[edit]According to a 2018 census by the Mennonite World Conference (MWC), it has 107 member denominations in 58 countries, and 1.47 million baptized members.[115] Their membership in 2023 included 108 denominations from 60 countries, and around 1.45 million baptized members in over 10,180 congregations. As of 2023, 84% of baptized members in MWC member churches were African, Asian or Latin American, and 16% were located in Europe and North America.[116]
Africa has the highest membership growth rate by far, with an increase of 10% to 12% every year, particularly in Ethiopia due to new conversions. African Mennonite churches underwent a dramatic 228% increase in membership during the 1980s and 1990s, attracting thousands of new converts in Tanzania, Kenya, and the Congo.[117] Programs were also founded in Botswana and Swaziland during the 1960s.[118] Mennonite organizations in South Africa, initially stifled under apartheid due to the Afrikaner government's distrust of foreign pacifist churches, have expanded substantially since 1994.[118] In recognition of the dramatic increase in the proportion of African adherents, the Mennonite World Conference held its assembly in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, in 2003.[117]
In Latin America growth is not as high as in Africa, but strong because of the high birth rates of traditional Mennonites of German ancestry. Growth in Mennonite membership is steady and has outpaced total population growth in North America, the Asia/Pacific region and Caribbean region. Europe has seen a slow and accelerating decline in Mennonite membership since about 1980.[119][120]
Organization worldwide
[edit]The most basic unit of organization among Mennonites is the church. There are hundreds or thousands of Mennonite churches and groups, many of which are separate from all others. Some churches are members of regional or area conferences. And some regional or area conferences are affiliated with larger national or international conferences. There is no single world authority on among Mennonites, however there is a Mennonite World Committee (MWC) includes Mennonites from 60 countries.[116] The MWC does not make binding decisions on behalf of members but coordinates Mennonite causes aligning with the MWC's shared convictions.
For the most part, there is a host of independent Mennonite churches along with a myriad of separate conferences with no particular responsibility to any other group. Independent churches can contain as few as fifty members or as many as 20,000 members. Similar size differences occur among separate conferences. Worship, church discipline and lifestyles vary widely between progressive, moderate, conservative, Old Order and orthodox Mennonites in a vast panoply of distinct, independent, and widely dispersed classifications. There is no central authority that claims to speak for all Mennonites, as the 20th century passed, cultural distinctiveness between Mennonite groups has decreased.[121]
The largest Mennonite/Anabaptist groups are:
- Mennonite Brethren (426,581 members in 2010 worldwide)[122]
- Old Order Amish (383,565 members in 2023 worldwide)[123]
- Meserete Kristos Church in Ethiopia (295,500 members in 2017; over 500,000 attendance)[124]
- Old Colony Mennonite Church (120,000 in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Bolivia, Paraguay, Belize and Argentina)
- Communauté Mennonite au Congo (86,600 members)[125]
- Old Order Mennonites (60,000 to 80,000 members in the U.S., Canada and Belize)
- Mennonite Church USA (about 62,000 members in the United States)[126]
- Kanisa La Mennonite Tanzania (50,000 members in 240 congregations)
- Conservative Mennonites (30,000 members in over 500 U.S. churches)[127]
- Mennonite Church Canada (26,000 members in 2018)[128]
- Church of God in Christ, Mennonite (24,400 members, of whom 14,804 (2013 data) were in U.S., 5,081 in Canada, and the remainder in Africa, Asia, Central and South America, the Caribbean, and Europe)[44]
Organization: North America
[edit]In 2015, there were 538,839 baptized members organized into 41 bodies in the United States, according to the Mennonite World Conference.[11] The largest group of that number is the Old Order Amish. According to the Association of Religion Data Archives, in 2001 there were 80,820 Old Order Amish church members living in the United States.[129] The U.S. Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches comprises 34,500 members.[122] 27,000 are part of a larger group known collectively as Old Order Mennonites.[130][131] Another 78,892 of that number are from the Mennonite Church USA.[70]
Total membership in Mennonite Church USA denominations decreased from about 133,000, before the MC-GC merger in 1998, to about 114,000 after the merger in 2003. In 2016 it had fallen to under 79,000. Membership of the Mennonite Church USA is on the decline.[70][120]
Canada had 143,720 Mennonites in 16 organized bodies as of 2015.[11] Of that number, the Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches had 37,508 baptized members[122] and the Mennonite Church Canada had 31,000 members.[132]
As of 2012, there were an estimated 100,000 Old Colony Mennonites in Mexico.[133][134] These Mennonites descend from a mass migration in the 1920s of roughly 6,000 Old Colony Mennonites from the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In 1921, a Canadian Mennonite delegation arriving in Mexico received a privilegium, a promise of non-interference, from the Mexican government. This guarantee of many freedoms was the impetus that created the two original Old Colony settlements near Patos Nuevo Ideal, Durango, Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua and La Honda, Zacatecas.[135]
