Category: Uncategorized

  • A picture of gradual decline

    A picture of gradual decline

    Often our society relies too much on numbers. In gravitating to quantification we tend to short-circuit the truth, which is nuanced and multilayered. But when it comes to our denomination, I would like to see more numbers. Specifically, how has overall giving to area/regional churches and Mennonite Church Canada changed over time? The charts here…

  • Nonviolent action in history and today

    Nonviolent action in history and today

    “In the Second World War there were over 10,000 loyal Canadians who served Canada without weapons. What were they called?” This is the question Conrad Stoesz has been asking students at the Red River Heritage Fair for more than a decade. War has long been the popular narrative throughout history and it continues to be…

  • Both ends of the pipeline

    Both ends of the pipeline

    On April 20, 2018, Mennonite Church Canada’s Indigenous-Settler Relations director was arrested on the West Coast for protesting the proposed Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline expansion. But what is happening in Mennonite churches at the other end of the pipeline? At Trinity Mennonite, on the south side of Calgary, Pastor Will Loewen listens to trains…

  • Kindred partners with Rockway to serve the community

    Kindred partners with Rockway to serve the community

    As the presenting partner of this year’s Rockway Mennonite Collegiate Envirathon Servathon, Kindred Credit Union had its staff join 300 students and teachers, who fanned out across the region on May 7, 2018, to do everything from planting trees and preparing garden beds, to sorting clothing donations and serving meals. “When Kindred talks about inspiring…

  • Forming intentional community with young adults

    Forming intentional community with young adults

    When Thomas and Terri Lynn Friesen met, Terri Lynn was a guest at the Burrow, an intentional community Thomas was living in with eight other young adults. This coming September, a few weeks before the couple’s second wedding anniversary, they will embark on a new adventure together: opening their Saskatoon home to form an intentional…

  • Worth the wait

    Worth the wait

    If good things come to those who wait, exciting times are ahead for Kenzie Jane. The Winnipeg-based singer-songwriter recently released her debut EP, Love Me From Scratch, more than three years after she first started recording it. Jane says she was encouraged to take her time by her mentors in the Winnipeg Folk Festival’s Stingray…

  • Winnipeggers take to the street in support of Nakba survivors

    Winnipeggers take to the street in support of Nakba survivors

    Around a hundred people gathered at a busy intersection in Winnipeg on May 15, 2018, to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Nakba, which means “catastrophe” in Arabic. The Nakba refers to the dispossession of more than 750,000 Palestinians from their homes and lands that followed the creation of the State of Israel in 1948.…

  • MC Canada working groups call for sanctions against Israel

    MC Canada working groups call for sanctions against Israel

    The following letter was drafted by representatives of the Mennonite Church Canada network of regional working groups on Palestine and Israel, and sent to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s foreign affairs minister, on May 2, 2018. It is being published in Canadian Mennonite at the request of the working groups. In July…

  • ‘Connected: Striving side by side with one mind’

    ‘Connected: Striving side by side with one mind’

    The theme of this year’s Mennonite Church Eastern Canada annual church gathering—stated in the headline—had many facets, both inspiring and challenging, for those gathered at Redeemer College in Ancaster on April 27 and 28, 2018. Impassioned plea to stay connected Executive minister David Martin urged four congregations considering leaving the regional church—Milverton; Maple View, Wellesley;…

  • ‘We have to begin by crying out for justice’

    ‘We have to begin by crying out for justice’

    “We have to begin by crying out for justice. You build peace on justice.” Naim Ateek uttered this plea on April 25 2018, before more than 150 people gathered at Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) in Winnipeg to hear him speak about his new book, A Palestinian Theology of Liberation: The Bible, Justice, and the Palestine-Israel Conflict.…