Beyond Ethics: Transcendence, Prayer and Spirit
In our May 2024 feature section, you will find:
Allan Rudy-Froese got sick of sermons—including his own—in which ethics overshadowed God, so he took a deep dive into grace.
In our May 2024 feature section, you will find:
Allan Rudy-Froese got sick of sermons—including his own—in which ethics overshadowed God, so he took a deep dive into grace.
To put names and faces to these partnerships, Canadian Mennonite’s correspondents across the country have profiled Witness workers and the churches that support them. Following are stories from B.C. and Alberta.
Nature has always been a source of inspiration for Mennonite children’s author Aimee Reid.
Several years ago, she took her dog for a walk while camping at Valens Lake Conservation Area in Hamilton, Ontario. She returned with a phrase in her mind:
If all the earth were forests green and you were the nest.
They had forgotten about the kids.
Brent Kipfer’s Mennonite Church Canada pedigree is solid: he grew up at Poole Mennonite Church in Poole, Ontario, attended Rockway Mennonite Collegiate, graduated from Canadian Mennonite Bible College and Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary, and became pastor of a Mennonite Church Eastern C
Why do people switch or exit a church or denomination? And why do some churches leave a denomination altogether?
Harv Wiebe—not his real name—did not agree with his congregation’s decision to leave the regional church, but still, he hoped things would work out for the congregation he had once pastored.
The Mennonite more-with-less ethic is something I have always connected with. Shopping for clothes at the thrift
If I’m not careful, I find myself surrounded by similar-minded individuals who are great at reflecting my own perspectives and values back at me. In a society that continues to grow increasingly polarized and tribalistic, the ease with which this can happen worries me.
A couple of years ago my sister and I had hammock party at the park with our friends.
Ian Funk remembers the last time he arrived on campus at Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary (AMBS)—how he walked into the guest house late at night and was welcomed by a fellow student sitting at the dining room table. People heard them exchanging greetings and popped out of their rooms.
I spent my mid-twenties holding my disability flag high, confident that I’d found my calling. This was my cause. These were my people.
Allan Rudy-Froese says he “got sick” of hearing sermons that spoke more about “what we should do” than the life of faith.
God comes to us in many ways. Sometimes we are keenly aware of God’s presence; at other times we just don’t pay attention.
“I think you are a contemplative.” Spoken by my spiritual director, those words caught
“This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased” (Matthew 3:17).
We asked numerous people to share three to five words that express the essence of Anabaptism for them.
The feature for our February 23, 2024 issue is a 12-page comic by noted graphic novelist Jonathan Dyck. For the piece, Dyck collaborated with Dave Scott, an historian and ambassador from the Swan Lake First Nation in southern Manitoba.
See the sample below.
The disciples were shocked when Jesus said, “One of you will betray me.” Judas’s story is told in different ways in the gospels, giving us some insight into how the disciples and gospel writers came to terms with the betrayal of Judas.
The gulf appears impossible to bridge.
As bombs continue to fall onto Gaza and rockets somehow continue to fly out of Gaza, a conflict nearly as old as time and as entrenched as the Jordan River spirals to depths unthinkable. To listen to people on either side is to hear vastly different narratives about the same reality.
An interview with Gustavo Zentner
By Will Braun
Gustavo Zentner will never forget visiting areas attacked by Hamas.
“We walked into the homes where you can still smell the smell of burned flesh,” he recalled. “That smell will always accompany me.”