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The <em>Aeltestenrat</em><strong>, </strong>or Council of Elders, composed of the elders, ministers and deacons of the Mennonite churches of [[Baden (Germany)|Baden]] (9) and Württemberg (5), five of the eight in Bavaria, and two in the [[p3594.html|Palatinate]]. In the 1950s it met four times annually to deliberate on<strong> </strong>questions concerning the individual churches and on<strong> </strong>questions concerning the conference, known as the <em>[[Verband deutscher Mennonitengemeinden (Federation of Mennonite Churches)|Badisch-württembergisch-bayerischer Gemeindeverband]] </em>(Union of the congregations of Baden, Württemberg, and Bavaria). The churches are supervised by the <em>Aeltestenrat </em>jointly; therefore no one elder made important decisions without first hearing the advice of the others, and in a sense all the congregations operated as one united congregation. Actually the elders were chosen by the <em>Aeltestenrat </em>to serve the entire group, even though they had primary responsibility locally in one congregation.
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The <em>Aeltestenrat</em>, or Council of Elders, composed of the elders, ministers and deacons of the Mennonite churches of [[Baden (Germany)|Baden]] (9) and Württemberg (5), five of the eight in Bavaria, and two in the [[p3594.html|Palatinate]]. In the 1950s it met four times annually to deliberate on questions concerning the individual churches and on questions concerning the conference, known as the <em>[[Verband deutscher Mennonitengemeinden (Federation of Mennonite Churches)|Badisch-württembergisch-bayerischer Gemeindeverband]] </em>(Union of the congregations of Baden, Württemberg, and Bavaria). The churches are supervised by the <em>Aeltestenrat </em>jointly; therefore no one elder made important decisions without first hearing the advice of the others, and in a sense all the congregations operated as one united congregation. Actually the elders were chosen by the <em>Aeltestenrat </em>to serve the entire group, even though they had primary responsibility locally in one congregation.
  
 
In the sessions, which were always preceded by the discussion of a passage of Scripture, all the activities of the individual congregations, as well as the wishes of the members were considered, relations between the congregations regulated, decisions about church discipline made, communion dates set, and measures for the welfare of the congregations passed. The decisions of the <em>Aeltestenrat </em>on important issues were usually preceded by an inquiry of the church members. Minutes were kept of all proceedings, which afforded an interesting record of the development of the congregations, with primary reference to church discipline. But the record was complete only since 1876; most of the previous minutes have been lost. The <em>Aeltestenrat </em>had no permanent president, a different chairman being chosen for each meeting. However, usually one or more of the senior elders carried decisive weight in the deliberations of the group. For many years the meetings were held in Heilbronn.
 
In the sessions, which were always preceded by the discussion of a passage of Scripture, all the activities of the individual congregations, as well as the wishes of the members were considered, relations between the congregations regulated, decisions about church discipline made, communion dates set, and measures for the welfare of the congregations passed. The decisions of the <em>Aeltestenrat </em>on important issues were usually preceded by an inquiry of the church members. Minutes were kept of all proceedings, which afforded an interesting record of the development of the congregations, with primary reference to church discipline. But the record was complete only since 1876; most of the previous minutes have been lost. The <em>Aeltestenrat </em>had no permanent president, a different chairman being chosen for each meeting. However, usually one or more of the senior elders carried decisive weight in the deliberations of the group. For many years the meetings were held in Heilbronn.
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There were similar councils of elders <em>(Aeltesten-Convent) </em>in Holland, [[West Prussia|West Prussia]], [[Russia|Russia]], and [[North America|North America]] before the organization of the modern church conferences.
 
There were similar councils of elders <em>(Aeltesten-Convent) </em>in Holland, [[West Prussia|West Prussia]], [[Russia|Russia]], and [[North America|North America]] before the organization of the modern church conferences.
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=Vol. 1, p. 19|date=1955|a1_last=Hege|a1_first=Christian|a2_last= |a2_first= }}
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=Vol. 1, p. 19|date=1955|a1_last=Hege|a1_first=Christian|a2_last= |a2_first= }}
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[[Category:Denominational Boards and Agencies]]
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[[Category:Verband deutscher Mennonitengemeinden Boards and Agencies]]

Latest revision as of 13:44, 14 July 2015

The Aeltestenrat, or Council of Elders, composed of the elders, ministers and deacons of the Mennonite churches of Baden (9) and Württemberg (5), five of the eight in Bavaria, and two in the Palatinate. In the 1950s it met four times annually to deliberate on questions concerning the individual churches and on questions concerning the conference, known as the Badisch-württembergisch-bayerischer Gemeindeverband (Union of the congregations of Baden, Württemberg, and Bavaria). The churches are supervised by the Aeltestenrat jointly; therefore no one elder made important decisions without first hearing the advice of the others, and in a sense all the congregations operated as one united congregation. Actually the elders were chosen by the Aeltestenrat to serve the entire group, even though they had primary responsibility locally in one congregation.

In the sessions, which were always preceded by the discussion of a passage of Scripture, all the activities of the individual congregations, as well as the wishes of the members were considered, relations between the congregations regulated, decisions about church discipline made, communion dates set, and measures for the welfare of the congregations passed. The decisions of the Aeltestenrat on important issues were usually preceded by an inquiry of the church members. Minutes were kept of all proceedings, which afforded an interesting record of the development of the congregations, with primary reference to church discipline. But the record was complete only since 1876; most of the previous minutes have been lost. The Aeltestenrat had no permanent president, a different chairman being chosen for each meeting. However, usually one or more of the senior elders carried decisive weight in the deliberations of the group. For many years the meetings were held in Heilbronn.

There were similar councils of elders (Aeltesten-Convent) in Holland, West Prussia, Russia, and North America before the organization of the modern church conferences.


Author(s) Christian Hege
Date Published 1955

Cite This Article

MLA style

Hege, Christian. "Aeltestenrat (Germany)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1955. Web. 25 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Aeltestenrat_(Germany)&oldid=132142.

APA style

Hege, Christian. (1955). Aeltestenrat (Germany). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 25 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Aeltestenrat_(Germany)&oldid=132142.




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Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 1, p. 19. All rights reserved.


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