Difference between revisions of "Windsor Mennonite Fellowship (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)"

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The Windsor Mennonite Fellowship was the second attempt to establish a Mennonite church in Windsor, [[Ontario (Canada)|Ontario]]. The [[Windsor United Mennonite Church (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)|first congregation]] met from 1926 until the mid-40s but never achieved autonomous status, remaining a satellite of the [[Leamington United Mennonite Church (Leamington, Ontario, Canada)|Essex County United Mennonite Church]] centered in Leamington.
 
The Windsor Mennonite Fellowship was the second attempt to establish a Mennonite church in Windsor, [[Ontario (Canada)|Ontario]]. The [[Windsor United Mennonite Church (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)|first congregation]] met from 1926 until the mid-40s but never achieved autonomous status, remaining a satellite of the [[Leamington United Mennonite Church (Leamington, Ontario, Canada)|Essex County United Mennonite Church]] centered in Leamington.
  
The second attempt began as a church-planting project of the [[Conference of United Mennonite Churches in Ontario|Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario]]. Henry Paetkau, pastor of the [[Harrow United Mennonite Church (Harrow, Ontario, Canada)|Harrow United Mennonite Church]], was appointed to lead this project. Week-night Bible studies involving interested people were held in the home of Henry and Mary Janzen; these went from September 1981 to February 1983. On 27 November 1983 Sunday evening worship services began in the basement chapel of Trinity United Church. These services continued until 30 December 1984; on 6 January 1985, the services moved to Sunday mornings and the meeting place shifted to the Remington Booster Community Center. Since Paetkau then had to withdraw as pastor, Henry P. Epp of Leamington, newly-retired pastor of the [[St. Catharines United Mennonite Church (St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada)|St. Catharines United Mennonite Church]], assumed pastoral leadership on an interim basis. The move to the community center also led to the addition of a Sunday School for all ages.
+
The second attempt began as a church-planting project of the [[Conference of United Mennonite Churches in Ontario|Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario]]. Henry Paetkau, pastor of the [[Harrow United Mennonite Church (Harrow, Ontario, Canada)|Harrow United Mennonite Church]], was appointed to lead this project. Weeknight Bible studies involving interested people were held in the home of Henry and Mary Janzen; these went from September 1981 to February 1983. On 27 November 1983 Sunday evening worship services began in the basement chapel of Trinity United Church. These services continued until 30 December 1984; on 6 January 1985, the services moved to Sunday mornings and the meeting place shifted to the Remington Booster Community Center. Since Paetkau then had to withdraw as pastor, Henry P. Epp of Leamington, newly-retired pastor of the [[Linwell Church (St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada)|St. Catharines United Mennonite Church]], assumed pastoral leadership on an interim basis. The move to the community center also led to the addition of a Sunday School for all ages.
  
 
In 1985 the congregation adopted a constitution, achieved registration as a charitable institution, and on 27 October celebrated "Membership Sunday" at which time 13 full members and 4 associate members formally joined the Fellowship. On 1 August 1985 Jacob W. Dyck was hired as pastor, and he served until 31 July 1987. During his tenure, the first [[Baptism|baptism]] (Cathy Janzen) was held on 7 June 1987.
 
In 1985 the congregation adopted a constitution, achieved registration as a charitable institution, and on 27 October celebrated "Membership Sunday" at which time 13 full members and 4 associate members formally joined the Fellowship. On 1 August 1985 Jacob W. Dyck was hired as pastor, and he served until 31 July 1987. During his tenure, the first [[Baptism|baptism]] (Cathy Janzen) was held on 7 June 1987.
  
In 1988 Arthur P. Boers took on the position of pastor. During his term of service the Windsor Mennonite Fellowship was accepted as a member church in the [[Mennonite Church Eastern Canada|Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada]] (MCEC), and its meeting place changed twice --: first, to the AKO Community Centre and in 1990 to its own building at 1709 George Avenue. Here an abandoned laundromat was transformed into a meetinghouse, with financial assistance from MCEC, the Tenth Man Program of the [[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)|General Conference Mennonite Church]], and volunteer labor from the Leamington and Harrow churches. Within two years, an education wing was also added.  
+
In 1988 Arthur P. Boers took on the position of pastor. During his term of service the Windsor Mennonite Fellowship was accepted as a member church in the [[Mennonite Church Eastern Canada|Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada]] (MCEC), and its meeting place changed twice -- first, to the AKO Community Centre and in 1990 to its own building at 1709 George Avenue. Here an abandoned laundromat was transformed into a meetinghouse, with financial assistance from MCEC, the Tenth Man Program of the [[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)|General Conference Mennonite Church]], and volunteer labor from the Leamington and Harrow churches. Within two years, an education wing was also added.  
  
