Difference between revisions of "Conference of Mennonites in Canada"

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A few new congregations have come into the conference from eastern Canada (Quebec and New Brunswick). Various other, notably urban, congregations have also joined in the last decade. One segment of the conference accepted a new inter-Mennonite affiliation in [[Ontario (Canada)|Ontario]] when the [[Conference of United Mennonite Churches in Ontario|Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario]] joined [[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church (MC)]] congregations in Ontario to become the of [[Mennonite Church Eastern Canada|Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada]] (MCEC) in 1988. The MC congregations in MCEC became associate members of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada, and in 1995 sixty-eight of these congregations became full members of CMC. Provincial conferences have taken on sizable programs of their own, and reassessments of mutual relationships continue as this occurs. Joint sessions occurred for the first time with the [[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)|General Conference Mennonite Church]] (GCM) in 1989. In the <em>CMC Directory, 1998</em>, there are 222 congregations with a total of over 35,000 members listed as belonging to the Conference of Mennonites in Canada.
 
A few new congregations have come into the conference from eastern Canada (Quebec and New Brunswick). Various other, notably urban, congregations have also joined in the last decade. One segment of the conference accepted a new inter-Mennonite affiliation in [[Ontario (Canada)|Ontario]] when the [[Conference of United Mennonite Churches in Ontario|Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario]] joined [[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church (MC)]] congregations in Ontario to become the of [[Mennonite Church Eastern Canada|Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada]] (MCEC) in 1988. The MC congregations in MCEC became associate members of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada, and in 1995 sixty-eight of these congregations became full members of CMC. Provincial conferences have taken on sizable programs of their own, and reassessments of mutual relationships continue as this occurs. Joint sessions occurred for the first time with the [[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)|General Conference Mennonite Church]] (GCM) in 1989. In the <em>CMC Directory, 1998</em>, there are 222 congregations with a total of over 35,000 members listed as belonging to the Conference of Mennonites in Canada.
  
In 1999 the conference, together with the [[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church (MC)]] and [[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)|General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)]] completed a long process of integration and transformed into two national bodies -- Mennonite Church USA and [[Mennonite Church Canada|Mennonite Church Canada]].
+
In 1999 the conference, together with the [[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church (MC)]] and [[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)| General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)]] completed a long process of integration and transformed into two national bodies -- Mennonite Church USA and [[Mennonite Church Canada|Mennonite Church Canada]].
 
= Bibliography =
 
= Bibliography =
 
<em>Bulletin: Conference of Mennonites in Canada, 1965-</em> (Winnipeg, four to six times annually; annually since 1971).
 
<em>Bulletin: Conference of Mennonites in Canada, 1965-</em> (Winnipeg, four to six times annually; annually since 1971).

Revision as of 13:58, 23 August 2013

The Conference of Mennonites in Canada (CMC) began in 1902-1903 with the union of congregations from the Rosenorter Mennonites of Saskatchewan and the Bergthaler Mennonites of Manitoba.  The conference first met in 1903 in Hochstadt, Manitoba, and was organized to promote "home missions." The Mennonites generally had large families and were constantly looking for land, and it was hoped that the conference would aid in the challenging task of keeping them united. The constitution, adopted at the second meeting of the conference in Eigenheim, Saskatchewan in 1904, strongly affirmed the autonomy of individual congregations: "The Conference has no authority to interfere in the internal matters of a congregation unless called to do so. It is not a legislative, but an advisory body. The union it promotes does not consist in agreeable forms and customs, but in unity of love, faith, and hope, and in connection with this a common work in the kingdom of God."  Early leaders in the conference included David Toews (chairperson from 1914-1940, with the exception of 1936), John G. Rempel (secretary from 1930-1947), and J. J. Thiessen (vice-chairperson from 1941-1942 and chairperson from 1943-1959).

The Conference of Mennonites in Canada has come to include a significant number of new congregations made up of some families who arrived from the United States, along with many more recent immigrants from the Soviet Union. The latter first came to Canada in the 1920s, then in a further wave during the years following World War II, and finally in a smaller group of scattered families who left the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s.

