Bridgefolk 2025 to be held in Winnipeg in July

Bridgefolk Conference 2025
Mennonites and Catholics in Dialogue

Anabaptism at 500:
Ecumenical Dialogue in an Age of Polarization
First Mennonite Church, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
July 24-27, 2025

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The 2025 annual Bridgefolk conference will be held July 24-27, 2025 at First Mennonite Church, Winnipeg, Manitoba—Treaty 1 Territory and the homeland of the Metis Nation. This is the 23rd annual Bridgefolk gathering, the second time it will be held in Winnipeg, and the third time in Canada.

Bridgefolk is a grassroots ecumenical movement of Mennonites and Roman Catholics who work together toward Christian unity by “proceeding through friendship.” Newcomers are always welcome at Bridgefolk gatherings, regardless of religious affiliation.

Interior of church.
First Mennonite Church, Winnepeg, Manitoba (photo by George Penner)

The 2025 conference theme is “Anabaptism at 500: Ecumenical Dialogue in an Age of Polarization.” This year’s conference will look at the birth of Anabaptism from both a Mennonite and a Roman Catholic perspective, what has changed in the past five centuries, and what the implications are for ecumenical dialogue today.

The Mennonite keynote address will be given by Dr. Jennifer Otto, Associate Professor in the Department of History and Religion at the University of Lethbridge, where she teaches courses on Christianity, Bible, and Western Religions. Dr. Otto’s current research project, “Remembering Anabaptist Martyrs,” investigates the reception and representation of early Christian martyrs among Anabaptists in the 16th century and in the present day.

We also welcome Fr. John Klassen OSB, as our Roman Catholic keynote speaker. Fr. John was abbot of Saint John’s Abbey, in Collegeville, Minnesota, for over 23 years, and was instrumental in starting and supporting Bridgefolk during that time. Before becoming abbot, he received a doctorate from The Catholic University of America in Washington, DC, in 1985, taught at Saint John’s Preparatory School (1972-77) and Saint John’s University (1983-2000), and was the director of the university’s senior seminar program (1986-88), and of the Peace Studies Program (1988-90). He was the director of monastic formation for the abbey from 1993-99.

This conference will also feature a panel discussion with others who are involved in ecumenical dialogue and work, locally and elsewhere. The conference will feature a workshop to equip participants with practical tools to engage in respectful dialogue as well as small groups in which to practice these tools.

“Bridgefolk brings a unique set of gifts to this work,” notes Laura Funk, long-time Bridgefolk participant and local conference organizer. “Mennonites and Catholics are in conversation and prayer with each other. Often we do our best learning in the presence of those who have had a different experience, who bring different assumptions and history to the challenge of respectful dialogue in an age of increased polarization. In addition, we are called together to be peacemakers, with a commitment to the non-violence of Jesus in the Gospel. This call shapes our approach to listening, speaking, thinking, and acting.”

The conference will include a foot-washing service and agape meal, as well as a hymn sing, which have become favorite elements of Bridgefolk gatherings.

Registration information will be forthcoming on the Bridgefolk website (www.bridgefolk.net)

Online registration now open!

Bridgefolk Summer Retreat
25-28 July 2024 | Saint John’s Abbey, Collegeville, MN

Spiritual Practices for Peacemaking: Nurturing Resistance and Resilience
Featuring guest facilitator Sarah Augustine,
Executive Director of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery

Click here for online registration
Click here to download form for mail-in registration.

We will come together as Catholics and Mennonites committed to peacemaking at a time of multiple challenges: climate disaster, protracted war in Ukraine and devastating destruction and death in Gaza, political and religious polarization during an election year in the US, White Christian Nationalism, and the ongoing struggle for Indigenous rights and racial justice in the US and Canada.