 
Erwin Wiens, Windsor's longest-serving pastor in the congregation's early life, gave leadership from September 1993 until July 2002. He and his wife, Marian, then left to work with [[Mennonite Church Canada|Mennonite Church Canada]] Witness in South Korea.  
 
Erwin Wiens, Windsor's longest-serving pastor in the congregation's early life, gave leadership from September 1993 until July 2002. He and his wife, Marian, then left to work with [[Mennonite Church Canada|Mennonite Church Canada]] Witness in South Korea.  
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Janzen, Henry D. "Mennonites in Essex County: the Early Years." <em class="gameo_bibliography">Mennogespräch</em> 5.2 (September 1987): 9-14.
 
Janzen, Henry D. "Mennonites in Essex County: the Early Years." <em class="gameo_bibliography">Mennogespräch</em> 5.2 (September 1987): 9-14.
  
Janzen, Mary M., <em class="gameo_bibliography">et al,</em> eds. <em class="gameo_bibliography">Memories: Sixty Years of Mennonite Life in Essex and Kent Counties 1925-1985</em>. Leamington, 1985.
+
Janzen, Mary M., et al., eds. <em class="gameo_bibliography">Memories: Sixty Years of Mennonite Life in Essex and Kent Counties 1925-1985</em>. Leamington, 1985.
  
 
Kliewer, Victor D., ed. <em class="gameo_bibliography">The Mennonites in Essex and Kent Counties Ontario: an Introduction</em>. Leamington: Essex-Kent Mennonite Historical Association, 1997.
 
Kliewer, Victor D., ed. <em class="gameo_bibliography">The Mennonites in Essex and Kent Counties Ontario: an Introduction</em>. Leamington: Essex-Kent Mennonite Historical Association, 1997.
Line 31: Line 31:
 
Tiessen, Dave. "An Examination of Windsor Mennonite Fellowship as a Biblical Congregation in Mission." Unpublished essay, December 1985.  
 
Tiessen, Dave. "An Examination of Windsor Mennonite Fellowship as a Biblical Congregation in Mission." Unpublished essay, December 1985.  
  
<em class="gameo_bibliography">Mennonite Reporter</em> (10 July 1989): 13; (24 December 1990): 13; (15 April 1991): 12.
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''Mennonite Reporter'' (10 July 1989): 13; (24 December 1990): 13; (15 April 1991): 12.
 +
 
 
= Additional Information =
 
= Additional Information =
 
'''Address''': 1709 George Avenue, Windsor ON N9Y
 
'''Address''': 1709 George Avenue, Windsor ON N9Y
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'''Website''': [https://www.facebook.com/WindsorMenno / Windsor Mennonite Fellowship]
 
'''Website''': [https://www.facebook.com/WindsorMenno / Windsor Mennonite Fellowship]
  
=== Windsor Mennonite Church Pastoral Leaders ===
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== Windsor Mennonite Church Pastoral Leaders ==
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
|-
 
|-
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|-
 
|-
 
| Angelika Guenther Correa || align="right" | 2014-2015
 
| Angelika Guenther Correa || align="right" | 2014-2015
 +
|-
 +
| Susan Kennel Harrison || align="right" | 2015-March 2018
 +
|-
 +
| Rielly McLaren || align="right" | 2018-
 
|}
 
|}
  
=== Windsor Mennonite Church Membership ===
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== Windsor Mennonite Church Membership ==
  
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
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| 2003 || align="right" | 43
 
| 2003 || align="right" | 43
 
|-
 
|-
| 2012 || align="right" | 35
+
| 2008 || align="right" | 35
 +
|-
 +
| 2015 || align="right" | 35
 +
|-
 +
| 2020 || align="right" | 50
 
|}
 
|}
  

Latest revision as of 10:24, 24 October 2024

Windsor Mennonite Fellowship
Source: Essex Kent Mennonite Historical Association website

The Windsor Mennonite Fellowship was the second attempt to establish a Mennonite church in Windsor, Ontario. The first congregation met from 1926 until the mid-40s but never achieved autonomous status, remaining a satellite of the Essex County United Mennonite Church centered in Leamington.