On the other hand, the Mennonite World Conference cites only 33,881 Mennonites organized into 14 bodies in Mexico.[11]
Organization: Africa
[edit]Organization: Europe
[edit]Germany has the largest contingent of Mennonites in Europe. The Mennonite World Conference counts 47,202 baptized members within 7 organized bodies in 2015.[11] The largest group is the Bruderschaft der Christengemeinde in Deutschland (Mennonite Brethren), which had 20,000 members in 2010.[122] Another such body is the Union of German Mennonite Congregations or Vereinigung der Deutschen Mennonitengemeinden. Founded in 1886, it has 27 Congregations with 5,724 members and is part of the larger "Arbeitsgemeinschaft Mennonitischer Gemeinden in Deutschland" or AMG (Assembly/Council of Mennonite Churches in Germany),[136] which claims 40,000 overall members from various groups. Other AMG member groups include: Rußland-Deutschen Mennoniten, Mennoniten-Brüdergemeinden(Independent Mennonite Brethren congregations), WEBB-Gemeinden, and the Mennonitischen Heimatmission.[137] However, not all German Mennonites belong to this larger AMG body. Upwards of 40,000 Mennonites emigrated from Russia to Germany starting in the 1970s.[136]
The Mennonite presence remaining in the Netherlands, Algemene Doopsgezinde Societeit or ADS (translated as General Mennonite Society), maintains a seminary, as well as organizing relief, peace, and mission work, the latter primarily in Central Java and New Guinea. They have 121 congregations with 10,200 members according to the World Council of Churches,[18] although the Mennonite World Conference cites only 7680 members.[11]
Switzerland had 1800 Mennonites belonging to 14 Congregations which are part of the Konferenz der Mennoniten der Schweiz (Alttäufer), Conférence mennonite suisse (Anabaptiste) (Swiss Mennonite Conference).[138]
In 2015, there were 2078 Mennonites in France. The country's 32 autonomous Mennonite congregations have formed the Association des Églises Évangéliques Mennonites de France.[139]
While Ukraine was once home to tens of thousands of Mennonites, in 2015 the number totalled just 499. They are organized among three denominations: Association of Mennonite Brethren Churches of Ukraine, Church of God in Christ, Mennonite (Ukraine), and Evangelical Mennonite Churches of Ukraine (Beachy Amish Church – Ukraine).[140]
The U.K. had but 326 members within two organized bodies as of 2015.[11] There is the Nationwide Fellowship Churches (UK) and the larger Brethren in Christ Church United Kingdom.[141] Additionally, there is the registered charity, The Mennonite Trust (formerly known as "London Mennonite Centre"), which seeks to promote understanding of Mennonite and Anabaptist practices and values.[142]
In popular culture
[edit]Mennonites have been portrayed in many areas of popular culture, especially literature, film, and television.[143] Notable novels about or written by Mennonites include A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews, Peace Shall Destroy Many by Rudy Wiebe, The Salvation of Yasch Siemens by Armin Wiebe, The Russlander by Sandra Birdsell, A Year of Lesser by David Bergen, A Dream of a Woman by Casey Plett, and Once Removed by Andrew Unger.[144] Rhoda Janzen's memoir Mennonite in a Little Black Dress was a best-seller.[144] In 1975 Victor Davies composed the Mennonite Piano Concerto and in 1977 composer Glenn Gould featured Manitoba Mennonites in his experimental radio documentary The Quiet in the Land, part three of his Solitude Trilogy.[145] In the 1990s, photographer Larry Towell documented the lives of Canadian and Mexican Mennonites, subsequently published in a volume by Phaidon Press.[146] In 2007, Mexican director Carlos Reygadas directed Silent Light, the first ever feature film in the Russian Mennonite dialect of Plautdietsch.[147] Other films depicting Mennonites include I Propose We Never See Each Other Again After Tonight, as well as All My Puny Sorrows and the Oscar-winning Women Talking, both based on Miriam Toews novels. Mennonites have also been depicted on television, including the show Pure, and in episodes of Schitt's Creek, Letterkenny[148] and The Simpsons, which was created by Matt Groening, himself of Russian Mennonite descent.[149] Andrew Unger's satirical news website The Unger Review (formerly called The Daily Bonnet) pokes fun at Mennonite culture and traditions.[150][151]
See also
[edit]- Bible Mennonite Fellowship
- Bruderhof Communities
- Church of God in Christ, Mennonite
- Eastern Mennonite Missions
- Vincent Harding
- Guy Hershberger
- List of Mennonites
- Mennonite Church USA Archives
- Mennonite cuisine
- Mennonite denominations
- Mennonites in Argentina
- Mennonites in Belize
- Mennonites in Bolivia
- Mennonites in Mexico
- Mennonites in Paraguay
- Mennonites in Russia
- Mennonites in Uruguay
- Mennonite literature
- Mennonite settlements of Altai
- More-with-Less Cookbook
- Portrait of a Man in a Wide-Brimmed Hat
- Rot-Front, Kazakhstan
- Simple living
- Virginia Mennonite Missions
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Mennonite World Conference. World Directory, 2018. p. 58.
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- ^ a b c Mennonite World Conference. World Directory, 2018. p. 57.