A series of three different name changes led to the present conference name. Known first as Die Konferenz der Mennoniten im Mittleren Kanada (Conference of Mennonites in Middle Canada), it became the General Conference of Mennonites in Canada in 1932 (sessions at Laird, Saskatchewan, Canada). Restructuring in 1959 brought about some major changes, such as limiting the terms of offices, and giving the organization its present name. At the same time a varying set of committees, which had carried out tasks as they arose, was replaced by five boards: Missions, Education and Publications, Christian Service, Canadian Mennonite Bible College, and Finance. Beginning in the 1950s the first staff members (a part-time treasurer, then a general secretary, and soon also executive secretaries of other boards) took up responsibilities as a central office developed rapidly in the next decade and a half. In the congregations there was a strong move away from leadership by elders toward the promotion of a professional ministry.

These new directions created a project-oriented agenda. With it came rising budgets and new initiatives of ministry and mission. The Mennonite Pioneer Mission, established and maintained by the Bergthal Mennonites of Manitoba until 1958, was brought into the conference program. Ultimately it formed the core aspects of Native Ministries, as this work is called in 1998. Congregations were given loans to build new church buildings. Canadian Mennonite Bible College (CMBC) expanded its new campus at 600 Shaftesbury Blvd., Winnipeg, where the conference also had its offices. The Board of Education and Publication, meanwhile, published devotional materials, subsidized conference-related periodicals, and undertook to publish the Conference Bulletin and other promotional materials. From time to time certain key theological and other issues rose to the fore. In the beginning years the issues related to problems of assuming public office (government) and other civic responsibilities. Then the matter of conversion and the nature of becoming believers caught attention for a time. Eschatological questions had their turn also. In the 1960s there arose the seeming tension between faith and social action, particularly in the years when the Board of Christian Service drew attention to major social ills erupting in society at the time.

Representation in the delegate sessions and board tended to shift in these years from a predominantly clergy-oriented body to one with a growing lay member involvement; at the first conference session in 1903 there was one lay person present. By 1970 a large number of delegates were lay members, although ministers tended to dominate the executive committee and boards for some time to come. This was no doubt partly because ministers were more readily available, and perhaps better-trained to take up board and other responsibilities. Congregations were more likely to view ministers' attendance at meetings and annual sessions as part of their regular employment than would be true of farmers and the employers of urban workers and professionals.

In 1971 the constitution was revised again. The earlier five boards now became four: General Board, Congregational Resources, Canadian Mennonite Bible College (CMBC), and Mennonite Pioneer Missions (changed to Native Ministries the following year). Another result of the change was a marked reduction of staff, and the general board of the conference assumed responsibility for finances. The conference celebrated its 75th birthday at the Gretna, Man., sessions in 1978. That year the CMBC board reported a projection of changes and expansion which would allow the college's student body to rise to between 160 and 200. The following decade would see that goal attained as student enrollment stabilized around 180.

Additional issues, such as the place of women in the church, marital stability (divorce, marriage), a conference periodical, a new partnership with a growing number of Chinese and other Asian congregations, several Native churches, relating to the Umsiedler Mennonite churches of the Federal Republic of Germany (emigrants from the Soviet Union), and the development of an archival center, came to be important questions for the network of ministries in the conference in the 1980s.

A few new congregations have come into the conference from eastern Canada (Quebec and New Brunswick). Various other, notably urban, congregations have also joined in the last decade. One segment of the conference accepted a new inter-Mennonite affiliation in Ontario when the Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario joined Mennonite Church (MC) congregations in Ontario to become the of Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada (MCEC) in 1988. The MC congregations in MCEC became associate members of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada, and in 1995 sixty-eight of these congregations became full members of CMC. Provincial conferences have taken on sizable programs of their own, and reassessments of mutual relationships continue as this occurs. Joint sessions occurred for the first time with the General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM) in 1989. In the CMC Directory, 1998, there are 222 congregations with a total of over 35,000 members listed as belonging to the Conference of Mennonites in Canada.

In 1999 the conference, together with the Mennonite Church (MC) and General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM) completed a long process of integration and transformed into two national bodies -- Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada.

Bibliography

Bulletin: Conference of Mennonites in Canada, 1965- (Winnipeg, four to six times annually; annually since 1971).

CMC Directory (1998): 12.

Conference of Mennonites in Canada Yearbook (Winnipeg, 1928-)

Ens, Adolf. Becoming a National Church: a History of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada. Winnipeg, MB: CMU Press, 2004.

Friesen-Petkau, Irene. "Just when we were . . ." Winnipeg: History Archives Committee of the Conference of Mennonites In Canada, 1978.

Gerbrandt, Henry J. "A History of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada," in Call to Faithfulness, ed. Henry Poettcker and Rudy Regehr. Winnipeg: CMBC, 1972: 81-91.

Handbook of Information (1988): 100-103.

