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''' [[Sponsors]] |  [[World Mennonite Membership Distribution|Mennonite World Statistics]] | [[Special:NewPages|New Articles]]'''
 
''' [[Sponsors]] |  [[World Mennonite Membership Distribution|Mennonite World Statistics]] | [[Special:NewPages|New Articles]]'''
 
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=== Featured Article: "George I, King of Great Britain and Ireland (1660-1727)" ===
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=== Featured Article: "Burkholder, John Lawrence (1917-2010)" ===
[[George I, King of Great Britain and Ireland (1660-1727)|(Read full article)]]
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[[Burkholder, John Lawrence (1917-2010)|(Read full article)]]
  
{{:George I, King of Great Britain and Ireland (1660-1727)}}
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{{:Burkholder, John Lawrence (1917-2010)}}
 
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=== Who We Are ===
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=== Our Mission ===
The mission of GAMEO is to provide reliable information on [[Anabaptism|Anabaptist]]-related ([[Amish]], Mennonite, [[Hutterian Brethren (Hutterische Brüder)|Hutterite]], [[Brethren in Christ Church|Brethren in Christ]]) topics, including history, theology, biography, institutions and local congregations. Secular topics from an Anabaptist perspective and full-text source documents are also included.
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The Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online provides reliable, freely-available English-language information on Anabaptist-related congregations, denominations, conferences, institutions and significant individuals, as well as historical and theological topics. Secular subject articles from an Anabaptist perspective and full-text source documents are also included.
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=== Donations ===
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If you would like to make a donation to the ongoing development and expansion of GAMEO we'd be glad for your help! Donations should sent to [http://mwc-cmm.org/article/ways-give Mennonite World Conference] and designated for GAMEO.
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=== Corrections and Suggestions ===
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If you have specific corrections to articles or suggestions that should be added to the encyclopedia send them to the GAMEO's email address at admin@gameo.org. As a volunteer organization we are unable to respond to questions on Mennonite history or genealogical questions of any kind. For questions of that type, please contact a local genealogical society, or check with a Mennonite historical library or archives.
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===About Us===
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===== To learn more [[GAMEO:About|about GAMEO]], click the [[GAMEO:About|link]]. =====
  
GAMEO includes the full text of the print [[Mennonite Encyclopedia, The|''Mennonite Encyclopedia'']], and continues to add new content both from North America and around the world. In December 2012 there were over 15,325 articles in GAMEO. A minimal amount of non-English content is currently available within the encyclopedia, and this content will continue to grow. Articles in GAMEO are assigned and editorially reviewed before upload; GAMEO is not a "Wiki"-style project. If you have specific '''corrections''' to articles or '''suggestions''' that should be added to the encyclopedia send them to GAMEO's email address at [mailto:admin@gameo.org admin@gameo.org].
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=== Other Mennonite Encyclopedias ===
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GAMEO works together with the editors of other Mennonite encyclopedias to make their content available in the English language. These encyclopedias include:
  
GAMEO cooperates with the [http://www.anabaptistwiki.org/mediawiki/index.php/Main_Page Global Anabaptist Wiki]. The Global Anabaptist Wiki is an interactive community of Anabaptist-Mennonite groups from around the world. Initiated by the [http://www.goshen.edu/mhl/ Mennonite Historical Library] at [http://www.goshen.edu/ Goshen College], the site is committed to helping individual groups: 1) tell their own stories; 2) post and preserve electronic archives; and 3) become better informed about other groups in the global Anabaptist fellowship. The Global Anabaptist Wiki is a major site for primary sources related to the Anabaptist-Mennonite tradition from the 16th century to the present and in a wide variety of languages.
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* [http://www.menonitica.org/lexikon/ Lexikon der Mennoniten in Paraguay]
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* [http://www.mennlex.de/doku.php Mennonitisches Lexikon (MennLex)]
  
As a volunteer organization we are unable to respond to questions on Mennonite history or genealogical questions of any kind. For questions of that type, please contact a local genealogical society, or check with a Mennonite historical library or archives. For a list of Mennonite historical society or archives near you, please consult the [http://www.mcusa-archives.org/directory2.html Directory of Mennonite and Related Church Historians and Committees]
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===Mennonite Historical Agencies===
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As a volunteer organization we are unable to respond to questions on Mennonite history or genealogical questions of any kind.  
  
If you would like to make a '''donation''' to the ongoing development and expansion of GAMEO we'd be glad for your help! Donations should sent via [http://mwc-cmm.org/article/ways-give Mennonite World Conference] and designated for GAMEO.
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For questions of that type, please contact a local genealogical society, or check with a Mennonite historical library or archives. For a list of Mennonite historical society or archives near you, please consult the [http://mennoniteusa.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/2015DirectoryofNorthAmericanMennoniteHistoricalAgencies.pdf Directory of North American Mennonite Historical Agencies].
  
