Mennonite worship leaders meet Benedictine hospitality at January retreat

Mount Pleasant, PA —  The 26th Annual Music and Worship Leaders Retreat (MWLR) at Laurelville Mennonite Church Center (LMCC) served as an opportunity for encounter between Mennonites and Catholics in January, as featured speaker Abbot John Klassen OSB, Bridgefolk co-chair, shared concerning Benedictine practices of hospitality.

During their time together, music and worship leaders were inspired and taught by many experienced leaders, including Klassen and Mennonite pastor Isaac S. Villegas. Contained in teachings were various steps and challenges in the area of hospitality among churches. Overall, the planning and resource team created “…a space where change [could] take place”, giving leaders the opportunity to sit back, soak in and worship God as they assessed their current worship styles and brainstormed for years to come.

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Mennonites and Catholics to join in marking Michael Sattler’s martyrdom

Collegeville, MN (BRIDGEFOLK) – On May 26-27 a group of Mennonite and Catholic scholars and church leaders will gather at the Benedictine monastery in Collegeville MN to jointly mark the anniversary of Michael and Margaretha Sattler’s martyrdom in 1527.

The event is jointly sponsored by the Mennonite Church USA and by Saint John’s Abbey, and marks a significant step in the changing relationships between Mennonites and Catholics, who have been divided for centuries by the persecution of Anabaptists during the Reformation era.

Michael Sattler has long been regarded as one of the major founders of the 16th-century Anabaptist tradition, from which the Mennonite and Amish churches emerged, and is widely regarded as the primary author of the foundational Schleitheim Confession. He and his wife Margaretha were arrested and martyred shortly after it was written.

Because Sattler had been a prior in his Benedictine monastery in South Germany (its second in command) before joining one of the dissident evangelical communities which emerged during the 1525 Peasants’ Revolt, his martyrdom had a major impact at the time and several reports were published.

One was included in the 17th-century Martyrs Mirror, a large compilation of 16th-century Anabaptist martyr accounts, many of them at the hands of Catholic authorities.

The conference organizer, Ivan J. Kauffman, who has long identified himself as both Mennonite and Catholic, says, “It has only been in recent years that Catholics have been able to recognize the justice of Sattler’s break with the medieval Catholic establishment, and to consider him an early witness to non-violence, religious liberty, and social justice—values now widely recognized as part of the Catholic tradition.”

The conference will open Sunday afternoon, May 26, with a keynote address by Arnold Snyder, professor of history at Conrad Grebel College in Waterloo, Ontario and a prominent Mennonite historian of 16th-century Anabaptism. He is the author of the most recent biography of Michael Sattler, and will trace the changing views of Sattler that have appeared over the nearly five centuries since his death.

Prof. Carol Neel, a historian of pre-Reformation evangelical reform movements, will discuss the medieval background from which the Sattlers emerged, emphasizing the necessity for reading history forward, from the perspective of those who lived at the time rather than projecting current beliefs onto past events. Dr. Neel is chair of the history department at Colorado College, and the author of several articles and books dealing with the medieval reform movements.

Her presentation will be followed by a report of recent historical research on the 1525 Peasants’ Revolt, a formative event which took place during the Sattlers’ final years. The presenter will be conference organizer Kauffman, the author of a recent account of evangelical movements throughout church history entitled “Follow Me”: A History of Christian Intentionality.

On Monday afternoon a panel of Mennonite, Catholic, and Protestant church leaders and scholars will discuss the relevance of the Sattler’s witness for the future. The moderator will be Prof. Gerald Schlabach, professor of theology at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul MN, and one of the founders of the Bridgefolk movement, which each year brings Mennonites and Catholics together for informal dialogue.

Abbot John Klassen, the leader of Saint John’s Abbey, will present a Catholic response. He has been a long-time supporter of Mennonite-Catholic dialogue and has served as Catholic co-chair of Bridgefolk since its inception, along with Rev. Marlene Kropf, the Mennonite co-chair.

Two leading Mennonite pastors will present Mennonite responses. Dr. Phil Waite is lead pastor of College Mennonite Church in Goshen IN, and Rev. Weldon Nisly is pastor of Seattle Mennonite Church. Others will join them in discussing the relevance of the Sattlers’ witness from an ecumenical perspective.

The conference will conclude with a commemorative meal. Abbot Klassen will preside, using a liturgy developed at the Bridgefolk conferences.

The initial Mennonite connection with Saint John’s Abbey was made in 2001 by Rev. Nisly who came to the Collegeville Institute at Saint John’s for a pastoral sabbatical, studying ways Sattler’s Benedictine formation influenced him and the Anabaptist movement.

“While it is difficult to document explicit ways Sattler and the early Anabaptist movement drew on monasticism,” says Nisly, “there are implicit indications. That a Michael Sattler House connected to Saint John’s Abbey now exists and that Mennonites and Catholics can join in marking Sattler’s martyrdom exceeds my wildest imagination back in 2001, and is tremendously inspiring.” Nisly will serve as the conference’s moderator.

The first joint commemoration of Sattler’s martyrdom took place last year at the Michael Sattler House. The response, both Mennonite and Catholic was positive, and this led to plans to hold annual Mennonite-Catholic commemorations of the Sattlers’ martyrdom.

