The
Mennonites are a group of
Christian Anabaptist
denominations named after the
Frisian
Menno Simons (1496–1561), who, through
his writings, articulated and thereby formalized the teachings of
earlier Swiss founders. The teachings of the Mennonites were
founded on their belief in both the mission and ministry of Jesus
Christ, which they held to with great conviction despite
persecution by the various Roman Catholic and Protestant states.
Rather than fight, the majority survived by fleeing to neighboring
states where ruling families were tolerant of their radical belief
in adult baptism. Over the years, Mennonites have become known as
one of the historic
peace
churches because of their commitment to
nonviolence.
There are about 1.5 million Mennonites worldwide as of 2006.
Mennonite congregations worldwide embody the full scope of
Mennonite practice from old fashioned
'plain' people to those who are
indistinguishable in dress and appearance from the general
population.
The largest populations of Mennonites are in
Canada
, Democratic Republic of Congo
and the United States
, but Mennonites can also be found in tight-knit
communities in at least 51 countries on six continents or scattered
amongst the populace of those countries. There are also a
significant number of Mennonites scattered throughout China.
There are
German Mennonite colonies in Argentina
, Belize
, Bolivia
, Brazil
, Mexico
and Paraguay
and there
remains a small congregation in the
Netherlands where Menno was born.
The Mennonite Disaster Service, based in
North America, provides both immediate and
long-term responses to
hurricanes,
floods, and other disasters. The
Mennonite Central Committee
provides disaster relief around the world alongside their long-term
international development programs. Other programs offer a variety
of relief efforts and services throughout the world.
In the last few decades some Mennonite groups have also become more
actively involved with
peace and
social justice issues, helping to found
Christian Peacemaker
Teams and Mennonite Conciliation Service.
Radical Reformation

Ulrich Zwingli
The early history of the Mennonites starts with the
Anabaptists in the German and Dutch-speaking
parts of central Europe. The German term is "Wiedertäufer" (that
is, Again-Baptists, or Anabaptists via the Greek
ana
[="again."]). These forerunners of modern Mennonites were part of
the broad reaction against the practices and theology of the
Roman Catholic Church known as
the
Protestant Reformation.
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 into the Roman Catholic Church. Other significant
theological views of the Mennonites developed in opposition to
Roman Catholic views or to the views of other Protestant reformers
like
Martin Luther and
Huldrych Zwingli.
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 in accordance with his teachings. At a small meeting
on January 21, 1525,
Conrad Grebel,
Felix Manz, and
George Blaurock, along with twelve others,
baptized each other. This meeting marks the beginning of the
Anabaptist movement. In the spirit of
the times, many radical groups followed, preaching any number of
ideas about hierarchy, 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 persecution, banishment, torture, and
sometimes executing them as
heretics.
Despite
heavy efforts of the state churches, the movement spread slowly
around Western Europe, primarily along the Rhine
. Many
of the earliest Anabaptist leaders were killed in an attempt to
purge Europe of the new sect. 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.
These
pacifist branches often survived by seeking refuge in neutral
cities or nations, such as Strasbourg
. Their safety, however, 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 very willingness to fight. This played a large part in the
evolution of Anabaptist theology.

Menno Simons
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.
Fragmentation and variation
During the sixteenth century, the Mennonites and other Anabaptists
were relentlessly
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 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. Persecution was still going on until 1710 in
various parts of Switzerland.
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 Schools
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 because of the
practical considerations of distance and, in some cases,
language.
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
upset the powerful state churches, princes would renege on
exemptions for military service, 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.

