Lost River Bethany Church (Lost River, Saskatchewan, Canada)

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Bethany Mennonite Church and congregation in 1926. Original building constructed in 1917 with 1926 addition visible at the back.

At the beginning of the 20th century Mennonites began homesteading in the western end of the Carrot River Mennonite Reserve. This area became known as Lost River and is in the Rural Municipality of Nipawin (RM487), about 26 kilometers west of the town of Nipawin and south of the Saskatchewan River. By 1906 these Mennonites begin to meet in homes for worship; they received visits from a number of pastors. On 6 and 7 November 1913 Ältester Abraham Doerksen of the Manitoba Sommerfeld Church baptized 42 persons and ordained Aron Dörksen and Abram R. Bergen as pastors. In March 1914 a brotherhood meeting (Brüderschaft) decided to build a church; this has been considered the congregation's founding. However, growing differences in the group soon led to a painful division. One group, which included Abram R. Bergen, in 1915 chose to build on the SW quarter, section 30, township 49, range 16 west of 2nd meridian (SWq-Sec30-Tw49-Rn16-W2) and affiliated with the Bergthaler Church. The other group which already in 1915 affiliated with the Conference of Mennonites in Canada met on 6 December 1916 at the home of Aron Dörksen and received a proposal to restructure their congregation. Two members of the Committee on Home Missions (Innere Mission) of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada, John Gerbrandt of Drake, Saskatchewan and Gerhard Epp of Eigenheim, Saskatchewan, assisted. By unanimous agreement the group agreed to form the Bethany Mennonite Church, then known by its German name Bethania Mennoniten Gemeind with twenty-seven men and women as founding members.

Aron Dörksen was recognized as the founding pastor of Bethany Mennonite Church. Henry H. Neufeld was elected as treasurer and David H. Neufeld as secretary. The following summer work began on construction, with the completed church dedicated on 8 July 1917. The building was on Aron Dörksen's farm at SEq-Sec36-Tw49-Rn17-W2. This is just 2 km north of the Bergthaler church but on the west side of the road. In 1926 the building was enlarged by adding 14 feet. By 1945 the growth required a new structure with a basement on the old site. The congregation built a manse in 1960, a porch in 1964 and an extension to the church in 1974. That building burned in 1988, but a new building was constructed in the same year near the old foundation.

In August 1914 Bethany Mennonite Church began Sunday school instruction for the children. In October 1918 the Lost River Ladies Aid was formed. It was later renamed the Bethany Mission Circle and continued for the entire life of the congregation. A second pastor, Jacob J. Enns, was ordained in 1919. Isaac Epp who taught at Two Rivers Bible School was the first pastor to receive payment at a very modest level. Abe Buhler was the first fulltime paid pastor.

Bethany Mennonite Church built in 1988 with manse on the right

From its founding until the 1930s the congregation received regular visits from Reiseprediger of the Conference Home Missions. They performed baptisms and ordinations and encouraged spiritual growth because the congregation was without its own bishop and was isolated from the larger Mennonite communities. At the end of 1939 the congregation purchased a small log building and located it east of Teddington on the Peter Enns farm. At this mission outreach station Charlie Dirks served as pastor. This outreach included both worship and a Sunday School for the children and continued into the 1950’s.

With the coming of Russian Mennonite immigrants in the 1920s the congregation reached its peak membership in 1941 with 327 souls, including 170 members. Membership began to decline in the 1950s with the general decline in Saskatchewan's rural population. In the 1940’s the change from German to English occurred gradually and was encouraged by the use of the General Conference Mennonite Church’s English language hymnbook. By the mid 1950s worship services were almost entirely in English.

From its beginning the congregation affiliated with the Conference of Mennonites in Canada and later with the North American General Conference Mennonite Church and with the Conference of Mennonites of Saskatchewan. Through the leadership of pastor Frank Eidse, who had a background in the Evangelical Mennonite Church, the congregation withdrew from the Conference of Mennonites in Canada. In 1971 the congregation withdrew from all conference affiliations. This withdrawal was influenced by the difficultly in finding pastors with strong Mennonite affiliations, the isolation of the congregation from the larger Mennonite communities, and the poor roads in the area that hindered travel. Since then the Bethany Mennonite Church has operated as an independent Mennonite church. It maintains some Mennonite affiliations, and also functions as the local community church welcoming worshipers from more than half a dozen different denominations. With the closing of the nearby Bergthaler Church in 1981 Bethany gained some of their former members.

