Difference between revisions of "Mennonite Hour (Radio Program)"

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[[File:Mennonite_Hour_4.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Mennonite Broadcasts headquarters, 1955-1972, 1111 North  
 
[[File:Mennonite_Hour_4.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Mennonite Broadcasts headquarters, 1955-1972, 1111 North  
  
Main St., Harrisonburg, Virginia. Third Way Media photo'']]    The original staff for the program was all volunteer, but the workload rose as the number of stations increased, generating more letters to be answered. By the end of 1953, when the program was carried on 35 stations, Mildred Graybill (Tillman) was hired as a full time staff person, and [[Eastern Mennonite University (Harrisonburg, Virginia, USA)|Eastern Mennonite College]] (EMC) provided recording facilities and limited office space. In 1954 Richard Weaver, a skilled radio technician and the recording engineer for <em>The Mennonite Hour</em>, converted his chicken house into a quality recording studio close to the EMC campus. The technical quality of the recorded program greatly improved.
+
Main St., Harrisonburg, Virginia. Third Way Media photo  
 +
 
 +
'']]    The original staff for the program was all volunteer, but the workload rose as the number of stations increased, generating more letters to be answered. By the end of 1953, when the program was carried on 35 stations, Mildred Graybill (Tillman) was hired as a full time staff person, and [[Eastern Mennonite University (Harrisonburg, Virginia, USA)|Eastern Mennonite College]] (EMC) provided recording facilities and limited office space. In 1954 Richard Weaver, a skilled radio technician and the recording engineer for <em>The Mennonite Hour</em>, converted his chicken house into a quality recording studio close to the EMC campus. The technical quality of the recorded program greatly improved.
  
 
By the end of 1955, Mennonite Broadcasts, formally incorporated in 1956, moved into a spacious three-story, 20-room headquarters along North Main Street in Harrisonburg. There were seven full-time staff,  the broadcast was carried on 49 stations, and new types of programming were added. <em>The Way To Life</em>, an English international program, began in 1956. <em>Heart to Heart</em>, a 15-minute program for women in the home, was picked up in 1958. Various foreign language programs--in French, German. Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese and Navaho--were eventually added. From 1963 to 1972 <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> was carried on well over 100 radio stations throughout the United States and Canada. By 1961 an office was opened in [[Kitchener-Waterloo (Ontario, Canada)|Kitchener]], [[Ontario (Canada)|Ontario]] to help handle the requests for literature and to process the many letters.
 
By the end of 1955, Mennonite Broadcasts, formally incorporated in 1956, moved into a spacious three-story, 20-room headquarters along North Main Street in Harrisonburg. There were seven full-time staff,  the broadcast was carried on 49 stations, and new types of programming were added. <em>The Way To Life</em>, an English international program, began in 1956. <em>Heart to Heart</em>, a 15-minute program for women in the home, was picked up in 1958. Various foreign language programs--in French, German. Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese and Navaho--were eventually added. From 1963 to 1972 <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> was carried on well over 100 radio stations throughout the United States and Canada. By 1961 an office was opened in [[Kitchener-Waterloo (Ontario, Canada)|Kitchener]], [[Ontario (Canada)|Ontario]] to help handle the requests for literature and to process the many letters.
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[[File:Mennonite_Hour_3.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''B. Charles Hostetter with male quartet. L-R: Nevin Miller,  
 
[[File:Mennonite_Hour_3.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''B. Charles Hostetter with male quartet. L-R: Nevin Miller,  
  
Earl Maust, Wilbur Maust, Elmer Miller, ca. 1955. Third Way Media photo'']]    In 1972 Mennonite Broadcasts moved to a larger space along Virginia Avenue in Harrisonburg, close to the campus of Eastern Mennonite College (now University).  Staff had increased to about 30 persons and extensive publishing endeavors had been added, such as Choice Books and the expanded curriculum of Home Bible Study courses. The new building later housed a first rate recording studio (Alive Studios).
+
Earl Maust, Wilbur Maust, Elmer Miller, ca. 1955. Third Way Media photo  
 +
 
 +
'']]    In 1972 Mennonite Broadcasts moved to a larger space along Virginia Avenue in Harrisonburg, close to the campus of Eastern Mennonite College (now University).  Staff had increased to about 30 persons and extensive publishing endeavors had been added, such as Choice Books and the expanded curriculum of Home Bible Study courses. The new building later housed a first rate recording studio (Alive Studios).
  
