Difference between revisions of "Linwell Church (St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada)"
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St. Catharines United Mennonite Church confesses regularly their call in the world as “sent to be the hands, feet and voice of Jesus.” | St. Catharines United Mennonite Church confesses regularly their call in the world as “sent to be the hands, feet and voice of Jesus.” | ||
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+ | In 2024, St. Catharines United Mennonite Church changed its name to Linwell Church. | ||
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[[Mennonite Church Eastern Canada]] (1988-present) | [[Mennonite Church Eastern Canada]] (1988-present) | ||
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Revision as of 10:19, 24 October 2024
The St. Catharines United Mennonite Church traces its beginning to the early 1940s when more and more Mennonite families were moving to the city for economic reasons. Some families had struggled in farming communities on the prairies during the 1920s and 1930s. Other families had tried to make a living cutting lumber near Reesor in northern Ontario. Moving to industrialized southern Ontario offered better employment opportunities. Some families joined existing churches in Vineland or Virgil, but due to wartime gasoline rations and many families not having a car, Wilhelm Schellenberg contacted the families he knew, and held the first worship service on 4 July 1942, in a rented hall at 345 St. Paul Street (Arthur Murray Dance Studio). On 30 April 1944 a meeting was held under the leadership of Wilhelm Schellenberg to organize the people attending the services into a church group and to elect the first church board. On 15 October 1944 the first membership list was drawn up.
Since they could only rent the hall for Sunday morning, it was decided to build a church. The work started in the spring of 1945, but immediately there were difficulties. It was still wartime, and in order to buy building materials, a permit from the Wartime Prices and Income Commission, was required. This permit was denied. Not being incorporated also meant that they were unable to borrow money from a bank. In spite of the difficulties, the church was built, and it held its first worship service on 16 September 1945 in their own building, located on Carlton Street. At a membership meeting on 28 October 1945, they officially elected Wilhelm Schellenberg as their leader, adopted the official name of “The St. Catharines United Mennonite Church” and accepted the constitution and by-laws of the Ontario United Mennonite Churches. Several years later, on 7 March 1949 the Church was incorporated by Letter Patent from the Government of Ontario.
The St. Catharines United Mennonite Church membership grew significantly with the arrival of post-war refugees, so that they sold their building on 15 February 1949, and built a new church at 101 Garnet Street. The first worship service was held on 28 August 1949. In 1956 a group of 48 members left to found Grace Mennonite Church which worshipped in English. In 1961 the building was expanded with the addition of an education wing, but soon even this did not provide sufficient space, so that a decision was made on 3 April 1966 to sell the Garnet Street building, and build a new worship place at 335 Linwell Road. The dedication service for this building took place on 19 March 1967. This location continues to be used till today (2016).
The language of worship was exclusively German in the beginning. Sunday School for children was in German, with the use of English to explain the lesson. Parallel English and German classes were started in 1958. The use of German in the Sunday School program was dropped in the fall of 1978, with the introduction of the Foundation Series curriculum, with the exception of on adult class. Worship services consisted of German and English elements until 1988, when a new structure was adopted for the Sunday morning worship services. A German service was held from 9:45 to 10:30 a.m. during the Sunday School hour, followed by the English worship hour from 11:00 till noon, with the exception of the first Sunday of the month, when there would only be an English family worship service. This structure was still being followed in 2016.
This congregation used lay minister in the beginning. The first salaried minister was Peter Heinrichs in 1952. The first associate pastor hired was David Stobbe in 1979.
From the beginning, the St. Catharines United Mennonite Church had deacons that spent time visiting members – the sick, the elderly, the hospitalized, and also assisted the ministers in the serving of communion. Since 2012, one associate minister has had primary responsibility for ministry to seniors.
From the outset, St. Catharines United Mennonite Church has had an active music ministry with various choirs and music groups that served at services, funerals or in the homes for seniors. In 2016 there were three choirs that sang regularly in worship services – German Choir, Praise and Worship Choir, and Church Choir.
The church has had ladies groups whose primary role was supporting relief and mission work though sewing clothes, blankets, quilts, preparing health kits, having bake sales and raising money through an annual bazaar.
The ministry to youth has changed over the years. In the 1940s, the youth group was synonymous with church choir and ranged in ages from 16 to young married couples without children. By the 1970s, there were distinct junior youth and senior youth groups, divided along grade levels in school. A kid’s club program for elementary school age children was started in 2007.
