Hillsboro Resolution



In 1974, Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) approved a resolution that encouraged each Mennonite household in North America to “examine its lifestyle” and adopt a goal to “reduce consumption and expenditures by 10 percent.” 

It came to be known as the Hillsboro Resolution, as the meeting in question took place in Hillsboro, Kansas. 

Five years after the Hillsboro Resolution, Paul Longacre wrote a status update for MCC. The following is from that document. Longacre, who was married to Doris Janzen Longacre until her death in 1979, served as MCC’s hunger concerns secretary.

“The resolutions we passed in 1974 were good. They were comprehensive. . . . We must adopt a new standard of consumption. Too long and in too many ways the society around us has set our standard. We know our persistent indulgences are depriving others of the resources God has given to us all. . . .

“Except for a few persons among us, there has been no drastic cutback in our consumption. Mennonite and Brethren in Christ living and consumption patterns are little different from neighbors with similar income, professional or vocational experience. . . .

“Big changes come with seemingly small activities. When we begin more responsible living patterns, God will lead us on to greater faithfulness.”



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