Mennonite World Handbook, (Strasbourg, France, and Lombard, Ill.: Mennonite World Conference, 1984): 131.

Peters, Jacob. "Organizational Change Within A Religious Denomination: A Case Study of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada, 1903-1978." Ph.D. diss., U. of Manitoba, 1987.

Regehr, Rudy A. and Margaret Franz, ed. Twenty-Five Years: A Time To Grow. Winnipeg: CMBC, 1972.

Reimer, Margaret Loewen, ed. One Quilt, Many Pieces. Waterloo, Ont.: Mennonite Publishing Service, 1983: 49-51.

Rempel, J. G.  Fünfzig Jahre Konferenz Bestrebungen, 1902-1952: Konferenz der Mennoniten in Canada. Steinbach, 1952.

Totemak. Winnipeg, Native Ministries program, 1972-79, frequency varies; name changed to Intotemak (1980-).

Additional Information

Statements approved by the Conference

A Commitment to Christ's Way of Peace (Mennonite Central Committee, 1993)

Guidelines for building faithful relationships in the church (Conference of Mennonites in Canada, 1998)

Resolution on the Issue of Homosexuality (Conference of Mennonites in Canada, 1998)

Mennonite Church Canada (formerly Conference of Mennonites in Canada) website

See also General Conference Mennonite Church; Conference of Mennonites in British Columbia; Mennonite Church Alberta; Conference of Mennonites of Saskatchewan; Conference of Mennonites in Manitoba; Conference of United Mennonite Churches of Ontario; Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada.

Conference of Mennonites in Canada Executive 1
Number Year Place Chair Vice-Chair Secretary
01
1903
Hochstadt, MB
 