- ^ Kraybill, Donald B. (12 September 2017). Eastern Mennonite University. Penn State University Press. p. 94. ISBN 9780271080581.
- ^ a b c Hartzler, Rachel Nafziger (30 April 2013). No Strings Attached: Boundary Lines in Pleasant Places: A History of Warren Street / Pleasant Oaks Mennonite Church. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-62189-635-7.
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There are educated, professionalized, affluent Mennonites, conservative Mennonites who still wear plain clothes, restrain education but drive cars and tractors, and use electricity, and there are Old Order Mennonites who differ from the Amish only by the absence of beards and the use of plain, austere church buildings instead of the Amish house church. Transportation is by horse and buggy.
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But Mennonites ... are from many places and diverse in terms of belief, drawing, historically, on European diasporic histories, and at present, negotiating a much broader variety of diasporic histories, perhaps especially in Asia (Indonesia, for example), Latin America (Colombia, Brazil, Mexico, among others) and Africa (Congo, for example). A subset of these groups of Mennonites--Swiss Mennonites and Russian Mennonites--sometimes identify or are identified as 'ethnic Mennonites'.
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Two hundred forty names appear on a list of November 1919 of those murdered in Zagradovka. In Borzenkovo in the village of Ebenfeld alone 63 persons were murdered, and in Steinbach of the same settlement 58 persons.
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it is in many ways, an option of last resort and it's something we only do when we think we have a critical threat to the community's safety and we need immediate action
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"MC USA's new, lower membership total is based on only 1,091 members from LMC"(Lancaster Mennonite Conference)
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Bibliography
[edit]- Penner, Nikolai (2009). The High German of Russian Mennonites in Ontario (PDF) (Thesis). Waterloo, Ontario, Canada: University of Waterloo. Archived (PDF) from the original on 31 August 2021. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
- Unruh, Benjamin Heinrich, ed. (1955). Die niederländisch-niederdeutschen Hintergründe der mennonitischen Ostwanderungen im 16., 18. und 19. Jahrhundert (in German).
Further reading
[edit]- Epp, Marlene Mennonites in Ontario. Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario, 2012. ISBN 0969604637
- Epp, Marlene Mennonite Women in Canada: A History (Winnipeg, University of Manitoba Press, 2008. xiii + 378 pp.) ISBN 9780887551826
- Epp, Marlene Women without Men: Mennonite Refugees of the Second World War. University of Toronto Press, 2000. ISBN 0802082688
- Epp, Maureen. Sound in the Lands: Mennonite Music Across Borders (Kitchener, ON: Pandora Press, 2011).ISBN 978-1926599199
- Gingerich, Melvin (1949), Service for Peace, A History of Mennonite Civilian Public Service, Mennonite Central Committee.ASIN B0007DXNN6
- Harder, Helmut and Miller, Larry, "Mennonite Engagement in International Ecumenical Conversations: Experiences, Perspectives, and Guiding Principles," Mennonite Quarterly Review 90(3) (2016), 345–71.
- Heisey, M. J. "'Mennonite Religion was a Family Religion': A Historiography," Archived 26 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Mennonite Studies (2005), Vol. 23 pp. 9–22.
- Hinojosa, Felipe (2014). Latino Mennonites: Civil Rights, Faith, and Evangelical Culture. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.ISBN 978-1421412832
- Horsch, James E. (Ed.) (1999), Mennonite Directory, Herald Press. ISBN 0836194543
- Kinberg, Clare. "Mennonites." om Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 3, Gale, 2014), pp. 171–182. Online
- Klassen, Pamela E. Going by the Moon and the Stars: Stories of Two Russian Mennonite Women. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1994. ISBN 0889202443
- Krahn, Cornelius, Gingerich, Melvin & Harms, Orlando (Eds.) (1955). The Mennonite Encyclopedia, Volume I, pp. 76–78. Mennonite Publishing House.ASIN B002Q3LGMU
- Kraybill, D. B. Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010).ISBN 978-0801896576
- Mennonite & Brethren in Christ World Directory 2003. Available On-line at MWC – World Directory
- Pannabecker, Samuel Floyd (1975), Open Doors: A History of the General Conference Mennonite Church, Faith and Life Press. ISBN 0873036360
- Miller Shearer, Tobin (2010). Daily Demonstrators: The Civil Rights Movement in Mennonite Homes and Sanctuaries. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 392. ISBN 978-0801897009.
- Scott, Stephen (1995), An Introduction to Old Order and Conservative Mennonite Groups, Good Books, ISBN 1561481017
- Smith, C. Henry (1981), Smith's Story of the Mennonites (5th ed. Faith and Life Press). ISBN 0873030605
- Van Braght, Thielman J. (1660), Martyrs Mirror (2nd English ed. Herald Press) ISBN 083611390X
External links
[edit]- Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society, in Pennsylvania Archived 12 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online (GAMEO) Archived 14 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- Global Anabaptist Wiki Archived 14 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- Mennonite World Conference Archived 26 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- Pilgrim Ministry: Conservative Mennonite church directory Archived 23 May 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- The Swiss Mennonite Cultural and Historical Association
- Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911. .
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