Mennonite churches blended into city
architecture to avoid offending the religious sensibilities of the
majority.
Doopsgezinde Gemeente, Amsterdam.
While Mennonites in
Colonial
America were enjoying a large degree of religious freedom,
their counterparts in Europe were in 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 (
nl:
Doopsgezinden) enjoyed a relatively high
degree of tolerance. The Mennonites would reclaim this land through
hard work , in exchange for exemption from mandatory military
service. However, once the land was arable again, this arrangement
would often change, and the persecution would begin again. Because
the land still needed to be tended, the ruler would not drive out
the Mennonites 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, and
they were forbidden from announcing the beginning of services with
the sound of a bell.
In addition, high taxes were enacted in exchange for both
continuing the military service exemption, and to keep the states'
best farmers from leaving. In some cases, the entire congregation
would give up their belongings to pay the tax to be allowed to
leave. If a member or family could not afford the tax, it was often
paid by others in the group.
A strong emphasis on "community" was developed under these
circumstances and continues to be typical of Mennonite churches. As
a result of frequently being required to give up many possessions
in order to retain individual freedoms, these Mennonites learned to
live very simply. This was reflected both in the home and at
church, where their dress and their buildings were plain. Even the
music at church, which was 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.
Jacob Amman and the Amish
In 1693
Jacob Amman led an effort to
reform the Mennonite church: to include
shunning (social avoidance of baptised members who
left the church), to hold communion more often, and other
differences. When the discussions fell through, Jacob and his
followers split from the Mennonite church. Amman's followers became
known as the
Amish. The acrimony between the
two groups was so severe that they reportedly refused to talk to
each other when they found themselves together on the same boat
sailing to America.
Russian Mennonites
In 1768
Catherine the Great of Russia
acquired a great deal of land north of the Black Sea
(in the present-day Ukraine) following a war with
the Turks. Russian government
officials 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. Over the years the
Mennonite farmers were very successful. By the beginning of the
20th century they owned large agricultural estates and were even
successful as industrial entrepreneurs in the cities. 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. Beyond
expropriation, Mennonites suffered
severe persecution during the course of the Civil War, at the hands
of both the
Bolsheviks and, particularly,
the anarchists of
Nestor Makhno who
saw Mennonites as privileged foreigners of the upper class and
targeted them. Hundreds of Mennonite men, women and children were
murdered in these attacks. After the war people who openly followed
religion were in many cases imprisoned. This led to a wave of
Russian Mennonite emigration to the Americas (U.S., Canada and
Paraguay).
When the German army invaded the Soviet Union in the summer of
1941, many in the Mennonite community saw them as liberators from
the communist regime under which they had suffered. When the tide
of war turned, many of the Mennonites fled with the German army
back to Germany where they were accepted as "
Volksdeutsche".
After the war the
remainder of the Mennonite community emigrated or, (because, as the
Soviets saw it, they had "collectively collaborated" with the
Germans) was forcefully relocated to Siberia
and Kazakhstan
, and many were sent to the Gulag. Many German-Russian Mennonites who lived
further to the East (not Western Russia) were deported to Siberia
before the German army's invasion, and were also often placed in
labor camps. In the 1990s the Russian government gave these people
the opportunity to emigrate. The Russian Mennonite immigrants in
Germany outnumber the pre-1989 community of Mennonites in Germany
by 3 to 1.
North America
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 Dutch-Mennonite congregations around
Krefeld, Altona-Hamburg, Gronau and Emden. 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 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.
Jacob Gottschalk was the first
bishop of this Germantown congregation. This early group of
Mennonites and Mennonite-Quakers wrote the first formal protest
against
slavery in the
United States. The treatise was addressed to slave-holding
Quakers in an effort to persuade them to change their ways.
In the eighteenth century, 100,000 Germans from the
Palatinate, collectively known as the
Pennsylvania Dutch, emigrated to
Pennsylvania. Of these, around 2,500 were Mennonites and 500 Amish.
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.
Today,
Mennonites also reside in Kishacoquillas Valley
(also known as Big Valley), a valley in Huntingdon
and Mifflin
counties, also in Pennsylvania.
During the Colonial period, Mennonites were distinguished from
other Pennsylvania Germans in three ways: their opposition to the
American 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.
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.

Mennonite Church logo
The
Swiss-German Mennonites that emigrated to North America in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries settled first in Pennsylvania,
then across the Midwestern
states (initially Ohio, Indiana, and Kansas
) are the
root to the former Mennonite Church denomination (MC), colloquially
called the "Old Mennonite Church". This denomination had
offices in Elkhart,
Indiana
, and was the most populous Mennonite denomination
before merging with the General Conference Mennonite Church (GCMC)
in 2002.

