Seeing God in the lives of others

Personal reflection: Saskatchewan correspondent reflects on eight years of telling other people’s stories



Rosthern, Sask.

Eight years ago, I received an e-mail from then editor Dick Benner, asking me whether I’d consider being Canadian Mennonite’s Saskatchewan correspondent.

It sounds trite to say that I felt God calling me to take this job, but that’s exactly how I felt. My years as a homeschooling mom had come to an end when my youngest began high school, and I’d been praying that God would open the door to some meaningful work. The door opened when I opened that e-mail.

It also sounds trite to say that a whole new world opened up for me, but this, too, was the case. As a regional correspondent, I attended all sorts of events I wouldn’t otherwise have attended, from annual general meetings, pastoral gatherings and book launches, to cake auctions, folk festivals and fashion shows. If the event was sponsored by Mennonite Church Saskatchewan, or in some way involved the good people of my regional church, I was there with my notebook and camera in hand, taking notes, taking pictures and taking it all in.

My favourite story subjects, however, were not events, but people—women and men of all ages, interests and perspectives living out their faith to the best of their abilities in their own particular contexts:

  • One of the first individuals I wrote about was Ric Driediger. When I spoke with him at his home in Rosthern in 2014, he told me that he believes in the power of encountering God in the wilderness. As owner of Churchill River Canoe Outfitters in Missinipe, he said he often hears people reflect on the spiritual nature of their canoeing experiences.

“I believe God reveals himself through nature,” said Driediger. “Millennia before the Bible came to be, that’s how people found out about God. They looked,”

God revealed himself to Wayne and Carry Dueck through the 32-hectare parcel of land they purchased in the early 1980s. In 2019, I spent a wondrous morning with them at the property northwest of Duck Lake known to them simply as “The Land.”

When the Duecks bought the land, they intended to preserve its natural state but also add trees. In the years that followed, Wayne, their sons and many friends planted thousands of coniferous trees.

Carry told me that she sees “planting trees as a route to reparation, a way of making amends for the damage we have dealt to the natural world.”

Planting trees is not a quick way of making amends. It takes time and patience to see one’s efforts come to fruition. This is also true of human relationships. Making amends for damage done in people’s lives also takes time and patience.

  • Leonard Doell is someone who seems to embody this kind of patience. For many years, Doell served as Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan’s Indigenous Neighbours Program coordinator, and he is known in Saskatchewan for his long-standing relationship with the Young Chippewayan people. I spoke with him following his retirement in 2020.

“Efforts toward reconciliation can be very messy and complex,” he said. “Many times we didn’t get things right.” But he had the patience and took the time to make things right. Reflecting on those years, he said, “I often felt in over my head, but I trusted that God had brought me there for a purpose.” Doell’s patience and faith in God inspire me.

  • Wes Neepin’s faith also inspires me. I met Neepin for the first time when I preached at Grace Mennonite Church in Prince Albert in 2017. He was putting brown-bag lunches into the pantry box in front of the church. He told me that he made sandwiches for hungry people every day because he remembered what it felt like to be hungry.

I wrote Neepin’s faith story for CM in 2019, when he was 86 years old. “God can help me every day as long as I’m willing to believe in him,” Neepin said. “And I pray every night and every morning for guidance.”

  • Like Neepin, Elaine Presnell also relied on God every day. I spoke with her in 2019 at Mourning Glory Funeral Services in Saskatoon, where she worked as a funeral officiant. At that time, Presnell had presided at more than 600 funerals, offering the gift of non-judgmental listening to families who often didn’t have a church community.

“I’ll get a call about some family . . . and I’ll just say to God, ‘I don’t know what this family needs, but you do.’” Presnell told me. “I totally rely on God’s guidance.”

I agree with Driediger that God reveals himself in nature, but I also see God revealed in the lives of God’s people: people like Driediger, Wayne and Carry Dueck, Leonard Doell, Wes Neepin, and Elaine Presnell. It has been a privilege and a joy to share their stories, and so many more, with you these past eight years. 



One response to “Seeing God in the lives of others”

  1. Heather Driedger Avatar
    Heather Driedger

    Thank you!
    Thank you Donna for offering your gift of writing to help connect and inspire Mennonites across Canada. I always appreciated reading your articles. You will be missed!

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