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GAMEO is a project of the [http://www.mhsc.ca/ Mennonite Historical Society of Canada], [http://www.mennoniteusa.org/executive-board/archives/ Mennonite Church USA Archives],
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[[File:Global Anabaptism Portal.jpg|800px|thumbnail|center|link=http://www.globalanabaptism.com/]]
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GAMEO falls under the umbrella of the Mennonite World Conference Faith and Life Commission. Members of the Management Board include: [http://www.mhsc.ca/ Mennonite Historical Society of Canada], [http://www.mennoniteusa.org/executive-board/archives/ Mennonite Church USA Archives],
 
[http://www.mbhistory.org/index.en.html Mennonite Brethren Historical Commission], [http://www.mcc.org/ Mennonite Central Committee], [http://www.mwc-cmm.org/ Mennonite World Conference] and the [http://www.goshen.edu/institutes/anabaptism/ Institute for the Study of Global Anabaptism]
 
[http://www.mbhistory.org/index.en.html Mennonite Brethren Historical Commission], [http://www.mcc.org/ Mennonite Central Committee], [http://www.mwc-cmm.org/ Mennonite World Conference] and the [http://www.goshen.edu/institutes/anabaptism/ Institute for the Study of Global Anabaptism]
 
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Revision as of 21:01, 11 July 2017

Encyclopedia Index

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0-9 (special chars)

Sponsors | Mennonite World Statistics | New Articles

Featured Article: "Burkholder, John Lawrence (1917-2010)"

(Read full article)


J. Lawrence and Harriet Burkholder in 1971 when Lawrence became Goshen College president.
Source: Goshen College Photograph Collection, 1958-2004. J. Lawrence Burkholder Inauguration, 1971. V-4-11 Box 1 Folder 8. Mennonite Church USA Archives - Goshen. Goshen, Indiana.

J. Lawrence “Larry” Burkholder, a Goshen College and Harvard Divinity School professor and administrator, as well as a scholar and interpreter of Mennonite theological ethics, was born 31 October 1917 in Newville, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, USA to Henry L. Burkholder (24 October 1878-18 December 1938) and Mary Seitz Burkholder (1 November 1884-14 March 1941); he was the third child in a family of two boys and three girls. On 20 August 1939 he married Harriet Lee Lapp (31 March 1916-6 September 2007), who he met while attending Goshen College. They had two sons and two daughters. J. Lawrence died on 24 June 2010, in Goshen, Indiana. Lawrence and Harriet are buried in the Elkhart Prairie Cemetery in Goshen.

Lawrence Burkholder grew up in Newville, Pennsylvania, near Shippensburg State Teachers' College, where his father, Henry, who had an MA from New York University in 1929, and had begun work on a PhD, taught from World War I until his death in 1938. In 1939 Lawrence graduated from Goshen College. He then was among the earliest (Old) Mennonites to secure a BD (Gettysburg Theological Seminary) before his ordination in 1942. In 1944, after a two-year pastorate at the First Mennonite Church of New Bremen in New York, he volunteered for relief work in China. Burkholder spent most of a year in India before flying over the Himalayas into China. In 1946 his family joined him in Shanghai, where they resided until being evacuated in December 1948.

These years in China were deeply influential in shaping Burkholder's lifelong interests and creative thinking. Appointed by the Mennonite Board of Missions, Elkhart, Indiana, he directed programs for both Mennonite Central Committee and Church World Service. As a relief administrator he worked closely with the United Nations China Clearing Committee. He later observed that these years in China introduced into his thinking "complexity and ambiguity, and sometimes tragic necessity." He added, "Nothing in my Mennonite background prepared me to make any but unambiguous choices."

On returning to North America, he began a graduate program in theology and ethics at Princeton Theological Seminary, where he eventually earned a ThM (1951) and ThD (1958). He taught at Goshen College between 1949 and 1961. In 1961 he joined the Harvard Divinity School faculty as the Victor S. Thomas Professor of Divinity and first chair of the Department of the Church. In 1971 he responded to the call of Goshen College to serve as president, a position he held until 1984.

Burkholder's thinking centered on two themes. The first was discipleship. In his teaching and several essays he connected the Anabaptist notion of "Nachfolge Christi" to the writings of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. At Harvard he once had Bonhoeffer's fiancée, Maria von Wedemeyer, visit his seminar on discipleship. He lived his commitment "to serve Christ by loving the neighbor with greater understanding and effectiveness.”

The second theme is represented by his dissertation title: "The Problem of Social Responsibility from the Perspective of the Mennonite Church" (1958; published in 1989). Here he connected his China experience to what he felt were inadequacies in Mennonite ethics. He asked whether Mennonite ethics could deal with "both the essentials of Christianity and the realities of modern life." He appealed for church discernment (another of his favorite terms) to consider "perplexing contemporary issues, not to abandon the way of the cross [but rather with] creative imagination, courage to face suffering, and a renewed commitment of faith to follow the way.” In a noteworthy autobiographical reflection, The Limits of Perfection (1993), he connected his life experiences to his ethical thought in a stimulating narrative.