St. Catharines United Mennonite Church is a member of Mennonite Church Eastern Canada, supporting ministries beyond the local congregation, through prayer, financial support, and individual involvement. This support extended to such activities as volunteering in the Christian Benefit Shop, supporting Mennonite Central Committee, Mennonite Disaster Service, Mennonite care homes in the Niagara region and sponsoring refugees.
St. Catharines United Mennonite Church confesses regularly their call in the world as “sent to be the hands, feet and voice of Jesus.”
In 2024, St. Catharines United Mennonite Church changed its name to Linwell Church.
Bibliography
Canadian Mennonite (12 July 1966): 16; (6 November 1970): 10.
Mennonite Reporter (28 November 1994): 17; (27 November 1995): 16.
Stobbe, Bernard. "Ein geschichtlicher Ueberblick ueber die drei Gemeinden der Vereinigten Mennoniten in der Niagara Halbinsel." Research paper, Canadian Mennonite Bible College, 1956, 20 pp. Mennonite Archives of Ontario
50th anniversary of the St. Catharines United Mennonite Church, 1945-1995. St. Catharines: The Church, 1995, 182 pp.
Additional Information
Address: 335 Linwell Rd., St. Catharines, ON L2N 1T6
Phone: 905-935-8017
Website: http://scumc.ca/
Denominational Affiliations:
Conference of United Mennonite Churches in Ontario (1944-88)
Conference of Mennonites in Canada / Mennonite Church Canada (1946-)
General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM) (1947-1999)
Mennonite Church Eastern Canada (1988-present)
Linwell Church Pastoral Leaders
Name | Years of Service |
---|---|
Wilhelm Schellenberg | 1942-1949 |
Frank Andres | 1950-1951 |
Peter Heinrichs (First salaried minister) |
1952-1959 |
Henry P. Epp | 1959-1968 1976-1981 1983-1984 |
Norman Bergen | 1969-1975 |
Otto Dirks | 1981-1983 |
John R. Friesen | 1984-1991 |
Jack W. Dyck | 1991-2001 |
Ben Wiebe | 2001-2004 |
Grant Gordon (Intentional Interim) |
2004-2005 |
Ken Gazley | 2006-2012 |
Randy Klaassen (Interim Supply) |
2012-2013 |
Randy Klaassen (Associate) |
2013-June 2023 |
Doug Schulz | 2013-2015 |
Jim Horsthuis (Interim Supply) |
July 2015-March 2017 |
Paul Adams (Interim Supply) |
April 2017-January 2018 November 2021-May 2023 |
Nick Schuurman (Youth pastor 2016-2018) |
January 2018-September 2021 |
Tim Amor | June 2023- |
Linwell Church Membership
Year | Members |
---|---|
1945 | 32 |
1950 | 164 |
1965 | 455 |
1975 | 655 |
1980 | 698 |
1985 | 674 |
1990 | 612 |
1995 | 551 |
2000 | 548 |
2005 | 502 |
2010 | 450 |
2015 | 410 |
2020 | 340 |
Original Article from Mennonite Encyclopedia
By F. J. Andres. Copied by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, p. 401. All rights reserved.
The St. Catharines United Mennonite Church (General Conference Mennonite) located on Garnet Street on the east side of St. Catharines, Ontario, was organized in 1946 by 16-18 families who had moved to the city or settled on neighboring fruit farms, led by W. Schellenberg from the Essex County United Mennonite Church in Leamington, Ontario, who served as its first pastor until 1950, when he retired from active duty. The St. Catharines United Mennonite Church belongs to the Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario and to the Conference of the Mennonite Churches of Canada. The first church was built in 1946, replaced in 1948 by a larger church seating about 450. Its membership in 1957 was about 430, with P. J. Heinrichs as pastor.
Map
Map:St. Catharines United Mennonite Church (St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada)
Author(s) | Nelly Rempel |
---|---|
Alf Redekopp | |
Date Published | May 2016 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Rempel, Nelly and Alf Redekopp. "Linwell Church (St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. May 2016. Web. 21 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Linwell_Church_(St._Catharines,_Ontario,_Canada)&oldid=179943.
APA style
Rempel, Nelly and Alf Redekopp. (May 2016). Linwell Church (St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 21 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Linwell_Church_(St._Catharines,_Ontario,_Canada)&oldid=179943.
©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.