Study project, archival development grants made
Historical Commission press release
Stephanie Chase, Abe J. Dueck, Zacharie Leclair and Conrad Stoesz are the 2016 recipients of the MB Historical Commission’s Mennonite Brethren studies project grants. Each award comes with a grant of $2,500. The selection committee chose the four from a strong field of applicants, all working on projects of historical and theological interest to Mennonite Brethren around the world.
Chase is a master’s degree student at Briercrest Seminary, Caronport, Sask. Her project title is “The Jesus of Whom I Speak: The Reconciliation of Nonviolent Discipleship and God’s Violence, According to J. Denny Weaver and Miroslav Volf.” Chase’s project grows from wrestling with an Anabaptist-Mennonite commitment to nonviolent discipleship and a troubling awareness of Scripture’s presentation of God in violent images. The project is a comparative study of the work of Volf and Weaver, paying attention to how they reconcile nonviolent discipleship and God’s violence. While distinctive, each scholar’s Christology, theological lenses and hermeneutical methods appear significant in the respective reconciliations of the problem. She hopes to leverage her discoveries in order to construct a more robust Anabaptist-Mennonite theology of nonviolent discipleship.
Dueck is a retired college professor from Canadian Mennonite University, Winnipeg, Man. His project title is “The Mennonite Brethren Bible College (1944–1992): Competing Visions for Mennonite Brethren Education in Canada.” The MB Bible College in Winnipeg was the primary educational institution of the Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches for the formative period of the conference following the massive immigration of Russian Mennonites in the 1920s. As such it prepared most of the leaders, pastors, Bible school and MB high school teachers, missionaries and musicians for most of the period. It was succeeded for almost 10 years by Concord College and then by Canadian Mennonite University. A comprehensive history of the MBBC period (1944-1992), one that documents a period that was marked by contested visions for what college, university and ministry education should look like, has not been written. Dueck’s project addresses this gap.
Leclair lectures in U.S. History at the Université de Montréal in Quebec. His project title is “‘Unconscientious’ Objectors? Woodrow Wilson, Conscription and Mennonite Conscientious Objectors, 1917–1918.” Leclair’s project aims at understanding U.S. President Woodrow Wilson’s response to American Mennonites’ objection to war. Although Wilson conceived of the American intervention as an ultimately pacifistic endeavor, waging war against Germany required a complete mobilization of American society. The Mennonite conscientious objectors posed an intellectual, spiritual and political problem for such a devout Protestant president as Wilson. While discrete and relatively small, their critique and persistent peaceful disobedience undermined the intellectual scaffolding of the Wilsonian justification of the war. By exploring how Wilson handled the Mennonite “problem,” Leclair hopes to find ways to improve the reception of divergent opinions in a society shaped by media culture and to better understand the impact minority groups might have on policy making in contemporary settings.
Stoesz is a master’s degree student in the joint program at University of Winnipeg and University of Manitoba and an archivist working halftime at the Mennonite Heritage Center and halftime at the Center for MB Studies, both in Winnipeg. His project title is “The Creation of Identity: Mennonite Conscientious Objectors in Western Canada through the Lens of Archives, A National Historical Society and Memoirs.” Using material from historical societies, archives and memoirs as sources, Stoesz plans to trace the intra- and extra-group forces in play and show how Mennonite identity was reinvented according to these contextual forces. His project takes a historical approach but creates a bridge between the disciplines of archives and history. He hopes his research can help contemporary Mennonite faith communities engage their own complex cultural identity, something that is not static but continually shaped by both societal and group forces.
The Historical Commission is pleased to make these awards, noting that these projects represent the kind of work that it wants to support, encourage and fund.
In November 2016, the commission also awarded the Mennonite Historical Society of Saskatchewan a $2,000 archival development grant in support of its application to help pay for needed archival supplies. The society’s archive is located in Saskatoon. This is the first year that archival development grants have been offered. The grants are available to Mennonite archives operating in Canada and the U.S., as well as those operating outside of Canada and the U.S.
Also, 25 books of historical interest to Mennonite Brethren—books published by the Historical Commission and Kindred Productions—have been moved to a Creative Commons license and converted to online readable e-books. The number of books in the online library, accessible through the commission’s website, now totals 58.
The MB studies project grants, archival development grants and digital historical library are made possible with support from U.S. and Canadian MB Churches. See www.mbhistory.org for information about these awards, grants, internships and digital libraries—just some of the initiatives put forward by the MB Historical Commission.
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