General Conference Mennonite Church
logo
The
General
Conference Mennonite Church was an association of Mennonite
congregations based in North America beginning in 1860.
The
conference was formed in 1860 when congregations in Iowa
invited
North American Mennonites to join together in order to pursue
common goals such as education and mission work. The
conference was especially attractive to recent Mennonite and Amish
immigrants to North America and expanded considerably when
thousands of Russian Mennonites arrived in North America starting
in the 1870s.
Conference offices were located in Winnipeg
, Manitoba
, and North Newton, Kansas
. The conference supported a seminary and
several colleges. It became the second largest Mennonite
denomination with 64,431 members in 410 congregations in Canada,
the United States and
South America in
the 1990s. After decades of increasingly closer cooperation with
the Mennonite Church, the two groups voted to merge in 1995 and
completed reorganization into
Mennonite Church Canada in 2000 and
Mennonite Church USA in
2002.
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. Initially the men
worked on road building, forestry and firefighting projects. After
May 1943, as a labour 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%).
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 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 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
Prior to migration to America, Anabaptists in Europe were divided
between those of Dutch and Swiss-German background. However, both
Dutch and Swiss groups took their name from Menno Simons who led
the Dutch group. A trickle of Dutch Mennonites began the migration
to America in 1683, followed by a much larger migration of
Swiss-German Mennonites beginning in 1707.
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, a process that began in 1785
with the formation of the orthodox Reformed Mennonite Church and is
ongoing today. 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 descended from those groups that
abandoned traditional Mennonite practices. Today, the groups that
have held to the traditional interpretations of Mennonite doctrine
are increasing at a more rapid rate than those groups that have
rejected these standards. However, the moderate denominations are
still by far the largest and continue to grow at a steady
rate.
These historical schisms have had an influence on creating the
distinct Mennonite denominations that exist today. Such divisions
continue to go on today as one group claims its version of the
Mennonite faith and splits from the parent denomination or church,
sometimes using mild or severe
shunning to
show its disapproval of other Mennonite groups.
One recent and widely
reported example of this is the expulsion of the Germantown
Mennonite Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
, from the Franconia Conference and
later the Mennonite Church USA
denomination for welcoming LGBT people as
church members.
Schools
Several Mennonite groups have their own private or parochial
schools. 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).
Secondary Schools
Canada
- Mennonite
Educational Institute, Abbotsford, British Columbia,
Canada
- Rockway Mennonite
Collegiate, Kitchener, Ontario, Canada
- Rosthern Junior College,
Rosthern, Saskatchewan
- Westgate Mennonite
Collegiate, Winnipeg, Manitoba
- Mennonite
Brethren Collegiate Institute
, Winnipeg, Manitoba
- Mennonite Collegiate
Institute, Gretna, Manitoba
United States
- Bluffton University
, Bluffton, Ohio
- Central Christian School, Kidron, Ohio
- Christopher Dock Mennonite High
School