 
The original Mennonite Hour was a 30-minute program of worship and preaching. The radio pastor delivered a 10-minute sermon and various a cappella singing groups provided music: a mixed voice chorus, a men’s chorus, a men’s quartet, and a ladies sextet (later a triple trio in 1961). Members came from the local community, and students, staff, and faculty from Eastern Mennonite College. B. Charles Hostetter served as principal speaker from 1952 to 1965.  His preaching style was simple, direct and effective. Though adapted for radio with extra music, the program had the feel of an evangelical Mennonite worship service. Program director and announcer Norman Derstine (1951-1961) played a key role in coordinating the broadcast.
 
The original Mennonite Hour was a 30-minute program of worship and preaching. The radio pastor delivered a 10-minute sermon and various a cappella singing groups provided music: a mixed voice chorus, a men’s chorus, a men’s quartet, and a ladies sextet (later a triple trio in 1961). Members came from the local community, and students, staff, and faculty from Eastern Mennonite College. B. Charles Hostetter served as principal speaker from 1952 to 1965.  His preaching style was simple, direct and effective. Though adapted for radio with extra music, the program had the feel of an evangelical Mennonite worship service. Program director and announcer Norman Derstine (1951-1961) played a key role in coordinating the broadcast.
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[[File:Mennonite_Hour_5.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''David Augsburger, Mennonite Hour speaker,  
 
[[File:Mennonite_Hour_5.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''David Augsburger, Mennonite Hour speaker,  
  
1966-1975, ca. 1972. Third Way Media photo'']]    In 1966 the program shortened to 15 minutes and David Augsburger (1961-1975) became the principal speaker. His style focused on the Anabaptist evangelical response to the social concerns of the day: war and peace, racism, and interpersonal relationships. Witty turns of language and thought held attention and conveyed truth. Richard Weaver, the recording technician from the beginning, took over the announcer’s role during Augsburger's years.
+
1966-1975, ca. 1972. Third Way Media photo  
 +
 
 +
'']]    In 1966 the program shortened to 15 minutes and David Augsburger (1961-1975) became the principal speaker. His style focused on the Anabaptist evangelical response to the social concerns of the day: war and peace, racism, and interpersonal relationships. Witty turns of language and thought held attention and conveyed truth. Richard Weaver, the recording technician from the beginning, took over the announcer’s role during Augsburger's years.
  
 
David Shank, Willis Breckbill, and Arthur McPhee served brief terms as speakers from March 1975 through 1978.  Finally in 1978, evidence indicated <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> had run its natural course, and that radio industry trends favored shorter, more diversified programming. The Mennonite Broadcasts board authorized the production of a 2.5 minute daily program to replace <em>The Mennonite Hour</em>.
 
David Shank, Willis Breckbill, and Arthur McPhee served brief terms as speakers from March 1975 through 1978.  Finally in 1978, evidence indicated <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> had run its natural course, and that radio industry trends favored shorter, more diversified programming. The Mennonite Broadcasts board authorized the production of a 2.5 minute daily program to replace <em>The Mennonite Hour</em>.
Line 25: Line 31:
 
A Cappella singing played a key role on <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> broadcast throughout its history. There were two basic eras. J. Mark Stauffer and Earl Maust provided primary leadership in the early era, mainly the 1950s. The music in their years mirrored good solid congregational style singing. The hymn arrangements were fairly simple. The men’s quartet and ladies’ sextet usually sang from popular song books that introduced the concept of "special music’" in many Mennonite churches. The music on <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> helped raise the standard of Mennonite congregational singing. 
 
A Cappella singing played a key role on <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> broadcast throughout its history. There were two basic eras. J. Mark Stauffer and Earl Maust provided primary leadership in the early era, mainly the 1950s. The music in their years mirrored good solid congregational style singing. The hymn arrangements were fairly simple. The men’s quartet and ladies’ sextet usually sang from popular song books that introduced the concept of "special music’" in many Mennonite churches. The music on <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> helped raise the standard of Mennonite congregational singing. 
  
