Église évangélique mennonite de Joliette (Joliette, Quebec, Canada)

From GAMEO
Revision as of 19:11, 20 August 2013 by GameoAdmin (talk | contribs) (CSV import - 20130820)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
First meeting place at 1419 rue Piette. Clyde Shannon stands in front, ca. 1976 L-R: David Shantz, Armand Roussin, Harold Reesor, Tilman Martin Joliette congregation in 2007
First meeting place at 1419 rue Piette. Clyde Shannon stands in front, ca. 1976 L-R: David Shantz, Armand Roussin, Harold Reesor, Tilman Martin Joliette congregation in 2007
First meeting place at 1419 rue Piette. Clyde Shannon stands in front, ca. 1976 L-R: David Shantz, Armand Roussin, Harold Reesor, Tilman Martin Joliette congregation in 2007

The Église évangelique mennonite de Joliette began services in 1958, and formally organized in 1974. Harold and Pauline Reesor were the founding missionaries for the group, choosing this small industrial town, 70 km northeast of Montreal, because it had no French Protestant congregation at the time. Previous French United Church work had been abandoned. This mission venture originated through the Mennonite Conference of Ontario and the Mennonite Board of Mission(Elkhart). In the pre-Vatican II days, Joliette was very heavily guided by the many priests, nuns and monks resident in town. Opposition from church and municipal authorities made for slow discouraging work. The Reesors met together with fellow missionaries Tilman and Janet Martin, along with the Schmidt family from Rawdon for fellowship and worship in French. Harold Reesor visited many homes as follow-up for an evangelical effort to mail French Protestant material to every household in Quebec. In 1961 Melvin and Leeta Horst and family from St. Jacob's congregation arrived near Joliette as part of "colonization" efforts to farm and support other missionaries. Harold Reesor built his house with a large basement, at 1419 rue Piette, which functioned as the church building from 1962 till 1982. In 1963, the Reesors handed over the responsibilities for the congregation to Clyde and Elisabeth Shannon, moving themselves to farm nearby Mascouche. Over the years many volunteers came from Ontario and particularly the Markham area to offer practical help. Very few could speak French to help more directly. The Shannons with previous experience as missionaries in the Congo and in St. Jerome, Quebec, pressed on in evangelism and hospital visits despite continued very slow progress. The first baptism came in 1969. Only in the late 1970s did a province-wide revival touch Joliette and bring in many youth. A church council was begun in 1974 and several younger members, including a local radio announcer began leadership. Rapid growth in the late 1970s led to gradual splitting off the members from nearby Rawdon for their own church and the  buying of the present larger church building in Joliette in 1982. Since 1982, the congregation has had native French-speaking Quebecers in leadership but from 1994 to 2005 there was no resident pastor. In that time the French membership dipped only to be replaced more recently by new immigrants. Joliette is generally considered the most Anabaptist of the French Mennonite or Mennonite Brethren congregations in Quebec and is also strongly evangelical. Over the years the congregation has been quite involved with prison ministries leading to and encouraged by full-time chaplaincy positions for members Tilman Martin and David Shantz. In the late 1990s a strong music and youth program led to opportunities to work with local Roman Catholic leaders and pioneer links between evangelicals and Catholics. In 2007 an independent Spanish congregation began meeting in the same building.

The congregation has been affiliated with the Mennonite Conference of Ontario and Quebec (1974-1988), the Mennonite Church (1974-    ), Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada (1988-    ), the Conference of Mennonites in Canada (1995-    ) and Mennonite Church Canada. The language of worship is French. 1225, rue Ladouceur, Joliette, Quebec, Canada, J6E 3X3. (450) 756-4351. Located in the northeast end of the city. The pastor in 2008 (shared with the Église évangélique menonite de Rawdon) is André Ouimet.

Bibliography

Martin, Janet. Album II: protestantisme française en Amerique du Nord, Hervé Fines, ed. Montreal: L'Aurore, 1988: 66-67.

Mennonite Reporter (12 December 1977): 12; (12 May 1980): 12; (22 February 1982): 14; (26 July 1982): 12; (23 May 1988): 17; (9 March 1992): 12.

Additional Information

Table 1: Membership of Église évangélique mennonite de Joliette

Year Membership
1985 61
1995 28
2000 32
2008 32

Table 2: Pastoral leaders of Église évangélique mennonite de Joliette

Harold Reesor 1958-1963
Clyde Shannon 1963-1978
André Joly & David Shantz 1978
David Shantz 1979-1983
Armand Roussin (1/4 time) 1984
Armand Roussin 1985-1991
François Malouin 1992-1994
no resident pastor 1994-2005
Daniel Genest (1/4 time) 2005
Doug and Stephanie Horst (1/4 time) 2006
André Ouimet (1/2 time) 2007-


Author(s) Richard Lougheed
Date Published February 2008

Cite This Article

MLA style

Lougheed, Richard. "Église évangélique mennonite de Joliette (Joliette, Quebec, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. February 2008. Web. 16 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=%C3%89glise_%C3%A9vang%C3%A9lique_mennonite_de_Joliette_(Joliette,_Quebec,_Canada)&oldid=80398.

APA style

Lougheed, Richard. (February 2008). Église évangélique mennonite de Joliette (Joliette, Quebec, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 16 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=%C3%89glise_%C3%A9vang%C3%A9lique_mennonite_de_Joliette_(Joliette,_Quebec,_Canada)&oldid=80398.




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