Sarah Augustine
Sarah Augustine

Using the framework of resistance and resilience from Potawatomi author Kaitlin Curtice, the presenter at the September 2023 AMBS Rooted & Grounded/Bridgefolk Conference in Indiana, we will reflect on scripture and take part in a variety of spiritual practices from each of our traditions and beyond. Sarah Augustine will offer teaching and invitations for resisting settler colonialism and will lead us in ceremony that draws from and honors the wisdom of her Pueblo (Tewa) people. We will share stories and learn from the experiences of one another to strengthen our peace witness. We welcome the participation of families with children.

Preliminary schedule:

Click here for online registration
Click here to download form for mail-in registration.

Bridgefolk 2023 conference in collaboration with Mennonite seminary

The 2023 Bridgefolk Conference will be a collaboration with the Rooted & Grounded Series of Conferences on Land and Christian Discipleship at Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary. “Pathways through Climate Doom: Resistance and Resilience” will be held September 28-30. Persons wishing to submit proposals for paper presentations should do so by the April 30 deadline.

For more details on the conference, please visit https://www.ambs.edu/rooted-and-grounded. For a PDF of the call for papers and workshop proposals, click here.

More details on Bridgefolk events at the conference will follow.

Videos from Bridgefolk 2022 now available online

Videos from the 2022 Bridgefolk conference, “Standing at the Crossroads” are now available online at Bridgefolk’s website. The conference “stood at the crossroads” in two ways: It offered the opportunity to look back in gratitude and forward as participants discerned a future path for Mennonite-Catholic dialogue and peacemaking.

Additionally, the conference continued the ongoing exploration of what it means for Mennonites and Catholics who seek a Just Peace to address issues of racial justice, which it began at its 2018 Conference. In particular, Bridgefolk sought to engage with indigenous communities, acknowledging the legacy of injustice and harm done by the historic removal of indigenous communities from traditional homelands by European settlers and the forced attendance of indigenous children at residential schools. The conference featured stories, including indigenous voices, of this work of repair and healing at the institutional, community, and personal levels.

We invite you to linger prayerfully at the crossroads by sharing videos of the conference sessions in parish or congregational settings and discussing how you and your community are called to respond.

Videos from five conference sessions are available on the 2022 conference website, along with the discussion questions used at the conference. Click here to visit.

Bridgefolk to celebrate 20th year with 2022 conference “Standing at the Crossroads”

Bridgefolk has announced a theme for its 2022 conference, to be held at St. John’s Abbey in Minnesota July 21-24, that will both look back at the movement’s 20 years of dialogue between Mennonites and Catholics, while committing to further work together. “Standing at the Crossroads: Mennonites and Catholics in Dialogue” will continue the ongoing exploration of what it means for Mennonites and Catholics who seek a Just Peace to address issues of racial justice, which it began at its 2018 Conference.

The current crossroads in this work find Mennonites and Catholics engaging with indigenous communities, acknowledging the legacy of injustice and harm done by the historic removal of indigenous communities from traditional homelands by European settlers and the forced attendance of indigenous children at residential schools. That task is all the more urgent and timely in light of Pope Francis’s recent apology to indigenous peoples in Canada for the abuse of church-run boarding schools, debates over whether apologies are enough, and discernment concerning next steps for Christian churches.

Further details and links to register are now available at
https://www.bridgefolk.net/conferences/bridgefolk-2022.

2018 Bridgefolk Conference

Mennonites and Catholics in Dialogue

Racial Harmony“Toward a Just Peace: Eradicating the Evil of Racism”

The 17th annual Bridgefolk conference was held at Saint John’s Abbey, Collegeville, MN, 26-29 July 2018.

Keynote speakers:

Anne McCarthy, OSB, Mount Saint Benedict Monastery, “Overturning Temple Tables: Toward Repairing a Racist Legacy”

Felipe Hinojosa, Associate Professor of History, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX. Teaching specialty in Latina/o – Chicana/o, Religion. Author of Latino Mennonites:  Civil Rights, Faith, and Evangelical Culture (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014). Keynote title to come.

2018 Conference Report, 10 August 2018

Pre-Conference News Release

Schedule

Registration is closed.

Travel Links

For more information: <info@bridgefolk.net>.