[[File:Mennonite_Hour_2.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Mennonite Hour A Capella Chorus, ca. 1964. Third Way Media photo'']]    David Augsburger, Marvin Miller, Catherine Mumaw, and David Seitz provided primary music leadership during the 1960s. The hymn arrangements became more elaborate and more choir anthems were used. In general these groups had more advanced trained voices and the singing had a more professional tone. All of <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> singers were well-schooled in the traditional art of of singing in a cappella four-part harmony. The singing was unpretentious, direct,and committed to communicating the Gospel message.
+
[[File:Mennonite_Hour_2.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Mennonite Hour A Capella Chorus, ca. 1964. Third Way Media photo  
 +
 
 +
'']]    David Augsburger, Marvin Miller, Catherine Mumaw, and David Seitz provided primary music leadership during the 1960s. The hymn arrangements became more elaborate and more choir anthems were used. In general these groups had more advanced trained voices and the singing had a more professional tone. All of <em>The Mennonite Hour</em> singers were well-schooled in the traditional art of of singing in a cappella four-part harmony. The singing was unpretentious, direct,and committed to communicating the Gospel message.
  
 
By 1969 all the regular singing groups disbanded. Music was selected from an musical archive of nearly 1000 songs and some outside groups recorded on occasion. A total of 21 vinyl recordings (LPs) were released from 1953 to 1978, some selling over 10,000 copies. The best of the singing from these LP’s and the program archives was later reissued on remastered CDs available from Third Way Media.
 
By 1969 all the regular singing groups disbanded. Music was selected from an musical archive of nearly 1000 songs and some outside groups recorded on occasion. A total of 21 vinyl recordings (LPs) were released from 1953 to 1978, some selling over 10,000 copies. The best of the singing from these LP’s and the program archives was later reissued on remastered CDs available from Third Way Media.
Line 32: Line 40:
  
 
The work of broadcasting continued in Harrisonburg, Virginia. In 2010 Third Way Media, under the Mennonite Mission Network of Mennonite Church USA, produced television documentaries and a 15- minute radio broadcast called<em> Shaping Families</em>. It also reissued quality CDs  of Mennonite Hour singing groups, and maintains a web site, Third Way Cafe, for persons inquiring about Mennonite theology and perspectives.
 
The work of broadcasting continued in Harrisonburg, Virginia. In 2010 Third Way Media, under the Mennonite Mission Network of Mennonite Church USA, produced television documentaries and a 15- minute radio broadcast called<em> Shaping Families</em>. It also reissued quality CDs  of Mennonite Hour singing groups, and maintains a web site, Third Way Cafe, for persons inquiring about Mennonite theology and perspectives.
 +
 +
 
= Bibliography =
 
= Bibliography =
 
Horst, John L. "The Role of Music on the Mennonite Hour Broadcast." Unpublished presentation, Sound in the Lands Conference, Conrad Grebel University College, June 2009. Horst was the bass in the Mennonite Hour's male quartet from 1956-1963, and a studio choir member through 1967.
 
Horst, John L. "The Role of Music on the Mennonite Hour Broadcast." Unpublished presentation, Sound in the Lands Conference, Conrad Grebel University College, June 2009. Horst was the bass in the Mennonite Hour's male quartet from 1956-1963, and a studio choir member through 1967.
  
 
Pellman, Hubert R. <em>Mennonite Broadcasts: the First 25 Years</em>. Harrisonburg, Va.: Mennonite Broadcasts, Inc., 1979.
 
Pellman, Hubert R. <em>Mennonite Broadcasts: the First 25 Years</em>. Harrisonburg, Va.: Mennonite Broadcasts, Inc., 1979.
 +
 +
 
= Additional Information =
 
= Additional Information =
 
<strong>Website</strong>: [http://www.ThirdWayMedia.org/ Third Way Media]
 
<strong>Website</strong>: [http://www.ThirdWayMedia.org/ Third Way Media]
  
<h3>Audio Examples </h3> <strong>(Note: Your Player May Download the Entire File Before Playing)
+
<h3>Audio Examples </h3>  
 
 
</strong>
 
  
 
<table class="plain">  <tr> <th>Program Examples</th> <th>Length
 
<table class="plain">  <tr> <th>Program Examples</th> <th>Length
Line 47: Line 57:
 
(Minutes)
 
(Minutes)
  
