Difference between revisions of "Arnaud Mennonite Church (Arnaud, Manitoba, Canada)"

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[[File:Arnaud MC.jpg|300px|thumbnail|right|''Arnaud Mennonite Church building, 2017. <br/>Source: Bert Friesen'']]
 
[[File:Arnaud MC.jpg|300px|thumbnail|right|''Arnaud Mennonite Church building, 2017. <br/>Source: Bert Friesen'']]
 
Mennonites settled in the Ste. Elizabeth, [[Arnaud (Manitoba, Canada)|Arnaud]], and Dominion City areas of [[Manitoba (Canada)|Manitoba]] in 1925. They met to worship in private homes and rented facilities when these became available. In 1927 the Lichtenau Mennonite Church (<em>Lichtenauer Mennoniten Gemeinde</em>) was formally organized. In 1929 it was decided to build a meeting house at [[St. Elizabeth Mennonite Church (St. Elizabeth, Manitoba, Canada)|Ste. Elizabeth]]. This was the first meeting house built by the 1920s Mennonite immigrants in western Canada. Travel conditions and means made it difficult for the entire group to worship together at Ste. Elizabeth. So in 1944 another meeting house was built in Arnaud. The Mennonite Brethren families had already built a meeting house in Arnaud in 1935 so many of the other Mennonite families worshiped there until 1944. An attempt at remaining an equal congregation in the <em>Lichtenauer Mennoniten Gemeinde</em> did not work out so two independent congregations emerged after 1944, the [[Lichtenau Mennonite Church (Morris, Manitoba, Canada)|Lichtenau Mennonite Church]] at Ste. Elizabeth and the Arnaud Mennonite Church. They did cooperate in some programmes such as the <em>Jugendverein</em>. For some major celebrations, such as the 40th anniversary of the settlement in 1965 the three congregations, Lichtenau, [[Arnaud Mennonite Brethren Church (Arnaud, Manitoba, Canada)|Arnaud Mennonite Brethren]], and Arnaud Mennonite celebrated together. The Arnaud Mennonite Church continued to survive after the Arnaud Mennonite Brethren congregation dissolved in 1980 and the Lichtenau congregation in 1990.
 
Mennonites settled in the Ste. Elizabeth, [[Arnaud (Manitoba, Canada)|Arnaud]], and Dominion City areas of [[Manitoba (Canada)|Manitoba]] in 1925. They met to worship in private homes and rented facilities when these became available. In 1927 the Lichtenau Mennonite Church (<em>Lichtenauer Mennoniten Gemeinde</em>) was formally organized. In 1929 it was decided to build a meeting house at [[St. Elizabeth Mennonite Church (St. Elizabeth, Manitoba, Canada)|Ste. Elizabeth]]. This was the first meeting house built by the 1920s Mennonite immigrants in western Canada. Travel conditions and means made it difficult for the entire group to worship together at Ste. Elizabeth. So in 1944 another meeting house was built in Arnaud. The Mennonite Brethren families had already built a meeting house in Arnaud in 1935 so many of the other Mennonite families worshiped there until 1944. An attempt at remaining an equal congregation in the <em>Lichtenauer Mennoniten Gemeinde</em> did not work out so two independent congregations emerged after 1944, the [[Lichtenau Mennonite Church (Morris, Manitoba, Canada)|Lichtenau Mennonite Church]] at Ste. Elizabeth and the Arnaud Mennonite Church. They did cooperate in some programmes such as the <em>Jugendverein</em>. For some major celebrations, such as the 40th anniversary of the settlement in 1965 the three congregations, Lichtenau, [[Arnaud Mennonite Brethren Church (Arnaud, Manitoba, Canada)|Arnaud Mennonite Brethren]], and Arnaud Mennonite celebrated together. The Arnaud Mennonite Church continued to survive after the Arnaud Mennonite Brethren congregation dissolved in 1980 and the Lichtenau congregation in 1990.
 
