Setting Off into the Unknown



According to lore, when map makers of old reached the end of their knowledge—the edges of the territory from which humans had returned alive—they drew sea monsters on the map and wrote, “Here Be Dragons.”

These were uncharted waters—literally. Ahead lay danger, adventure and possibility (including, sadly, the possibility of imperial conquest).

Many churches, including the Mennonite Church in Canada, face the uncharted waters of secularism and scandal, scattered attention and altered loyalty, rapid change and smaller numbers. (To be fair, some churches are bursting with fresh energy and young people.)

In Learning to Walk in the Dark, Barbara Brown Taylor writes, “I am especially aware of how many old-time Christians are looking into the dark right now. Attendance is down; debt is up. Plenty of smaller churches are closing or at least putting their buildings up for sale.”

We want to face the future with hope, but we remember the good old days, and the present feels less robust. We fear what we will find if we turn on the lights to look at the true state of the church. We feel deep pain that our children and grandchildren have drifted from church. We are afraid for the church in the next generation. We are worried the furnace will die.

We do not know whether these are growing pains or, perhaps, a death rattle.

Neither did our forebears 500 years ago.

They faced dragons, dangers and profound uncertainty. They did not know how things would unfold.

In addition to the uncertainty we face as a church today, adventures and new possibilities also lie ahead. Everything begins at the edge of the map.

In the time of the Babylonian exile, most prophets offered comforting words, saying God would soon restore Israel to its former status. While Jeremiah said, “Amen! May the Lord do so!” (Jeremiah 28), he went on to encourage the Israelites to accept the times they were in and to recognize something like what the late Walter Brueggeman points to when he writes, “The world for which you have been so carefully prepared is being taken from you by the grace of God.”

We do well when we remember God’s grace in uncharted waters.

And, as André Gide writes: “One does not discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore.” That invites us to take a clear-eyed look at this moment in the life of the Mennonite Church in Canada.

In this issue, we’ll look at how people interpret the past 500 years of Anabaptism globally, what the numbers tell about the past 25 years of Anabaptism nationally, and 15 ways we could frame the current moment.

In a fall issue of CM, we’ll invite church leaders to share their vision—as informed by the national gathering in July—for navigating the waters ahead of us.

This is graduation season, and I am reminded of the words from a divinity student at my son’s college graduation several years ago. Lindsay Sanwald’s final words are good ones for us as we set sail:

We have never been more vulnerable than we are today. Good. May this great vulnerability turn us into great visionaries. In exile, we become prophets, we part seas, we leap! … Let us go beyond the boundaries now, and may divine truth, wisdom and grace continue to guide our way.



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