Difference between revisions of "Metamora Mennonite Church (Metamora, Illinois, USA)"
[checked revision] | [checked revision] |
SamSteiner (talk | contribs) (Replaced article) |
SamSteiner (talk | contribs) |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
On 1 April 1918, during [[World War (1914-1918)|World War I]], a gang painted the church building with yellow paint with slogans like "We buy no bonds," "We are slackers," and "We love the Kaiser." The yellow paint remained on the building for over a year. | On 1 April 1918, during [[World War (1914-1918)|World War I]], a gang painted the church building with yellow paint with slogans like "We buy no bonds," "We are slackers," and "We love the Kaiser." The yellow paint remained on the building for over a year. | ||
− | In 1903, the Roanoke congregation purchased an abandoned 1865 Baptist and Methodist church building seven miles north of Eureka. Metamora Amish Mennonite joined the project in 1905, and helped rebuild the building in 1906, and called it the Harmony Mennonite Church. When the Roanoke congregation built its own meetinghouse in 1920, it left the Harmony work in charge of the Metamora congregation. Services were held regularly each alternate Sunday in the Metamora church. On intervening Sundays, the congregation divided between the Union church near Washington, Illinois, and the Harmony church. In 1929, the Harmony church was closed as greater use of automobiles and better roads made travel to the Metamora building easier. The Harmony building was dismantled and moved to [[ | + | In 1903, the Roanoke congregation purchased an abandoned 1865 Baptist and Methodist church building seven miles north of Eureka. Metamora Amish Mennonite joined the project in 1905, and helped rebuild the building in 1906, and called it the Harmony Mennonite Church. When the Roanoke congregation built its own meetinghouse in 1920, it left the Harmony work in charge of the Metamora congregation. Services were held regularly each alternate Sunday in the Metamora church. On intervening Sundays, the congregation divided between the Union church near Washington, Illinois, and the Harmony church. In 1929, the Harmony church was closed as greater use of automobiles and better roads made travel to the Metamora building easier. The Harmony building was dismantled and moved to [[CrossPoint Church (East Peoria, Illinois, USA)|Pleasant Hill]], near [[Morton (Illinois, USA)|Morton]], and was used by the congregation there as a house of worship. The Harmony property became part of a local farm. The Union Mennonite Church also closed in 1929. Edward Schertz purchased the building and used the lumber to rebuild his house. Metamora then included members from both Amish and Mennonite heritage. |
Well-known sons and daughters of the Metamora congregation included historian [[Smith, C. Henry (1875-1948)|C. Henry Smith]], home mission worker [[Oyer, Emma (1886-1951)|Emma Oyer]], [[Oyer, Noah (1891-1931)|Noah Oyer]], professor and minister at [[Hesston College (Hesston, Kansas, USA)|Hesston College]] and [[Goshen College (Goshen, Indiana, USA)|Goshen College]], and Walter Yoder, hymnologist. | Well-known sons and daughters of the Metamora congregation included historian [[Smith, C. Henry (1875-1948)|C. Henry Smith]], home mission worker [[Oyer, Emma (1886-1951)|Emma Oyer]], [[Oyer, Noah (1891-1931)|Noah Oyer]], professor and minister at [[Hesston College (Hesston, Kansas, USA)|Hesston College]] and [[Goshen College (Goshen, Indiana, USA)|Goshen College]], and Walter Yoder, hymnologist. | ||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
Estes, Steven R. ''Living Stones: a History of the Metamora Mennonite Church.'' Metamora, Ill.: The Church, 1984. | Estes, Steven R. ''Living Stones: a History of the Metamora Mennonite Church.'' Metamora, Ill.: The Church, 1984. | ||
− | Smith, Willard H. ''Mennonites in Illinois''. Studies in Anabaptist and Mennonite History, 24. Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 1983: 63-65, 169-170 | + | Smith, Willard H. ''Mennonites in Illinois''. Studies in Anabaptist and Mennonite History, 24. Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 1983: 63-65, 169-170. |