02
1904
Eigenheim, SK
 
03
1905
Winkler, MB
 
04
1906
Eigenheim, SK
 
05
1907
Herbert, SK
 
06
1908
Drake, SK
 
07
1909
Edenburg, MB
 
08
1910
Eigenheim, SK
 
09
1911
Herbert, SK
 
10
1912
Winkler, MB
 
11
1913
Drake, SK
 
12
1914
Rosthern, SK
N. F. Toews
13
1915
Herbert, SK
14
1916
Altona, MB
15
1917
Langham, SK
16
1918
Drake, SK
17
1919
Gretna, MB
H.H. Hamm
18
1920
Laird, SK
J. Regier
19
1921
Herbert, SK
J. Regier
20
1922
Winkler, MB
Jacob Gerbrandt
21
1923
Langham, SK
Jacob Gerbrandt
22
1924
Drake, SK
G. Buhler
Jacob Gerbrandt
23
1925
Eigenheim, SK
Jacob Gerbrandt
24
1926
Drake, SK
Jacob Gerbrandt
25
1927
Herbert, SK
Jacob Gerbrandt
26
1928
Rosthern, SK
G. Buhler
Jacob Gerbrandt
27
1929
Drake, SK
J.J. Klassen
Jacob Gerbrandt
28
1930
Winkler, MB
29
1931
Langham, SK
30
1932
Laird, SK
31
1933
Gnadenthal, MB
32
1934
Hague, SK
33
1935
Altona, MB
34
1936
Drake, SK
35
1937
Rosemary, AB
36
1938
Eigenheim, SK
J. J. Klassen
37
1939
Morden, MB
38
1940
Waldheim, SK
39
1941
Laird, SK
40
1942
Winkler, MB
41
1943
Langham, SK
42
1944
Winnipeg, MB
43
1945
Eigenheim, SK
Jacob Gerbrandt
44
1946
Beamsville, ON
Jacob Gerbrandt
45
1947
Coaldale, AB
Jacob Gerbrandt
46
1948
Gnadenthal, MB
Jacob Gerbrandt
47
1949
Greendale, BC
Jacob Gerbrandt
H. T. Klaassen
48
1950
Rosthern, SK
Jacob Gerbrandt
H. T. Klaassen
49
1951
Leamington, ON
Jacob Gerbrandt
H. T. Klaassen
50
1952
Gretna, MB
J. M. Pauls
H. T. Klaassen
51
1953
Drake, SK
H. T. Klaassen
52
1954
Abbotsford, BC
H. T. Klaassen
53
1955
P. R. Harder
54
1956
Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON
P. R. Harder
55
1957
Winkler, MB
P. R. Harder
56
1958
Saskatoon, SK
Henry Poettcker
P. R. Harder
57
1959
Clearbrook, BC
Henry Poettcker
Henry H. Epp
58
1960
Steinbach, MB
J. M. Pauls
Henry Poettcker
Henry H. Epp
59
1961
Calgary, AB
J. M. Pauls/G. G. Neufeld
G. G. Neufeld/David P. Neufeld
Henry H. Epp
60
1962
St. Catharines, ON
Paul Schroeder
J. J. Wichert
P. R. Harder
61
1963
Altona, MB
Paul Schroeder
H. P. Epp
P. R. Harder
62
1964
Rosthern, SK
Paul Schroeder
H. P. Epp
P. R. Harder
63
1965
Clearbrook, BC
H. P. Epp
H. T. Klaassen
R. H. Vogt
64
1966
Winnipeg, MB
H. P. Epp
H. T. Klaassen
R. H. Vogt
65
1967
Leamington, ON
H. P. Epp
P. G. Sawatzky
Herman Enns
66
1968
Calgary, AB
P. G. Sawatzky
Henry Poettcker
Herman Enns
67
1969
Saskatoon, SK
Edward Enns
Jacob F. Pauls
Herman Enns
68
1970
Winkler, MB
Edward Enns
Abe Neufeld
William Block
69
1971
Vancouver, BC
Edward Enns
Jacob Tilitzky
William Block
70
1972
Waterloo, ON
Jacob Tilitzky
Peter Retzlaff
71
1973
Edmonton, AB
Jacob Tilitzky
Peter Retzlaff
72
1974
Steinbach, MB
Jacob Tilitzky
Peter Retzlaff
73
1975
Swift Current, SK
Jake Harms
Herman Enns
74
1976
Clearbrook, BC
Jake Harms
Herman Enns
Lorne Buhr
75
1977
Jake Harms
Herman Enns/H. P. Epp
Lorne Buhr
76
1978
Gretna, MB
Jake Fransen
Lorne Buhr
77
1979
Calgary, AB
Jake Fransen
Helen Rempel
78
1980
Rosthern, SK
Jake Fransen
Helen Rempel
79
1981
Vancouver, BC
Jake Fransen
Henry Funk
Helen Rempel
80
1982
St. Catharines, ON
Jake Fransen
Henry Funk
Jacob Wiebe
81
1983
Winnipeg, MB
Jake Fransen
Fred Enns
Jacob Wiebe
82
1984
Three Hills, AB
Jake Fransen
Fred Enns
Jacob Wiebe
83
1985
Regina, SK
Jake Fransen
Fred Enns
Kay Martens
84
1986
Waterloo, ON
Jake Fransen
Fred Enns
Kay Martens
85
1987
Clearbrook, BC
Walter Franz
George Richert
Ruth Enns
86
1988
Winkler, MB
Walter Franz
George Richert
Ruth Enns
87
1989
Normal, IL, USA
Walter Franz
George Richert
Ruth Enns
88
1990
Edmonton, AB
Walter Franz
George Richert
Ruth Enns
89
1991
Saskatoon, SK
George Richert
Ruth Enns
90
1992
Sioux Falls, ND, USA
George Richert
Ruth Enns
91
1993
Waterloo, ON
Gerd Bartel
Ruth Enns
92
1994
Clearbrook, BC
Gerd Bartel
Mary Anne Loeppky
93
1995
Newton, KS, USA
Gerd Bartel
Mary Anne Loeppky
94
1996
Calgary, AB
Gerd Bartel
Mary Anne Loeppky
95
1997
Winnipeg, MB
Ron Sawatsky
Gerd Bartel
Mary Anne Loeppky
96
1998
Stratford, ON
Ron Sawatsky
Gerd Bartel
Pam Peters Pries
97
1999
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Ron Sawatsky
Jake F. Pauls
Joy Kroeger

Notes:

1. Individuals are listed alongside the convention at which they were appointed.

Source:

Ens, Adolf. Becoming a National Church: a History of the Conference of Mennonites in Canada. Winnipeg, MB: CMU Press, 2004.


Author(s) John G. Rempel
Lawrence Klippenstein
Date Published 1990

Cite This Article

MLA style

Rempel, John G. and Lawrence Klippenstein. "Conference of Mennonites in Canada." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1990. Web. 24 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Conference_of_Mennonites_in_Canada&oldid=91490.

APA style

Rempel, John G. and Lawrence Klippenstein. (1990). Conference of Mennonites in Canada. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 24 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Conference_of_Mennonites_in_Canada&oldid=91490.




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Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 1, p. 671; vol. 5, pp. 182-183. All rights reserved.


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