As a highly respected president of Goshen College, Burkholder made unique contributions that enhanced the visibility of the college in both the local community and in Mennonite congregations. He encouraged and directed a successful campaign to build an endowment called "The Uncommon Cause."

One of his singular achievements was to extend the college's international education component—the Study-Service Term—to China. He first returned to China in 1975. After several additional visits he negotiated an undergraduate exchange with the Sichuan Provincial Bureau of Higher Education. This program initiated in 1980, included dozens of Chinese scholars who spent a year at Goshen studying English language, North American literature and culture, and Christian theology. He also negotiated an inter-institutional program then known as China Educational Exchange. He lived the pain of China in the 1940s as well as the satisfaction of China's renewal after 1975.

Lawrence Burkholder was a faithful servant of the church, denominationally and ecumenically. He is widely considered to be one of the twentieth-century Mennonite movement's most provocative and creative thinkers.

Bibliography

Burkholder, J. L., Rodney Sawatsky, and Scott Holland. The Limits of Perfection : Conversations with J. Lawrence Burkholder. Waterloo, Ont.: Institute of Anabaptist-Mennonite Studies, Conrad Grebel College, 1993.

Burkholder, John Lawrence. The Problem of Social Responsibility from the Perspective of the Mennonite Church. Elkhart, IN: Institute of Mennonite Studies, 1989.

“John Lawrence Burkholder.” SAGA (Swiss Anabaptist Genealogical Association) Genealogical Website. Web. 3 June 2016. http://www.saga-omii.org/TNG10/getperson.php?personID=I451508&tree=Hostetler.

Lapp, John A. “In Memoriam: J. Lawrence Burkholder (1917-2010). Mennonite Quarterly Review 84 (October 2010): 485-486. This GAMEO article is derived, with permission, from the MQR memorial article.

Steiner, Jennifer and Jodi H. Beyeler. “Former Goshen College President J. Lawrence Burkholder passes away on June 24 and leaves Legacy of Engagement with the Church and the World.” Goshen College. 2010. Web. 5 June 2016. https://www.goshen.edu/news/pressarchive/06-24-10-jlb-death475.html.

Books by J. Lawrence Burkholder

Burkholder, J. Lawrence. Following Christ in our work. Scottdale, Pa. : Herald Press, 1959.

Burkholder, J. Lawrence. The problem of social responsibility from the perspective of the Mennonite Church. Elkhart, Ind. : Institute of Mennonite Studies, 1989.

Burkholder, J. Lawrence. Recollections of a Sectarian Realist: A Mennonite Life in the Twentieth Century. Elkhart, Ind.: Institute of Mennonite Studies, 2017.

Sawatsky, Rodney and Scott Holland. The Limits of perfection: conversations with J. Lawrence Burkholder. Waterloo, Ont. : Institute of Anabaptist-Mennonite Studies, Conrad Grebel College, 1993. A second edition was issued in 1996.


Author(s) John A Lapp
Date Published June 2016

Cite This Article

MLA style

Lapp, John A. "Welcome to GAMEO." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. June 2016. Web. 16 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Welcome_to_GAMEO&oldid=149046.

APA style

Lapp, John A. (June 2016). Welcome to GAMEO. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 16 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Welcome_to_GAMEO&oldid=149046.




©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.

Our Mission

The Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online provides reliable, freely-available English-language information on Anabaptist-related congregations, denominations, conferences, institutions and significant individuals, as well as historical and theological topics. Secular subject articles from an Anabaptist perspective and full-text source documents are also included.

Donations

If you would like to make a donation to the ongoing development and expansion of GAMEO we'd be glad for your help! Donations should sent to Mennonite World Conference and designated for GAMEO.

Corrections and Suggestions

If you have specific corrections to articles or suggestions that should be added to the encyclopedia send them to the GAMEO's email address at admin@gameo.org. As a volunteer organization we are unable to respond to questions on Mennonite history or genealogical questions of any kind. For questions of that type, please contact a local genealogical society, or check with a Mennonite historical library or archives.

About Us

To learn more about GAMEO, click the link.

Other Mennonite Encyclopedias

GAMEO works together with the editors of other Mennonite encyclopedias to make their content available in the English language. These encyclopedias include:

Mennonite Historical Agencies

As a volunteer organization we are unable to respond to questions on Mennonite history or genealogical questions of any kind.

For questions of that type, please contact a local genealogical society, or check with a Mennonite historical library or archives. For a list of Mennonite historical society or archives near you, please consult the Directory of North American Mennonite Historical Agencies.

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GAMEO falls under the umbrella of the Mennonite World Conference Faith and Life Commission. Members of the Management Board include: Mennonite Historical Society of Canada, Mennonite Church USA Archives, Mennonite Brethren Historical Commission, Mennonite Central Committee, Mennonite World Conference and the Institute for the Study of Global Anabaptism