Difference between revisions of "Central District Conference (Mennonite Church USA)"
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| [[Maplewood Mennonite Church (Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA)|Maplewood Mennonite Church]] || Fort Wayne || Indiana | | [[Maplewood Mennonite Church (Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA)|Maplewood Mennonite Church]] || Fort Wayne || Indiana | ||
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− | | [[ | + | | [[Mennonite Church of Normal (Normal, Illinois, USA)|Mennonite Church of Normal]] || Normal || Illinois |
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| Milwaukee Mennonite Church || Greenfield || Wisconsin | | Milwaukee Mennonite Church || Greenfield || Wisconsin |
Revision as of 13:20, 25 November 2022
The Central District Conference was the second largest district of the General Conference Mennonite Church in the United States It was created by a merger of the Central Conference Mennonite Church and the Middle District (GCM) at a joint session in Normal, IL, 27 April 1957. It had 41 congregations from Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri, and a membership of 8,361. Its original purpose, to promote unity, offer guidance, and provide a channel for the united mission efforts among its constituent churches, continued to be a focus of the conference in the late 1980s.
Each member congregation had one delegate vote for every 30 members. Delegates met yearly for a three-day session of business, worship, seminars, and fellowship at various locations around the district. An elected president, president-elect, treasurer, secretary, and two members-at-large made up the board of directors. Forty other elected people made up the standing committees: Ministerial; Program; Historical; Missions; Education and Publication; Camp Friedenswald ; and Peace, Service, and Justice. A nominating committee was appointed. The district also elected six Bluffton College board members, three General Conference commission members, and five board members of the Chicago Mennonite Learning Center. The district board and committees guided ministries in church planting and evangelism, prison and law offenders, youth, Christian camping, teacher training, marriage and family, leadership development, worship and music, and peace education. The budget for 1987 was $242,000. The Reporter, the monthly conference paper, was published 11 times each year.
The following have served as conference ministers: Raymond L. Hartzler, 1957-64; Gordon Dyck, 1964-69; Jacob T. Friesen, 1970-75; Stanley Bohn, 1975-79; and Mark Weidner, 1980-. Membership in 1987 was 62 congregations with 8,247 members. Twenty-six of the congregations were also affiliated with other conferences, primarily those of the Mennonite Church (MC).
In 2002 the Central District became part of Mennonite Church USA as a result of the merger of the Mennonite Church and the General Conference Mennonite Church.
In 2016 the following congregations were members of the Central District Conference:
Congregation | City | State |
---|---|---|
Agora Christian Fellowship | Columbus | Ohio |
Ames Mennonite Church | Ames | Iowa |
Ann Arbor Mennonite Church | Ann Arbor | Michigan |
Asian Mennonite Community Church | Lombard | Illinois |
Assembly Mennonite Church | Goshen | Indiana |
Atlanta Mennonite Fellowship | Atlanta | Georgia |
Chicago Community Mennonite Church | Chicago | Illinois |
Cincinnati Mennonite Fellowship | Cincinnati | Ohio |
Columbus Mennonite Church | Columbus | Ohio |
Community Mennonite Church | Markham | Illinois |
Covenant Mennonite Fellowship | Sarasota | Florida |
Eighth Street Mennonite Church | Goshen | Indiana |
Emmaus Road Mennonite Fellowship | Berne | Indiana |
Evanston Mennonite Church | Evanston | Illinois |
Faith Mennonite Church | Goshen | Indiana |
First Mennonite Church | Sugarcreek | Ohio |
First Mennonite Church | Wadsworth | Ohio |
First Mennonite Church | Bluffton | Ohio |
First Mennonite Church | Chicago | Illinois |
First Mennonite Church of Champaign-Urbana | Urbana | Illinois |
Florence Church of the Brethren Mennonite | Constantine | Michigan |
Grace Mennonite Church | Pandora | Ohio |
Hively Avenue Mennonite Church | Elkhart | Indiana |
Joy Fellowship Mennonite Church | Peoria | Illinois |
Lima Mennonite Church | Lima | Ohio |
Madison Mennonite Church | Madison | Wisconsin |
Maplewood Mennonite Church | Fort Wayne | Indiana |
Mennonite Church of Normal | Normal | Illinois |
Milwaukee Mennonite Church | Greenfield | Wisconsin |
Morning Star Church | Muncie | Indiana |
MSU Mennonite Fellowship | East Lansing | Michigan |
North Danvers Mennonite Church | Danvers | Illinois |
Oak Grove Mennonite Church | Smithville | Ohio |
Open Table Mennonite Fellowship | Goshen | Indiana |
Paoli Mennonite Fellowship | Paoli | Indiana |
Shalom Community Church | Ann Arbor | Michigan |
Shalom Mennonite Congregation | Harrisonburg | Virginia |
Silverwood Mennonite Church | Goshen | Indiana |
Southside Fellowship | Elkhart | Indiana |
St. Paul Mennonite Fellowship | St. Paul | Minnesota |
Trenton Mennonite Church | Trenton | Ohio |
Bibliography
Central District Yearbook, annual reports, conference minutes, directory, and statistics.
Handbook of Information, General Conference Mennonite Church (1988): 111-12, 139-40.
Pannabecker, Samuel F. Faith and Ferment: The History of the Central District Conference. Newton, KS, 1968.
Archival Records
Minutes, correspondence, records, etc., are retained in the Bluffton College Archives, Bluffton, Ohio.
Additional Information
Address: 1015 Division Street, Goshen, Indiana 46528
Phone: 574-534-1485
Website: https://mcusacdc.org/
Denominational Affiliations:
Author(s) | Mark Weidner |
---|---|
Date Published | July 2010 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Weidner, Mark. "Central District Conference (Mennonite Church USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. July 2010. Web. 21 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Central_District_Conference_(Mennonite_Church_USA)&oldid=174339.
APA style
Weidner, Mark. (July 2010). Central District Conference (Mennonite Church USA). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 21 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Central_District_Conference_(Mennonite_Church_USA)&oldid=174339.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, pp. 130-131. All rights reserved.
©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.