= Bibliography =
 
= Bibliography =
<em class="gameo_bibliography">CMC Nexus</em> (Sept. 1994): 1.
+
''CMC Nexus'' (Sept. 1994): 1.
  
 
Friesen, E. J. "Church Beginnings in a New Land: Arnaud-Ste. Elizabeth 1925-1944." Research paper, CMBC, 1985, 16 pp. MHC.
 
Friesen, E. J. "Church Beginnings in a New Land: Arnaud-Ste. Elizabeth 1925-1944." Research paper, CMBC, 1985, 16 pp. MHC.
  
Harder, Peter R.  <em class="gameo_bibliography">Arnaud Through the Years. </em>1974: 393.
+
Harder, Peter R.  ''Arnaud Through the Years.'' 1974: 393.
  
 
Kathler, Jacquie. "A Look at the Arnaud Mennonite Church from 1965-1982." Research paper, CMBC, 1982, 31 pp. MHC.
 
Kathler, Jacquie. "A Look at the Arnaud Mennonite Church from 1965-1982." Research paper, CMBC, 1982, 31 pp. MHC.
 +
 +
Klassen-Wiebe, Nicolien. "Arnaud Mennonite Church celebrates 75 years." ''Canadian Mennonite'' 23, no. 14D (3 July 2019). Web. https://canadianmennonite.org/stories/arnaud-mennonite-church-celebrates-75-years.
  
 
Toews, Tamara. "A History of the Arnaud Mennonite Church and its Changes from 1924-1986." Research paper, CMBC, 1986, MHC.
 
Toews, Tamara. "A History of the Arnaud Mennonite Church and its Changes from 1924-1986." Research paper, CMBC, 1986, MHC.
 +
 
= Additional Information =
 
= Additional Information =
 
'''Address''': 41 Smith Avenue East, Arnaud, Manitoba R0A 0B0
 
'''Address''': 41 Smith Avenue East, Arnaud, Manitoba R0A 0B0
 +
[Co-ordinates 49.251667, -97.101944 (49° 15' 06" N 97° 06' 07" W)]
  
 
'''Phone''': 204-427-2263
 
'''Phone''': 204-427-2263
 +
 +
'''Website''': http://www.arnaudchurch.ca/
  
 
'''Denominational Affiliations''':
 
'''Denominational Affiliations''':
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=== Arnaud Mennonite Church Ministers ===
 
=== Arnaud Mennonite Church Ministers ===
 
                                                
 
                                                
{| border="1"
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{| class="wikitable"
 
|-
 
|-
 
!Minister
 
!Minister
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|-
 
|-
 
|Lynell Bergen &amp; Bryan Dyck  
 
|Lynell Bergen &amp; Bryan Dyck  
|1993-2000
+
|1993-1999
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Lynne & Omar Martin (Omar died 2002)
 
|Lynne & Omar Martin (Omar died 2002)
|2001-2007  
+
|1999-2007  
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Dave Lepp
 
|Dave Lepp
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|-
 
|-
 
|Gloria Beck
 
|Gloria Beck
|2015-
+
|2015-2021
 +
|-
 +
|John P. Klassen (Intentional Interim)
 +
|May 2021-May 2022
 +
|-
 +
|Adam Robinson
 +
|June 2022-present
 
|}
 
|}
  
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|2015
 
|2015
 
| 87
 
| 87
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|-
 +
|2020
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| 76
 
|}
 
|}
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=May 2012|a1_last=Harder|a1_first=Peter R.|a2_last=Steiner|a2_first=Sam}}
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{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=May 2012|a1_last=Harder|a1_first=Peter R.|a2_last=Steiner|a2_first=Samuel J.}}
 
[[Category:Churches]]
 
[[Category:Churches]]
 
[[Category:Mennonite Church Manitoba Congregations]]
 
[[Category:Mennonite Church Manitoba Congregations]]

