Issue: Volume 16

  • Imaginations at work

    Imaginations at work

    Every September for the last 106 years, students have arrived at the Rosthern (Sask.) Junior College (RJC) campus to learn, explore their faith, play, live together, and to become friends and community. It is important to remember the history of this place and the mission of the school: “To nurture the development of every student’s…

  • People of faith must call for climate justice

    People of faith must call for climate justice

    Especially in the colder areas of Canada, people will sometimes facetiously say they are thankful for climate change when they experience unseasonably warm temperatures. But Willard Metzger, Mennonite Church Canada’s executive director, heard first-hand how destructive climate change is in developing countries at the 2011 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa. The…

  • Spaghetti-sauce churches

    Spaghetti-sauce churches

    “Why plant a new church?” It’s a legitimate question and, as a church planter, one I have heard often. With most churches in decline, and more than a few closing altogether, does it really make sense to start a new one? As one friend put it, “Why don’t you start a new typewriter company while…

  • Christmas is over, what now?

    Christmas is over, what now?

    While driving to work the other morning I was listening to the radio, as I usually do. The program host had a guest on the show and they were discussing seasonal tipping etiquette. The focus of the show quickly shifted from being a discussion about seasonal expectations and social norms, to a call-in radio recognition…

  • Collaborative conflict resolution

    Collaborative conflict resolution

    In the last few columns, I’ve written about different ways to manage conflict, including avoidance, competition, accommodation and compromise. Each of these responses can be quite useful, and each one also has limitations. It’s good to develop a repertoire of responses, and to sense when to use which one. The final conflict resolution strategy that…

  • The raising of Ebenezer

    The raising of Ebenezer

    The Ebenezer stone represented a fresh beginning, a reversal of course for God’s people. It also said something important about God: his mercies were everlasting; his covenant was forever. The Advent season was a time of preparation and anticipation. The Christmas season was a time for celebration and repletion. What follows, for me, is a…

  • Readers write

    Learn from the Bible, not cults or other religions Re: “Learning from diverse faiths,” Nov. 14, page 4. I was surprised and disappointed with the article about learning from Mormons and Muslims how to live Christian lives. Whatever happened to learning these things from the Word of God? All cults/religions contain teaching that mirrors the…

  • For discussion

    1. According to Larry Miller, the last two decades have been a time of fundamental change for Anabaptists around the world. What changes have you seen in Mennonite World Conference (MWC) and in how Mennonites interact globally? Do you agree that the centre of gravity of the global church has shifted to the Global South?…

  • Miller was a ‘migrant missionary’

    Miller was a ‘migrant missionary’

    “You were a new kind of ‘migrant missionary’ described in John Howard Yoder’s As You Go,” said Bert Lobe, in an evening of memories of Larry Miller at Rockway Mennonite Church, Kitchener, on Oct. 23, 2011. As the North American Mennonite World Conference (MWC) representative, who has worked closely with Miller over the years, Lobe…

  • ‘A place that gives life’

    ‘A place that gives life’

    Larry Miller remembers one moment clearly when, as a 38-year-old, he was weighing whether or not to accept the nomination to lead Mennonite World Conference (MWC). The year was 1988 and he was sitting in a university library in Strasbourg, France, where he lived. “I was working on my dissertation, and I looked up and…