</th> <th>MP3</th> <th>WMA</th> </tr>  <tr> <td><em>Divine Guidance </em>/ 6 August 1961
+
</th> <th> </th> </tr>  <tr> <td><em>Divine Guidance </em>/ 6 August 1961
  
 
B. Charles Hostetter, Speaker;
 
B. Charles Hostetter, Speaker;
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</td> <td align="right">12:49  
 
</td> <td align="right">12:49  
  
</td> <td>[[DivineGuidanceGodPromisestoLeadUs.mp3|MP3]]</td> <td>[[DivineGuidanceGodPromisestoLeadUs.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Marriage: Perishable or Cherishable</em>
+
</td> <td><player artist="B. Charles Hostetter" title="Divine Guidance">DivineGuidanceGodPromisestoLeadUs.mp3</player></td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Marriage: Perishable or Cherishable</em>
  
 
5 September 1971
 
5 September 1971
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Richard Weaver, Announcer
 
Richard Weaver, Announcer
  
</td> <td align="right">14:40</td> <td> [[MarriagePerishableorCherishable.mp3|MP3]]</td> <td>[[03_Marriage%20Perishable%20or%20Cherishable_Augsburger%20David.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr> <tr> <th>Musical Examples
+
</td> <td align="right">14:40</td> <td><player artist="David Augsburger" title="Marriage: Perishable or Cherishable">MarriagePerishableorCherishable.mp3</player></td> </tr> <tr> <th>Musical Examples
  
 
</th> <td align="right"> </td> <td> </td> <td>
 
</th> <td align="right"> </td> <td> </td> <td>
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Earl Maust, Solo
 
Earl Maust, Solo
  
</td> <td align="right">2:17</td> <td>[[01_Wonder%20Words%20of%20Life_Mennonite%20Hour%20Singers.mp3|MP3]]</td> <td>[[01_Wonder%20Words%20of%20Life_Mennonite%20Hour%20Singers.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Beneath the Cross of Jesus</em>
+
</td> <td align="right">2:17</td> <td><player title="Wonderful Words of Life">01_Wonder_Words_of_Life_Mennonite_Hour_Singers.mp3</player></td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Beneath the Cross of Jesus</em>
  
 
David Augsburger, arr.
 
David Augsburger, arr.
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Jon Scott Bender, solos
 
Jon Scott Bender, solos
  
</td> <td align="right">3:19</td> <td>[[02_Beneath%20the%20Cross%20of%20Jesus_Mennonite%20Hour%20Singers.mp3|MP3]]</td> <td>[[02_Beneath%20the%20Cross%20of%20Jesus_Mennonite%20Hour%20Singers.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>The Quiet Hour</em>
+
</td> <td align="right">3:19</td> <td><player title="Beneath the Cross of Jesus">02_Beneath_the_Cross_of_Jesus_Mennonite_Hour_Singers.mp3</player></td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>The Quiet Hour</em>
  
 
Early Male Quartet
 
Early Male Quartet
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Nevin Miller, Elmer Miller
 
Nevin Miller, Elmer Miller
  
</td> <td align="right">2:00</td> <td>[[03%20The%20Quiet%20Hour.mp3|MP3]]</td> <td>[[03_The%20Quiet%20Hour_Mennonite%20Hour%20Quartet.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Schafer's Sonntags Lied</em>
+
</td> <td align="right">2:00</td> <td><player title="The Quiet Hour">03_The_Quiet_Hour.mp3</player></td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Schafer's Sonntags Lied</em>
  
 
Later era Male Quartet
 
Later era Male Quartet
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Jack Hostetter, John Horst
 
Jack Hostetter, John Horst
  
</td> <td align="right">1:58</td> <td>[[04_Schafers%20Sonntags%20Lied_Mennonite%20Hour%20Quartet_1.mp3|MP3]]</td> <td>[[04_Schafers%20Sonntags%20Lied_Mennonite%20Hour%20Quartet.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Jesus Has Loved Me</em>
+
</td> <td align="right">1:58</td> <td><player title="Schafer's Sonntage Lied">04_Schafers_Sonntags_Lied_Mennonite_Hour_Quartet_1.mp3</player></td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>Jesus Has Loved Me</em>
  
 
Later Women's Triple Trio
 
Later Women's Triple Trio
  
</td> <td align="right">1:59</td> <td>[[05_Jesus%20Has%20Loved%20Me_Mennonite%20Hour%20Trio.mp3|MP3]]</td> <td>[[05_Jesus%20Has%20Loved%20Me_Mennonite%20Hour%20Trio.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>This Little Light of Mine</em>
+
</td> <td align="right">1:59</td> <td><player title="Jesus Has Loved Me">05_Jesus_Has_Loved_Me_Mennonite_Hour_Trio.mp3</player></td> </tr> <tr> <td><em>This Little Light of Mine</em>
  
 
David Seitz, arr.
 