+ | |||
= Additional Information = | = Additional Information = | ||
'''Address''': 1393 Mennonite Road, Metamora, Illinois 61548-7559 | '''Address''': 1393 Mennonite Road, Metamora, Illinois 61548-7559 | ||
Line 130: | Line 131: | ||
| Melissa Danner (Associate) || 2004?-2006? | | Melissa Danner (Associate) || 2004?-2006? | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | Ada L. Nofsinger (1933-2017)(Visitation) || 2004?-2014 | + | | Ada L. Nofsinger (1933-2017)(Visitation) || 2004?-2014 |
|- | |- | ||
| Jon David Byler (Associate) || 2005- | | Jon David Byler (Associate) || 2005- | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Randall Miller (Transitional) || 2015-2017 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Eric A. Potter || 2017- | | Eric A. Potter || 2017- | ||
|} | |} | ||
+ | |||
== Metamora Mennonite Church Membership == | == Metamora Mennonite Church Membership == | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right" | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right" |
Latest revision as of 15:50, 30 March 2024
Organized church life for Amish Mennonites in Illinois began in 1833 after the arrival of Christian Engle, a bishop ordained in Alsace. The Partridge Creek Amish Mennonite congregation was the first Amish congregation in Illinois. Prior to that, Bishop Peter Nafziger from Butler County, Ohio, had visited the area several times beginning in 1831.
Initially, the congregation met in homes every two weeks, followed by a simple lunch. The Partridge settlement in Woodford County grew rapidly and, by the 1840s, spread into adjacent counties.
The Partridge Creek congregation built its first meetinghouse in 1854. Partly, the departure of members to the Apostolic Christian Church (or Neu Taufer) in the early 1852s, stimulated the leadership to ordain a younger leader, and to build a meetinghouse.
During the Civil War, some Partridge Creek men paid the required fine to avoid service, but others enlisted. Perhaps the fact that Abraham Lincoln was well-known in the local community enhanced enlistment.
As Partridge Creek Amish Mennonite families began to move to more distant locations, new congregations formed. These included the Waldo Mennonite Church in 1860, the Weston congregation in 1870, and the Roanoke congregation in 1873. By 1889, most members had moved from Partridge Creek, so the congregation built a new wooden frame meetinghouse close to Metamora on land purchased from Christian and Laura Camp. It continued to use the Partridge Creek meetinghouse until 1894, when it was sold to a family. The new meetinghouse was known as the Metamora Amish Mennonite Church.
Partridge Creek became a member of the Western District Amish Mennonite Conference in the 1880s when that conference formed. When its Illinois congregations merged with the Illinois Mennonites in 1921, the combined regional conference became the Illinois Mennonite Conference. The Partridge Creek Amish Mennonites began to rotate services with Amish Mennonite congregations at Dillon Creek, Delavan Prairie, and Die Busch Gemein.
The congregation in the late 19th century also cooperated more closely with the Union Mennonite Church, a congregation with a Mennonite, not Amish, background. The Union Mennonites had begun settling in this area of Illinois at the same time as the Amish, but the groups had maintained strict separation for some decades. The cooperation was facilitated by popular evangelists like John S. Coffman, who preached to both groups.
In 1911, the Metamora Amish Mennonite Church tore down the 1889 building and erected a new building that it dedicated on 12 November 1911. This building also became inadequate over time. In 1951 it began construction of a new building and dedicated it on 16 November 1952. It built a new parsonage in 1956.
On 1 April 1918, during World War I, a gang painted the church building with yellow paint with slogans like "We buy no bonds," "We are slackers," and "We love the Kaiser." The yellow paint remained on the building for over a year.