Latest revision as of 19:34, 27 April 2024

Arnaud Mennonite Church building, 2017.
Source: Bert Friesen

Mennonites settled in the Ste. Elizabeth, Arnaud, and Dominion City areas of Manitoba in 1925. They met to worship in private homes and rented facilities when these became available. In 1927 the Lichtenau Mennonite Church (Lichtenauer Mennoniten Gemeinde) was formally organized. In 1929 it was decided to build a meeting house at Ste. Elizabeth. This was the first meeting house built by the 1920s Mennonite immigrants in western Canada. Travel conditions and means made it difficult for the entire group to worship together at Ste. Elizabeth. So in 1944 another meeting house was built in Arnaud. The Mennonite Brethren families had already built a meeting house in Arnaud in 1935 so many of the other Mennonite families worshiped there until 1944. An attempt at remaining an equal congregation in the Lichtenauer Mennoniten Gemeinde did not work out so two independent congregations emerged after 1944, the Lichtenau Mennonite Church at Ste. Elizabeth and the Arnaud Mennonite Church. They did cooperate in some programmes such as the Jugendverein. For some major celebrations, such as the 40th anniversary of the settlement in 1965 the three congregations, Lichtenau, Arnaud Mennonite Brethren, and Arnaud Mennonite celebrated together. The Arnaud Mennonite Church continued to survive after the Arnaud Mennonite Brethren congregation dissolved in 1980 and the Lichtenau congregation in 1990.

Bibliography

CMC Nexus (Sept. 1994): 1.

Friesen, E. J. "Church Beginnings in a New Land: Arnaud-Ste. Elizabeth 1925-1944." Research paper, CMBC, 1985, 16 pp. MHC.

Harder, Peter R.  Arnaud Through the Years. 1974: 393.

Kathler, Jacquie. "A Look at the Arnaud Mennonite Church from 1965-1982." Research paper, CMBC, 1982, 31 pp. MHC.

Klassen-Wiebe, Nicolien. "Arnaud Mennonite Church celebrates 75 years." Canadian Mennonite 23, no. 14D (3 July 2019). Web. https://canadianmennonite.org/stories/arnaud-mennonite-church-celebrates-75-years.

Toews, Tamara. "A History of the Arnaud Mennonite Church and its Changes from 1924-1986." Research paper, CMBC, 1986, MHC.

Additional Information

Address: 41 Smith Avenue East, Arnaud, Manitoba R0A 0B0 [Co-ordinates 49.251667, -97.101944 (49° 15' 06" N 97° 06' 07" W)]

Phone: 204-427-2263

Website: http://www.arnaudchurch.ca/

Denominational Affiliations:

Mennonite Church Manitoba

Mennonite Church Canada (1945-present)

General Conference Mennonite Church (1947-1999)

Arnaud Mennonite Church Ministers

Minister Years
Abram Warkentin 1944-1965
Johann Poetker 1944-1996
Peter Harder 1953-1959
John Krueger 1962-1976
David Wiebe 1977-1986
Jacob Funk 1986-1990
Abe Neufeld 1990-1991
Byron Rempel-Burkholder 1992-1993
Lynell Bergen & Bryan Dyck 1993-1999
Lynne & Omar Martin (Omar died 2002) 1999-2007
Dave Lepp 2008-2011
Albert Durksen 2011-2014
Gloria Beck 2015-2021
John P. Klassen (Intentional Interim) May 2021-May 2022
Adam Robinson June 2022-present

Arnaud Mennonite Church Membership

Year Members
1950  87
1965  110
1975  88
1985  100
1995  99
2000  96
2009  94
2015 87
2020 76


Author(s) Peter R. Harder
Samuel J. Steiner
Date Published May 2012

Cite This Article

MLA style

Harder, Peter R. and Samuel J. Steiner. "Arnaud Mennonite Church (Arnaud, Manitoba, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. May 2012. Web. 27 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Arnaud_Mennonite_Church_(Arnaud,_Manitoba,_Canada)&oldid=178752.

APA style

Harder, Peter R. and Samuel J. Steiner. (May 2012). Arnaud Mennonite Church (Arnaud, Manitoba, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 27 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Arnaud_Mennonite_Church_(Arnaud,_Manitoba,_Canada)&oldid=178752.




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