X

Vous n'êtes pas connecté

Maroc Maroc - CANADIANMENNONITE.ORG - A La Une - Hier 15:58

Resourcing the Anabaptist church

Over 500 years, the Anabaptist community has grown to be a diverse and global expression of faith. The resources of Anabaptism reflect this diversity.   Mennonite World Conference (MWC) represents most Christian churches rooted in the Anabaptist movement. In addition to the ongoing resourcing work of its commissions and networks, MWC has several significant resource titles: “Shared Convictions of Global Anabaptists,” the Global Anabaptist/Mennonite Shelf of Literature, and the Global Mennonite History series. Other notable global Anabaptist resources include The Global Anabaptist Wiki and Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All these are wonderful places to begin a journey into the wider Anabaptist story.   I offer additional resources from within a Canadian Anabaptist Mennonite perspective. For a relatively small family of faith, we have produced many resources and have many authors and institutions whose materials we generate, distribute, occasionally translate and preserve.   Different kinds of Anabaptist writers have left indelible marks on our identity and faith: historians, diarists, theologians, scholars, poets, biographers, preachers, cooks and others. Our regional and national archives and historical associations hold many of these treasures (see Mennonite Archival Information Database).   In many cases, resources were published as apologetic accounts for the basic understandings of Anabaptism. Recent titles include Radicals and Reformers, Anabaptist Essentials, The Naked Anabaptist and Living the Anabaptist Story.   Mennonites have written novels and poetry that express an insider’s view of Mennonite life (see On Mennonite/s Writing). Through the art of literature, another window opens into the complexities of our identity and faith.   Other writers have profoundly shaped our ethics around the kitchen and the table (e.g., More-with-Less Cookbook, Extending the Table and Simply in Season). Indeed, we are what we eat and how we eat.   Our institutions offer rich resources on who we are as Anabaptists and who we are becoming. Our denominations have vision and identity statements, confessions of faith and a wide spectrum of ministry resources in formation and witness, on topics as diverse as Indigenous relations, climate action, international ministries, education and peacebuilding.   CommonWord curates and makes accessible these and related resources for users to buy, borrow or access online.   Our universities and colleges are important incubators of foundational and emerging thought, expressed through public lecture series, academic writing (e.g., The Anabaptist Dictionary of the Bible), blogs (e.g., Anabaptist Historians), and journals (e.g., Vision, Anabaptist Witness).   Mennonite Central Committee, Community Peacemaker Teams, and many others offer service opportunities, provide eye-witness accounts and encourage calls to action while also resourcing the church. News and faith stories are explored through Canadian Mennonite.   Through social media or other media, Anabaptists connect as affinity groups or support networks to plan worship (e.g., Together in Worship, Anabaptist Worship Network), offer parenting support (e.g., Anabaptism: The Next Generation), navigate post-Christendom (e.g., Anabaptist Collective), and more.   Networks extend our reach into other important conversations and call us to action. These include Anabaptist Climate Collaborative, Palestine-Israel Network, Mennonite Action, and The Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, among others. Each provides resources that are reflective of our faith and help shape Anabaptism going forward.   Finally, MennoMedia, our binational denominational publisher, makes available key titles that shape our faith community: hymnals (e.g., Voices Together); curriculum (e.g., Shine); biblical studies (e.g., Believers Church Bible Commentary), in addition to Herald Press titles on specific themes. Hundreds of self-publishing efforts augment the Anabaptist collection.   In celebration of the 500th anniversary, MennoMedia prepared an entire suite of new Anabaptist publications, including devotionals, children’s books and the Anabaptist Community Bible, to which hundreds of small groups around the world contributed.   This wide array of materials is representative of the hopes, commitments, activities and learnings of the local, regional and nationwide faith communities across the globe. The challenge moving forward will be to produce more resources that give voice to the many voices that have been unheard, and for materials to be available in languages that reflect our linguistic diversity. May the Anabaptism of the future seek to reflect the full family of God.    Arlyn Friesen Epp serves as director of Mennonite Church Canada’s CommonWord Bookstore and Resource Centre. This piece first appeared in the Fall 2024 issue of Leader. Photo: Marcel Chagas/Pexels Share this page:

Articles similaires

Update from war-stricken Myanmar

canadianmennonite.org - 25/Sep 21:08

Greetings from Myanmar.   We are facing a significant challenge for our youth. As the number of soldiers in the junta [military] has dwindled,...

Whatever became of Sunday school

canadianmennonite.org - 15:50

They had forgotten about the kids.   It was the 1980s; two major Mennonite denominations had merged, spending five years and a large sum of money to...

Getting passionate about the bible

canadianmennonite.org - 14:38

Sunday school has been approached differently by different people. At times, the church has taken a defensive posture: It’s scary out there and...

Walking through open doors

canadianmennonite.org - 14:04

John and Edna Peters, 87 and 86, respectively, live in Winnipeg, where they are charter members of Charleswood Mennonite Church. Edna worked as a...

Readers Write: October 2024

canadianmennonite.org - 15:13

Love and Hate   I agree with Ryan Dueck’s insightful article, “A place for hate” (June 2024), particularly in today’s harsh world.   In...

Liberty Ikorodu 2024 by New Covenant Church, Stirring Considerable Community Interest

mockinbird.com.ng - 01/Oct 20:44

 ~By Oluwaseun Fabiyi Rev Kate Jinadu of the New Covenant Church, UK along with the Nigerian NCC leaders have affirmed the church's dedication to...

Making space might save someone's life

canadianmennonite.org - 25/Sep 21:20

Notice: This article mentions addiction, rape and abortion.     “I never thought I would set foot in another church.”   These were the opening...

Gog And Magog Now Are Coal, Gas, Oil And LNG – OpEd

eurasiareview.com - 16:03

For Muslims who despair about the terrible state of the modern world, we have just learned that liquefied natural gas leaves a greenhouse gas...

How your children can learn the Bible in public school

washingtontimes.com - 28/Sep 10:00

Since 70% of the U.S. is not regularly connected to a church, many times the children in the Bible2School program are hearing about the Bible for the...

Sorry! Image not available at this time

Hills want new Knockout team to 'give our town and communities something to be proud of'

nynganobserver.com.au - 23/Sep 09:00

'We've got a lot of faith in the boys that we have got.'