With the death of Henry Dörksen, son of Aron and Marie Dörksen in 23 September 1909 a cemetery was begun. It size is about one acre and straddles two quarter sections, the South East and North East of Sec36-Tw49-Rn17-W2. This is about half a mile north of the church. In April 2004, with the support of the remaining Saskatchewan Bergthaler congregations, Bethany also assumed responsibility for the near by Bergthaler cemetery.

Bibliography

Canadian Mennonite 12 (29 September 1964): 9.

Conference of Mennonites in Canada. <Yearbook. (1928-1972).

Doell, Leonard. “Bergthal Mennonites in the Carrot River Valley.” In Church, Family and Village: Essays on Mennonite Life on the West Reserve, edited by Adolf Ens, Jacob E. Peters and Otto Hamm. Winnipeg: Manitoba Mennonite Historical Society, 2001: 167-180.

Ens, Ruby. "Historical Development of Bethany Church, Lost River, Saskatchewan." Research paper, CMBC, 1965, 29 pp. MHC.

Peters, Gerhard I., Remember our Leaders: Conference of Mennonites in Canada, 1902-1977. Clearbrook, BC: Mennonite Historical Society of British Columbia, 1982.

Search for Yesteryears: a History of Newfield School and Districts of Elkhorn, Little Bridge, Murphy Creek, Newfield and Teddington, 2 vols. Codette, SK: Newfield School and Districts History Book Committee, 1984-2007.

Unpublished congregational history, 1960, 3 pp. MHC.

Archival Records

Some archival materials for Bethany Mennonite Church are held at the Mennonite Heritage Centre, Winnipeg, Manitoba. A fire in the home of the congregational secretary unfortunately burned all the older church records.

Additional Information

Mailing Address: Box 40, Codette, SK S0E 0P0

Phone: 306-862-5765

Website: http://lrbethanychurch.wixsite.com/b-m-c

Denominational Affiliations:

Bethany Mennonite Church Pastoral Leaders

Minister Years
Aron A. Dörksen 7 November 1913 - May 1930
Jacob J. Enns 16 October 1919 – 19451
David H. Neufeld 14 June 1925 – 1937
Peter Vogt 1926-19522
Isaak A. Doerksen 12 December 1937-1944
Charlie Dirks 1940-1945
Cornelius N. Enns 1942-1951
Jacob H. Enns 1942-1955
Isaac Epp November 1955-1959
Abe Buhler July 1959-August 19663
Frank Funk (Evangelist) 1951-1962
Werner Froese (Interim) Sept. 1964-May 1965
Peter R. Peters August 1966-1969
Frank Eidse Oct. 1969-Feb. 1978
Rodney Jahnke May 1978-Feb. 1982
Gerald Rogers July 1983-1989
Abe Froese 1990-1991
Willy Fehr 1991-1994
Dirk Van Ee 1994-July 2003
Jeff Goudy May 2004-August 2008
D. Brian Enns March 2009-May 2016
Jeremy Sherwood June 2016-September 2019
Adam Yadlowsky November 2019-Present

1 A year before this ordination, Jacob was elected as church evangelist.

2 Vogt was ordained in Russia.

3 Buhler was ordained 23 April 1961 as Ältester.

Missionaries from the congregation included Susan Neufeld, a missionary who was dedicated in 1958 for service in South America, and Jake D. Enns, ordained on 29 November 1959 at the beginning of his second term as a missionary in Liberia.

Bethany Mennonite Church Membership

Year Membership
1916 27
1931 109
1935 148
1940 165
1945 160
1951 162
1959 105
1965 82
1970 60
2004 80
2010 85


Author(s) Victor Wiebe
Date Published June 2010

Cite This Article

MLA style

Wiebe, Victor. "Lost River Bethany Church (Lost River, Saskatchewan, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. June 2010. Web. 18 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Lost_River_Bethany_Church_(Lost_River,_Saskatchewan,_Canada)&oldid=166008.

APA style

Wiebe, Victor. (June 2010). Lost River Bethany Church (Lost River, Saskatchewan, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 18 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Lost_River_Bethany_Church_(Lost_River,_Saskatchewan,_Canada)&oldid=166008.




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