David Seitz, arr.
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Later era Male Chorus
 
Later era Male Chorus
  
</td> <td align="right">2:07</td> <td>[[06_This%20Little%20Light%20of%20Mine_Mennonite%20Hour%20Singers.wma|MP3]]</td> <td>[[This%20Little%20Light%20of%20Mine_Mennonite%20Hour%20Singers.wma|WMA]]</td> </tr>  </table> <strong>The Programs are courtesy of Third Way Media. Used by Permission</strong>
+
</td> <td align="right">2:07</td> <td><player title="This Little Light of Mine">06_This_Little_Light_of_Mine_Mennonite_Hour_Singers.mp3</player></td> </tr>  </table> <strong>The Programs are courtesy of Third Way Media. Used by Permission</strong>
  
 
<strong>The Musical examples are courtesy of John L. Horst, and were used in his 2009 presentation listed in the Bibliography. Used by permission.</strong>
 
<strong>The Musical examples are courtesy of John L. Horst, and were used in his 2009 presentation listed in the Bibliography. Used by permission.</strong>

Revision as of 19:54, 23 August 2013

The origins of The Mennonite Hour go back to the fall of 1950 when a men’s quartet called The Crusaders received 15 minutes of free time on a Saturday morning, to sing live over WSVA, a local radio station in Harrisonburg, Virginia. On 4 March 1951 the program was expanded to 30 minutes and included testimonies and a short sermon. This expanded program, The Crusaders for Christ. did not have free air time. It had a variety of speakers and was soon incorporated with an independent board of directors in the summer of 1951.

In January 1952, B. Charles Hostetter became the permanent speaker on the broadcast, which was carried on stations in Harrisonburg, Virginia and Doylestown, Pennsylvania. In March 1952 the name changed to The Mennonite Hour in order to identify it as "a missionary project of the church."  By December 1952 The Mennonite Hour was broadcast over 11 stations.

Mennonite Broadcasts headquarters, 1955-1972, 1111 North Main St., Harrisonburg, Virginia. Third Way Media photo

The original staff for the program was all volunteer, but the workload rose as the number of stations increased, generating more letters to be answered. By the end of 1953, when the program was carried on 35 stations, Mildred Graybill (Tillman) was hired as a full time staff person, and Eastern Mennonite College (EMC) provided recording facilities and limited office space. In 1954 Richard Weaver, a skilled radio technician and the recording engineer for The Mennonite Hour, converted his chicken house into a quality recording studio close to the EMC campus. The technical quality of the recorded program greatly improved.

By the end of 1955, Mennonite Broadcasts, formally incorporated in 1956, moved into a spacious three-story, 20-room headquarters along North Main Street in Harrisonburg. There were seven full-time staff,  the broadcast was carried on 49 stations, and new types of programming were added. The Way To Life, an English international program, began in 1956. Heart to Heart, a 15-minute program for women in the home, was picked up in 1958. Various foreign language programs--in French, German. Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese and Navaho--were eventually added. From 1963 to 1972 The Mennonite Hour was carried on well over 100 radio stations throughout the United States and Canada. By 1961 an office was opened in Kitchener, Ontario to help handle the requests for literature and to process the many letters.

B. Charles Hostetter with male quartet. L-R: Nevin Miller, Earl Maust, Wilbur Maust, Elmer Miller, ca. 1955. Third Way Media photo

In 1972 Mennonite Broadcasts moved to a larger space along Virginia Avenue in Harrisonburg, close to the campus of Eastern Mennonite College (now University).  Staff had increased to about 30 persons and extensive publishing endeavors had been added, such as Choice Books and the expanded curriculum of Home Bible Study courses. The new building later housed a first rate recording studio (Alive Studios).