In 1903, the Roanoke congregation purchased an abandoned 1865 Baptist and Methodist church building seven miles north of Eureka. Metamora Amish Mennonite joined the project in 1905, and helped rebuild the building in 1906, and called it the Harmony Mennonite Church. When the Roanoke congregation built its own meetinghouse in 1920, it left the Harmony work in charge of the Metamora congregation. Services were held regularly each alternate Sunday in the Metamora church. On intervening Sundays, the congregation divided between the Union church near Washington, Illinois, and the Harmony church. In 1929, the Harmony church was closed as greater use of automobiles and better roads made travel to the Metamora building easier. The Harmony building was dismantled and moved to Pleasant Hill, near Morton, and was used by the congregation there as a house of worship. The Harmony property became part of a local farm. The Union Mennonite Church also closed in 1929. Edward Schertz purchased the building and used the lumber to rebuild his house. Metamora then included members from both Amish and Mennonite heritage.
Well-known sons and daughters of the Metamora congregation included historian C. Henry Smith, home mission worker Emma Oyer, Noah Oyer, professor and minister at Hesston College and Goshen College, and Walter Yoder, hymnologist.
During World War I, almost all Metamora Amish Mennonite men refused military service. In World War II, 13 men served in the Civilian Public Service program authorized by the church, and ten men entered military service.
After the war, the Metamora Mennonite Church helped establish Sunday schools that eventually became the Cazenovia Mennonite (1957) and Germantown Mennonite (1963) churches. However, the Germantown congregation closed in 1972, and most members returned to Metamora.
Bibliography
Estes, Steven R. Living Stones: a History of the Metamora Mennonite Church. Metamora, Ill.: The Church, 1984.
Smith, Willard H. Mennonites in Illinois. Studies in Anabaptist and Mennonite History, 24. Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 1983: 63-65, 169-170.
Additional Information
Address: 1393 Mennonite Road, Metamora, Illinois 61548-7559
Phone: 309-367-4892
Website: Metamora Mennonite Church
Denominational Affiliation:
Western Amish Mennonite Conference (Until 1920)
Illinois Mennonite Conference (1921-present)
Mennonite Church (MC) (1921-2002)
Mennonite Church USA (2002-present)
Pastoral Leaders at Metamora Mennonite Church
Name | Years of Service |
---|---|
Christian Engle (ca. 1765-1838)(Bishop) | 1833-1838 |
Joseph Engel (1790-1852)(Bishop) | 1837-1852 |
Jacob Nafziger (1798-1888)(Bishop) | 1837-ca. 1875 |
Michael Belsley (ca. 1775-1848) | 1837-1848 |
John Nafziger (1802-1856)(Bishop) | 1837-1856 |
Andrew Baughman (ca. 1799-1864)(Bishop) | 1839-1864 |
Johannes Gingerich (1801-1845)(Bishop) | 1840-1845 |
Peter Nafziger (1787-1885)(Bishop) | 1844-1859 |
Peter Beller (1800-1887)(Bishop) | 1850-ca. 1867 |
Christian Esch (1818-1882) | 1852-1864 |
Joseph Maurer (1815-1867)(Bishop) | 1856-1867 |
Andrew Ebersole (ca. 1825-ca. 1894) | 1880-1894 |
Joseph Bachman (1826-1897) (Bishop) |
1864-1867 1867-1897 |
Christian Garber (1814-1893) | by 1866-1893 |
Christian Schertz (1832-1889) | 1866-1889 |
Peter Guengerich (1825-1898) | 1880-1898 |
Peter Schertz (1857-1932) | 1888-1932 |
Peter Summer (1843-1922) | 1888-1918 |
Andrew A. Schrock (1863-1949) (Bishop) |
1894-1898 1898-1941 |
Peter Samuel Garber (1849-1939) | 1894-1934 |
Henry R. Schertz (1886-1954) (Bishop) |
1917-1920, 1923-1941 1941-1954 |
LeRoy E. Kennel (1930-2019) (Interim) |
1953-1954 1978-1979 |
Harold A. Zehr (1903-1975) | 1954-1955 |
Roy C. Bucher (1920-2006) (Interim) |
1955-1970 1994 |
Howard J. Zehr (1916-1977)(Bishop) | 1954-1957 |
