Mennonite Church Canada

Mennonite Church Canada
Classification Anabaptist
Orientation Mennonite
Polity Congregational
Associations Mennonite World Conference
Region Canada
Origin 2000
Merger of The General Conference Mennonite Church, Mennonite Church, Conference of Mennonites in Canada
Congregations 225[1]
Members 31,000[1]
Official website home.mennonitechurch.ca

Mennonite Church Canada is the conference of Mennonites in Canada, with head offices in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

The first Mennonites in Canada arrived from Pennsylvania in 1786. The majority of the Mennonites that migrated to Canada over the next 150 years came directly from Europe. The first annual meeting of Mennonite ministers was held in 1810, which eventually led to founding the Mennonite Conference of Ontario (later the Mennonite Conference of Ontario and Quebec). The Conference of Mennonites in Central Canada was formed in 1903. When other bodies arriving in Canada began to settle outside this "central" base, the name was changed to the General Conference of Mennonites in Canada in 1932 (later the Conference of Mennonites in Canada). The Ontario Amish Mennonite Conference (later Western Ontario Mennonite Conference) was founded in 1923, and the Conference of United Mennonite Churches in Ontario in 1945. In 1988, the Western Ontario Mennonite Conference, the Conference of United Mennonite Churches in Ontario and the Mennonite Conference of Ontario and Quebec united to form the Mennonite Conference of Eastern Canada.

Beginning in 1989, a series of consultations, discussions, proposals, and sessions led to the unification of two North American bodies (the Mennonite Church & General Conference Mennonite Church) and the related Canadian Conference of Mennonites in Canada into the Mennonite Church USA and the Mennonite Church Canada in 2000.

The doctrinal faith of the Mennonite Church Canada is set forth in The Confession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective. This confession was adopted in 1995 by the General Conference Mennonite Church and the Mennonite Church at Wichita, Kansas. It contains 24 articles on the following: "God; Jesus Christ; Holy Spirit; Scripture; Creation and Divine Providence; the Creation and Calling of Human Beings; Sin; Salvation; The Church of Jesus Christ; The Church in Mission; Baptism; The Lord's Supper; Foot Washing; Discipline in the Church; Ministry and Leadership; Church Order and Unity; Discipleship and the Christian Life; Christian Spirituality; Family, Singleness, and Marriage; Truth and the Avoidance of Oaths; Christian Stewardship; Peace, Justice, and Nonresistance; The Church's Relation to Government and Society; and The Reign of God."[2]

The organizational structure of the Mennonite Church Canada is divided into five Area Churches - Mennonite Church Alberta, Mennonite Church British Columbia, Mennonite Church Eastern Canada, Mennonite Church Manitoba, and Mennonite Church Saskatchewan. Denominational work is administered through a board elected by the delegates to the biennial assembly. Currently (2014) the body has about 31,000 members in 225 churches. The Mennonite Church Canada participates in the Canadian Council of Churches, the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, and the Mennonite World Conference.

The church ordains women as pastors.[3] In 2015, the first same-gender marriage was officiated in a congregation of the Mennonite Church Canada with the denomination clarifying that each congregation is free to decide its own position on the issue.[4]

Canadian Mennonite[5] is the official conference periodical. The conference also published the German-language Der Bote newspaper until 2008, when it ceased publication.

Notes

  1. 1 2 "About Mennonite Church Canada". Mennonite Church Canada. Mennonite Church Canada. Retrieved October 11, 2016.
  2. a Summary of the Confession of Faith
  3. "Article 15. Ministry and Leadership - Confession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective - Mennonite Church Canada". www.mennonitechurch.ca. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
  4. "First MC Canada-officiated same-sex marriage". The Mennonite: A Publication of Mennonite Church USA Providing Anabaptist Content. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
  5. Canadian Mennonite

Further reading

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