The original Mennonite Hour was a 30-minute program of worship and preaching. The radio pastor delivered a 10-minute sermon and various a cappella singing groups provided music: a mixed voice chorus, a men’s chorus, a men’s quartet, and a ladies sextet (later a triple trio in 1961). Members came from the local community, and students, staff, and faculty from Eastern Mennonite College. B. Charles Hostetter served as principal speaker from 1952 to 1965.  His preaching style was simple, direct and effective. Though adapted for radio with extra music, the program had the feel of an evangelical Mennonite worship service. Program director and announcer Norman Derstine (1951-1961) played a key role in coordinating the broadcast.

David Augsburger, Mennonite Hour speaker, 1966-1975, ca. 1972. Third Way Media photo

In 1966 the program shortened to 15 minutes and David Augsburger (1961-1975) became the principal speaker. His style focused on the Anabaptist evangelical response to the social concerns of the day: war and peace, racism, and interpersonal relationships. Witty turns of language and thought held attention and conveyed truth. Richard Weaver, the recording technician from the beginning, took over the announcer’s role during Augsburger's years.

David Shank, Willis Breckbill, and Arthur McPhee served brief terms as speakers from March 1975 through 1978.  Finally in 1978, evidence indicated The Mennonite Hour had run its natural course, and that radio industry trends favored shorter, more diversified programming. The Mennonite Broadcasts board authorized the production of a 2.5 minute daily program to replace The Mennonite Hour.

A Cappella singing played a key role on The Mennonite Hour broadcast throughout its history. There were two basic eras. J. Mark Stauffer and Earl Maust provided primary leadership in the early era, mainly the 1950s. The music in their years mirrored good solid congregational style singing. The hymn arrangements were fairly simple. The men’s quartet and ladies’ sextet usually sang from popular song books that introduced the concept of "special music’" in many Mennonite churches. The music on The Mennonite Hour helped raise the standard of Mennonite congregational singing. 

Mennonite Hour A Capella Chorus, ca. 1964. Third Way Media photo

David Augsburger, Marvin Miller, Catherine Mumaw, and David Seitz provided primary music leadership during the 1960s. The hymn arrangements became more elaborate and more choir anthems were used. In general these groups had more advanced trained voices and the singing had a more professional tone. All of The Mennonite Hour singers were well-schooled in the traditional art of of singing in a cappella four-part harmony. The singing was unpretentious, direct,and committed to communicating the Gospel message.

By 1969 all the regular singing groups disbanded. Music was selected from an musical archive of nearly 1000 songs and some outside groups recorded on occasion. A total of 21 vinyl recordings (LPs) were released from 1953 to 1978, some selling over 10,000 copies. The best of the singing from these LP’s and the program archives was later reissued on remastered CDs available from Third Way Media.

Witness, invitation, and proclamation of the Gospel message were themes that permeated The Mennonite Hour radio broadcast. These themes were never "high pressure" or confrontational but rather were personal and invitational. No high pressure fund raising appeals ever appeared on air. The necessary financial support came from records sales, various sponsoring congregations, direct mail solicitation, and dedicated board members.

The work of broadcasting continued in Harrisonburg, Virginia. In 2010 Third Way Media, under the Mennonite Mission Network of Mennonite Church USA, produced television documentaries and a 15- minute radio broadcast called Shaping Families. It also reissued quality CDs  of Mennonite Hour singing groups, and maintains a web site, Third Way Cafe, for persons inquiring about Mennonite theology and perspectives.


Bibliography

Horst, John L. "The Role of Music on the Mennonite Hour Broadcast." Unpublished presentation, Sound in the Lands Conference, Conrad Grebel University College, June 2009. Horst was the bass in the Mennonite Hour's male quartet from 1956-1963, and a studio choir member through 1967.

Pellman, Hubert R. Mennonite Broadcasts: the First 25 Years. Harrisonburg, Va.: Mennonite Broadcasts, Inc., 1979.