Milo F. Kauffman (1898-1988)(Interim) | 1970-1971 |
Jason James "Jim" Detweiler (1926-1994) | 1971-1978 |
Joseph W. Davis (1895-1984)(Visitation) | 1972-1975 |
Gail Fisher (Christian Education) |
1976-1981 1987-1988 |
Larry Augsburger | 1979-1986 |
Tina Hartzler (Christian Education) | 1982-1983 |
Tracey I. Werner (Christian Education) | 1984-1986? |
Paul C. Sieber (1921-2019)(Interim) | 1986-1987? |
Larry Tate | 1987-1988 |
Roger Hochstetler | 1988-1994 |
Robert E. Nolt | 1994-2001 |
Michael D. Danner (Associate) (Lead) |
1997-2001 2001-2015 |
Melissa Danner (Associate) | 2004?-2006? |
Ada L. Nofsinger (1933-2017)(Visitation) | 2004?-2014 |
Jon David Byler (Associate) | 2005- |
Randall Miller (Transitional) | 2015-2017 |
Eric A. Potter | 2017- |
Metamora Mennonite Church Membership
Year | Members |
---|---|
1854 | ca. 100 |
1889 | ca. 200 |
1904 | 179 |
1925 | 274 |
1930 | 266 |
1940 | 299 |
1950 | 351 |
1960 | 431 |
1970 | 424 |
1980 | 305 |
1990 | 239 |
2000 | 229 |
2009 | 188 |
2020 | 167 |
Original Mennonite Encyclopedia Article
By Henry R. Schertz and Harold S. Bender. Copied by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 3, p. 658. All rights reserved.
Metamora Mennonite Church (Mennonite Church USA), originally known as the Partridge Creek or Springbay Church, was organized in 1833 by Christian Engel in the home of his son John Engel one mile west of Metamora. Christian Engel, the first Amish bishop in America west of Ohio, served as bishop of this congregation until his death in 1838. The Partridge congregation at one time had 13 ordained ministers, four of whom were bishops. Services were held in the homes until 1854, when the Partridge brick church was built, which served until 1889, when a frame building was erected one mile east of Metamora. For many years services were held every other Sunday, alternating with the Roanoke Church.
The Metamora and Roanoke congregations together purchased an abandoned Baptist church building seven miles north of Eureka in 1905, rebuilt it, and called it the Harmony Church. When the Roanoke congregation built its own meetinghouse it left the Harmony work in charge of the Metamora congregation. Services were held regularly each alternate Sunday in the Metamora church. On intervening Sundays the congregation divided between the Union church near Washington, IL, and the Harmony church. In 1929 the Harmony and Union churches were closed. The Harmony building was moved to Pleasant Hill, near Morton, and was used by the congregation there as a house of worship.
The membership of the Metamora congregation in 1955 was 388, with Roy Bucher as pastor and Howard J. Zehr as bishop. The congregation is a member of the Illinois Conference. H. R. Schertz (1886-1954) served as minister in 1917-1954, bishop 1941-1954, and outstanding leader of the Metamora Mennonite Church, with the exception of a period of about three years (1920-1923), when he served as superintendent of the Chicago Home Mission.
Author(s) | H. R. Schertz |
---|---|
Harold S Bender | |
Date Published | 1957 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Schertz, H. R. and Harold S Bender. "Metamora Mennonite Church (Metamora, Illinois, USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1957. Web. 24 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Metamora_Mennonite_Church_(Metamora,_Illinois,_USA)&oldid=178614.
APA style
Schertz, H. R. and Harold S Bender. (1957). Metamora Mennonite Church (Metamora, Illinois, USA). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 24 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Metamora_Mennonite_Church_(Metamora,_Illinois,_USA)&oldid=178614.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 3, p. 658. All rights reserved.
©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.