- Eastern Mennonite High School

- Freeman Academy

- Iowa Mennonite School
, Kalona, Iowa
- Lancaster Mennonite High
School

- Philadelphia
Mennonite High School

- Rosedale Bible College
, Rosedale, Ohio
- Western Mennonite School
, Salem, Oregon
Controversy in Quebec
Quebec
does not
allow these parochial schools as the Quebec government imposes its
curriculum on all schools (public and private), while private
schools may only add optional material to the compulsory curriculum
but may not replace it. The Quebec curriculum is
unacceptable to the parents of the only Mennonite school in the
province. They have said they will leave Quebec after the Education
Ministry has threatened legal actions would be taken and the Youth
Protection services might become involved if the children were not
to register with the Education Ministry and either home school,
using the Government approved material, or attend a "sanctioned"
school. The local population and its mayor support the local
Mennonites. The
Evangelical Fellowship of
Canada has also written to the Quebec government to express its
concerns about this situation. This story has received quite a
large echo in circles defending religious freedom, so much so that
the
Becket Fund placed Quebec on its
weekly report of threatened religious traditions . Latest reports
indicate that several Mennonites families have already left Quebec
to protect their children.
Sexual, marriage, and family mores
The Mennonite church has no formal celibate religious order similar
to
monasticism, but recognizes the
legitimacy of and honors both the single state and the sanctity of
marriage of its members. Single persons are expected to be chaste,
and marriage is held to be a lifelong, monogamous, faithful
covenant between a man and a woman. Divorce is discouraged, and it
is believed that the "hardness of the heart" of people is the
ultimate cause of divorce. Some Mennonite churches have
disciplined members who have
unilaterally divorced their spouses outside of cases of sexual
unfaithfulness or acute abuse. Until approximately the 1960s or
1970s, before the more widespread urbanization of the Mennonite
demographic, divorce was, in fact, quite rare. In recent times,
divorce is more common, and also carries less stigma, particularly
in cases where abuse was apparent.
Traditionally, very modest dress was expected (apparent mostly in
women's apparel), particularly in conservative Mennonite circles,
but again, as the Mennonite population became urbanized and more
integrated into the wider culture, this visible difference has
disappeared outside of conservative Mennonite groups.
Some of these expelled congregations were dually affiliated with
the Mennonite Church and the General Conference Mennonite Church,
the latter of which did not act to 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, in all cases,
whether or not 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. Also, 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.
The Brethren Mennonite Council for lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender (LGBT) interests is putting forward its views about
homosexuality within Mennonite and Brethren churches, as well as
providing support for LGBT people within the Anabaptist
tradition.
The Mennonite church in the Netherlands (Doopsgezinde Kerk) was the
first Dutch church to have a female pastor — Anna Zernike,
authorized in 1911.
Theology
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:
- Salvation through faith in Jesus Christ
- The authority of Scripture and the Holy
Spirit.
- 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).
- Discipleship understood as an outward sign of an inward
change.
- Discipline in the church, informed by New Testament teaching,
particularly of Jesus (for example ). Some Mennonite churches
practice the
Meidung (shunning).
- 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.
One of the earliest expressions of their faith was the
Schleitheim Confession, adopted on
February 24, 1527. Its seven articles covered:
The
Dordrecht Confession
of Faith was adopted on April 21, 1632, by Dutch Mennonites, by
Alsatian Mennonites in 1660, and by North American Mennonites in
1725. There is no official
creed or
catechism of which acceptance is required by
congregations or members. However, there are structures and
traditions taught as in the Confession of Faith in a Mennonite
Perspective of Mennonite Church Canada and Mennonite Church
USA.
Worship, doctrine, and tradition
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 other 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 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, on community and service. However, members do
not live in community—they participate in the general community as
'salt and light' to the world (
Matt
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 those denominations
where community is more tight-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. Mennonite Central
Committee is a leader in foreign aid provision.
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 eighteenth 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.
Holdeman Mennonites were founded from a schism in
1859, the
Church of
God in Christ, Mennonite church has about 19,000 members
worldwide. They are known as Holdeman Mennonites after their
founder. They emphasize evangelical conversion, strict church
discipline and shunning of the excommunicated. They stay separate
from other Mennonite groups because of their emphasis on the
one-true church doctrine and their use of strict shunning against
their own excommunicated members.
Old Order
Mennonites cover many distinct groups. Some groups use
horse and buggies 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
nineteenth and early twentieth 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.