Additional Information

Website: Third Way Media

Audio Examples 

Program Examples Length

(Minutes)

Divine Guidance / 6 August 1961

B. Charles Hostetter, Speaker;

Norman Derstine, Announcer

(Extract from 30-minute program)

12:49 <player artist="B. Charles Hostetter" title="Divine Guidance">DivineGuidanceGodPromisestoLeadUs.mp3</player>
Marriage: Perishable or Cherishable

5 September 1971

David Augsburger, Speaker;

Richard Weaver, Announcer

14:40 <player artist="David Augsburger" title="Marriage: Perishable or Cherishable">MarriagePerishableorCherishable.mp3</player>
Musical Examples    
Wonderful Words of Life

Early Mixed Chorus

Earl Maust, Solo

2:17 <player title="Wonderful Words of Life">01_Wonder_Words_of_Life_Mennonite_Hour_Singers.mp3</player>
Beneath the Cross of Jesus

David Augsburger, arr.

Later era Mixed Choir

Annetta Wenger Miller &

Jon Scott Bender, solos

3:19 <player title="Beneath the Cross of Jesus">02_Beneath_the_Cross_of_Jesus_Mennonite_Hour_Singers.mp3</player>
The Quiet Hour

Early Male Quartet

Wilbur Maust (solo), Earl Maust,

Nevin Miller, Elmer Miller

2:00 <player title="The Quiet Hour">03_The_Quiet_Hour.mp3</player>
Schafer's Sonntags Lied

Later era Male Quartet

Bob Hostetler, Earl Maust,

Jack Hostetter, John Horst

1:58 <player title="Schafer's Sonntage Lied">04_Schafers_Sonntags_Lied_Mennonite_Hour_Quartet_1.mp3</player>
Jesus Has Loved Me

Later Women's Triple Trio

1:59 <player title="Jesus Has Loved Me">05_Jesus_Has_Loved_Me_Mennonite_Hour_Trio.mp3</player>
This Little Light of Mine

David Seitz, arr.

Later era Male Chorus

2:07 <player title="This Little Light of Mine">06_This_Little_Light_of_Mine_Mennonite_Hour_Singers.mp3</player>

The Programs are courtesy of Third Way Media. Used by Permission

The Musical examples are courtesy of John L. Horst, and were used in his 2009 presentation listed in the Bibliography. Used by permission.

Original Mennonite Encyclopedia article (1957)

The Mennonite Hour was the official broadcast of the Mennonite Church (MC) through the Mennonite Board of Missions and Charities (MBMC). It formally began in June 1951, under a private organization of Mennonite men, largely at Harrisonburg, Virginia, who formed the Mennonite Crusaders to take over the half-hour Sunday broadcast of a male quartet from Eastern Mennonite College called "Crusaders for Christ," which had begun in March 1951 over the local Harrisonburg station WSVA. In January 1952, B. Charles Hostetter became the radio pastor, a position he still held in 1957. In June 1953 the Crusaders entered into an agreement with the MBMC, whereby the planning and promoting of the broadcast became a cooperative venture under an administrative committee of the Board called "Radio Evangelism Committee." The Crusaders, who had been incorporated in Virginia June 1952, continued to operate and finance the broadcast, however, and did so until 1956, when its name was changed to Mennonite Broadcasts, Inc. The Mennonite Hour was a half-hour program, basically of worship and preaching. The radio pastor delivered a ten-minute sermon, and music was provided as a cappella singing by the Mennonite Hour Chorus, composed largely of community people and students of Eastern Mennonite College (EMC). The program director in the 1950s was Norman Derstine, a local Mennonite minister; music director, Earl Maust of the EMC faculty. The international English version was called "The Way to Life." In early 1957 the Mennonite Hour was broadcast over seventy stations in the United States and foreign countries. Of this number, 56 were in the United States, two in Canada, plus broadcasts in Ceylon, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Jamaica, Liberia, Tangier, Panama, Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Vietnam. The weekly listening audience was estimated in 1957 at five million.  The program was self-sustaining, supported largely by voluntary contributions from the listening audience. The Mennonite Hour Informer was published monthly 1952-1967, and the Mennonite Hour Prayer Guide monthly after 1953. The Mennonite Hour ceased broadcasting in 1979.-- Harold S. Bender

Maps

Map:Third Way Media (Harrisonburg, Virginia)


Author(s) John L Horst
Date Published March 2010

Cite This Article

MLA style

Horst, John L. "Mennonite Hour (Radio Program)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. March 2010. Web. 16 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Hour_(Radio_Program)&oldid=100075.

APA style

Horst, John L. (March 2010). Mennonite Hour (Radio Program). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 16 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Hour_(Radio_Program)&oldid=100075.




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