The second attempt began as a church-planting project of the Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario. Henry Paetkau, pastor of the Harrow United Mennonite Church, was appointed to lead this project. Weeknight Bible studies involving interested people were held in the home of Henry and Mary Janzen; these went from September 1981 to February 1983. On 27 November 1983 Sunday evening worship services began in the basement chapel of Trinity United Church. These services continued until 30 December 1984; on 6 January 1985, the services moved to Sunday mornings and the meeting place shifted to the Remington Booster Community Center. Since Paetkau then had to withdraw as pastor, Henry P. Epp of Leamington, newly-retired pastor of the St. Catharines United Mennonite Church, assumed pastoral leadership on an interim basis. The move to the community center also led to the addition of a Sunday School for all ages.

In 1985 the congregation adopted a constitution, achieved registration as a charitable institution, and on 27 October celebrated "Membership Sunday" at which time 13 full members and 4 associate members formally joined the Fellowship. On 1 August 1985 Jacob W. Dyck was hired as pastor, and he served until 31 July 1987. During his tenure, the first baptism (Cathy Janzen) was held on 7 June 1987.

In 1988 Arthur P. Boers took on the position of pastor. During his term of service the Windsor Mennonite Fellowship was accepted as a member church in the Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada (MCEC), and its meeting place changed twice -- first, to the AKO Community Centre and in 1990 to its own building at 1709 George Avenue. Here an abandoned laundromat was transformed into a meetinghouse, with financial assistance from MCEC, the Tenth Man Program of the General Conference Mennonite Church, and volunteer labor from the Leamington and Harrow churches. Within two years, an education wing was also added.

Erwin Wiens, Windsor's longest-serving pastor in the congregation's early life, gave leadership from September 1993 until July 2002. He and his wife, Marian, then left to work with Mennonite Church Canada Witness in South Korea.

At the annual meeting in January, 2003, the congregation revised its constitution, changing from a traditional church council/ministry council format to an eldership/trustee model.

Bibliography

Conference of the United Mennonite Churches of Ontario. Yearbooks 1984-87.

Driedger, N. N. The Leamington United Mennonite Church: Establishment and Development 1925-1972. Trans. Jacob N. Driedger. [Leamington], 1972.

Janzen, Henry D. "Mennonites in Essex County: the Early Years." Mennogespräch 5.2 (September 1987): 9-14.

Janzen, Mary M., et al., eds. Memories: Sixty Years of Mennonite Life in Essex and Kent Counties 1925-1985. Leamington, 1985.

Kliewer, Victor D., ed. The Mennonites in Essex and Kent Counties Ontario: an Introduction. Leamington: Essex-Kent Mennonite Historical Association, 1997.

Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada. Yearbooks 1988-96.

Schartner, Gisela, and Astrid Koop, eds. Biographies of our Late Leaders and Histories of the Mennonite Churches in Essex and Kent Counties 1925-95. Leamington: Essex-Kent Mennonite Historical Association, 1995.

Tiessen, Dave. "An Examination of Windsor Mennonite Fellowship as a Biblical Congregation in Mission." Unpublished essay, December 1985.

Mennonite Reporter (10 July 1989): 13; (24 December 1990): 13; (15 April 1991): 12.

Additional Information

Address: 1709 George Avenue, Windsor ON N9Y

Phone: 519-974-1346

Website: / Windsor Mennonite Fellowship

Windsor Mennonite Church Pastoral Leaders

Minister Years
Henry Paetkau 1983-1984
Henry P. Epp (interim) 1985
Jacob W. Dyck 1985-1987
Arthur P. Boers 1988-1992
Mathew Swora (interim) 1993
Erwin Wiens 1993-2002
Phyllis Kramer 2003-2009
Paul Dueck 2010-2014
Angelika Guenther Correa 2014-2015
Susan Kennel Harrison 2015-March 2018
Rielly McLaren 2018-

Windsor Mennonite Church Membership

Year Members
1985 17
1990 29
1995 36
2000 45
2003 43
2008 35
2015 35
2020 50

Map

Map:Windsor Mennonite Fellowship (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)


Author(s) Henry D Janzen
Date Published September 2003

Cite This Article

MLA style

Janzen, Henry D. "Windsor Mennonite Fellowship (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. September 2003. Web. 23 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Windsor_Mennonite_Fellowship_(Windsor,_Ontario,_Canada)&oldid=179950.

APA style

Janzen, Henry D. (September 2003). Windsor Mennonite Fellowship (Windsor, Ontario, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 23 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Windsor_Mennonite_Fellowship_(Windsor,_Ontario,_Canada)&oldid=179950.




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