The conference is open to the public. For more information visit the Michael Sattler House website (http://www.michaelsattlerhouse.org) or write to info@MichaelSattlerHouse.org.

Fernando Enns publishes new book on ecumenism and peace

Fernando Enns' book on ecumenism and peaceFernando Enns, Professor of Mennonite Peace Theology and Ethics at the University of Amsterdam has recently published a new book Ökumene und Frieden (Ecumenism and Peace).  In it Enns shows how ecumenism “works.” What are realistic goals and methodologies? Enns applies the ecumenical approach to different fields of theology and ethics. The large chapter on the Ecumenical “Decade to Overcome Violence” of the World Council of Churches is the first coherent account on that stimulating enterprise.

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Baptism the focus of trilateral dialogue by Mennonites, Catholics and Lutherans

Front row (from left): Luis Augusto Castro Quiroga, Turid Karlsen Sein, Cardinal Koch, Alfred Neufeld. Second row: Musawenkosi Biyela, Rebecca Osiro, Kaisamari Hintikka, Gregory J Fairbanks. Third row: William Henn, Larry Miller, Theodor Dieter. Fourth row: César Garcia, Marie-Hélène Robert, Kwong-Sang Peter Li. Fifth row: Luis M Melo, Fernando Enns, John Rempel.

Rome, Italy/Bogota, Colombia  (MWC) – An international trilateral dialogue between Mennonites, Catholics and Lutherans began in Rome, 9-13 December 2012.

According to a joint release issued after the Rome meeting, the overall theme of the five-year process is “Baptism and Incorporation into the Body of Christ, the Church.” The release further stated: “This innovative trilateral forum will allow the dialogue to take up questions surrounding the theology and practice of baptism in the respective communions.” Continue reading “Baptism the focus of trilateral dialogue by Mennonites, Catholics and Lutherans”

Mennonite firm sues over Obamacare contraception coverage

December 07, 2012
By Amy Worden
Philadelphia Inquirer 

A Mennonite-owned cabinetmaker has filed a federal suit charging that the Affordable Care Act’s mandate on contraception coverage violates its constitutional rights.

Conestoga Wood Specialties, citing the principles of religious freedom on which William Penn founded Pennsylvania, says in its suit, filed in U.S. District Court, that to accord to its Mennonite beliefs, it would be “sinful and immoral for the company to participate in, pay for, facilitate or otherwise support any contraception” that would have the effect of an abortion.

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Communion of saints: Miraculous healing leads to sainthood, helps Mennonites and Catholics deepen friendship

by Laurie Oswald Robinson

Mennonite World Review

Because a Japanese Mennonite man was healed from leukemia after Mennonites and Catholics prayed, a new round of ecumenical dialogue on prayer is stirring up the faithful.

Jun Yamada presents relics of Joseph Freinademetz to Pope John Paul II in the service of canonization for Freinademetz on Oct. 5, 2003, in Rome. — Photo by Society of the Divine Word

Exactly how God said “yes” to prayers for the healing in 1987 of Jun Yamada, a 24-year-old university student in Japan, will always be shrouded in mystery.

But that isn’t keeping participants in Bridgefolk — a group of Mennonites and Catholics united by their faith in Christ — from more deeply exploring the connection between God’s family on Earth and in heaven.

This past July at the annual Bridgefolk gathering, Alan and Eleanor Kreider — longtime Mennonite teachers on church history, worship and mission — shared the account that Jun Yamada’s brother, Nozomu Yamada, had passed on to them in Tokyo. Continue reading “Communion of saints: Miraculous healing leads to sainthood, helps Mennonites and Catholics deepen friendship”

St. Marcellus Day celebration Oct. 30 at Notre Dame

Tuesday, October 30

Pilgrimage, Supper, Prayer Service, and Keynote Address

The relics of St. Marcellus are kept at Notre Dame’s Sacred Heart Basilica, and each year on his feast day, pilgrims visit those relics and meditate on the current-day meaning of his martyrdom for peace 1,700 years ago. Continue reading “St. Marcellus Day celebration Oct. 30 at Notre Dame”

Mennonites plan a contemporary Martyrs’ Mirror

GOSHEN, Ind. — More than 35 people from seven countries gathered at Goshen College on August 5-8, for an international consultation on the theme, “Bearing Witness: A New Martyrs Mirror for the 21 st Century?” Hosted by the college’s Institute for the Study of Global Anabaptism, the international gathering explored the possibility of a major story-gathering initiative, focused especially on the theme of “costly discipleship.” Continue reading “Mennonites plan a contemporary Martyrs’ Mirror

“Deeper spirituality” by Andre Gingerich Stoner

The following article appeared in the August 20 issue of Mennonite World Review

In the mid-1980s, Dawn Ruth Nelson was part of a group of young mission workers trying to live out the Mennonite values of community, discipleship and nonviolence amid “the troubles” of Northern Ireland. When the communal living experiment ended explosively a few years later, she came to the painful awareness that her spiritual resources were not enough to sustain the ideals she was trying to practice. This led to a “desperate need for a more meaningful prayer life, a deeper spirituality, a closer connection to God” and her first silent retreat at a Catholic monastery.

When she returned to the U.S. she also began to explore the spiritual practices that had sustained Mennonites of earlier generations. Continue reading ““Deeper spirituality” by Andre Gingerich Stoner”