Mennonite Horse and Carriage
- Horse and Buggy Old Order Mennonites came from the main series
of Old Order schisms that began in 1872 and ended in 1901 as
conservative Mennonites fought the radical changes that the
influence of nineteenth 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, they stress
separation from the world, excommunicate and wear plain clothes.
Unlike the Stauffer or Pike Mennonites their form of the Ban is
less severe because the ex-communicant is not shunned, therefore is
not excluded from the family table, shunned by a spouse or cutoff
from business dealings.
- Automobile Old Order
Mennonites also evolved from the main series of Old Order
schisms from 1872-1901. 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 1900s. 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 the first and
most conservative form of Horse and Buggy Mennonites. They were
founded in 1845, following conflicts about how to discipline
child 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. They are now
considered to be part of the larger less-conservative Horse and
Buggy Old Order Mennonite group which formed from later
schisms.
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 nineteenth century, most Mennonites in the
United States and Canada retained a core of traditional beliefs
based on literal interpretation of the New Testament Scriptures as
well as more external 'Plain' practices into the beginning of the
twentieth 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 twentieth
century and continue to some extent today. Following WWII, a
conservative movement emerged from scattered separatist groups as a
reaction to the Mennonite Churches drifting away from the churches
historical traditions. 'Plain' became passé as open criticisms of
traditional beliefs and practices broke out in the 1950s and 1960s.
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/or from combinations with progressive
Amish groups. Other Conservative Mennonite groups
descend from the former Amish-Mennonite churches, who split from
the Old Order Amish in the latter part of the nineteenth century
like the Wisler Mennonites. There are also other Conservative
Mennonite churches that descend from more recent groups that have
left the Amish.
Progressive
Mennonite churches allow homosexual members to worship as
church members and have been banned from membership in some cases
in the moderate groups as result. The Germantown Mennonite Church
in Germantown, Pennsylvania is one example of such a progressive
Mennonite church. Progressive Mennonite Churches place a great
emphasis on the Mennonite tradition's teachings on peace and
non-violence.
Membership
In 2006, there were 1,478,540 Mennonites in 65 countries. The
United States had the highest number of Mennonites with 368,280
members, followed by Democratic Republic of Congo with 216,268
members.
The third largest concentration of
Mennonites was in India
with
146,095 members, while the fourth largest population was in
Canada
with 131,384 members. Europe, the birthplace
of Mennonites, had 52,222 members.
Africa has the highest membership growth rate by far with 10%-12%
rise every year, particularly in Ethiopia. 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.
Some churches in North America have begun profiling potential
members and with some success have targeted inner city minorities
in their recruitment efforts. Growth in the traditional churches is
outpacing growth in the moderate churches.
Organization: Worldwide
The most basic unit of organization among Mennonites is the church.
There are hundreds or thousands of Mennonite churches, many of
which are separate from all others. Some churches are members of
regional or area conferences. Some, but far from all, regional or
area conferences are members of larger national or world
conferences. Thus, there is no
single authorized
organization that includes
all Mennonite churches
worldwide.
Instead, there is a host of separate churches along with a myriad
of separate conferences with no particular responsibility to any
other group. Independent churches can contain as few as 50 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. For these reasons, no single
group of Mennonites anywhere can credibly claim to represent, speak
for, or lead
all Mennonites worldwide.
The twelve largest Mennonite groups are:
- Mennonite Brethren (300,000
members on 6 continents worldwide)
- Meserete
Kristos Church in Ethiopia
(120,600 members;126,000 more followers attending
alike churches)
- Mennonite Church USA with
114,000 members in the United States
- Brethren in Christ with
100,000 US and worldwide members
- Communauté Mennonite au Congo
(87,000).
- Kanisa La Mennonite Tanzania
with 50,000 members in 240 congregations
- Deutsche Mennonitengemeinden with 40,000 members in
Germany[3294]
- Mennonite Church Canada
with 35,000 members in Canada
- Conservative Mennonites
with 30,000 members in over 500 US churches (2008 CLP church
directory). Does not include Beachy Amish listed below.
- Church of God in
Christ, Mennonite with 21,765 members in about 19,000 in the US
and Canada, with the remaining in members in 32 other countries
(2008 data)
- Conservative
Mennonite Conference, 11,557 members in North America, plus
33,336 affiliate members in 7 countries worldwide.
- Beachy Amish Mennonite,
including related Amish Mennonite subgroups, with 10,895 members
(190 congregations) in 10 different countries.
The
Mennonite World
Conference is a global community of 95 Mennonite and Brethren
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.
Organization: North America
In 2003, there were about 323,000 Mennonites in the United States.
About 110,000 were members of Mennonite Church USA churches, about
26,000 were members of Mennonite Brethren churches, and about
40,000 (2008 CLP church directory) were members of conservative
churches. It is not known how many old order Mennonites there are.
(That leaves about 147,000 Mennonites unaccounted for in other
United States' churches). Other sources list 236,084 total United
States Mennonites.
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.
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).
As of 2003, there were an estimated 80,000 Old Colony
Mennonites in Mexico. 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
, and Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua
.
See also
Notes
References
- Gingerich, Melvin (1949), Service for Peace, A History of
Mennonite Civilian Public Service, Mennonite Central
Committee.
- Horsch, James E. (Ed.) (1999), Mennonite Directory,
Herald Press. ISBN 0-8361-9454-3
- Krahn, Cornelius, Gingerich, Melvin & Harms, Orlando (Eds.)
(1955). The Mennonite Encyclopedia, Volume I,
pp. 76–78. Mennoniite Publishing House.
- Mennonite & Brethren in Christ World Directory 2003.
Available On-line at
http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/index.htm
- Pannabecker, Samuel Floyd (1975), Open Doors: A History of
the General Conference Mennonite Church, Faith and Life Press.
ISBN 0-87303-636-0
- Scott, Stephen (1995), An Introduction to Old Order and
Conservative Mennonite Groups, Good Books, ISBN
1-56148-101-7
- Smith, C. Henry (1981), Smith's Story of the
Mennonites Fifth Edition, Faith and Life Press. ISBN
0-87303-060-5
External links