MWC PA 2015 opens with celebration, call for walking together

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MWC leaders give opening remarks, sermon

By Gordon Houser, editor of The Mennonite, for Meetinghouse

The 16th Mennonite World Conference (MWC) Assembly opened July 21 in Harrisburg, Pa., with a parade of Mennonites from across the globe, with confession of past treatment of Native Americans in Pennsylvania, with music and with calls for walking with God together.

A group of Native Americans from Pennsylvania marched in led by Barry Lee, drumming and singing. Jessica McPherson and Lee recounted some of the history of Native people in Pennsylvania losing their land to whites. Mennonites later profited from this confiscation of land. In a ceremony in 2010, Native representatives offered forgiveness to Mennonites who had confessed their regret for how their ancestors had treated Native people. Lee said, “We invite you in peace. What is past is past; let’s move on together.”

Representatives of the four hosting Anabaptist conferences—Mennonite Church USA, U.S. Mennonite Brethren, Brethren in Christ Church in the U.S., and Conservative Mennonite Conference—also welcomed the thousands of attendees. Clyde Ferguson, a USMB Leadership Board member from Lenoir, NC, pictured left, greeted the Assembly on behalf of the Mennonite Brethren churches. Ferguson was also a member of the PA 2015 instrumental ensemble leading worship in the morning and evening services.

More than 7,200 people from 56 countries had registered for the assembly.

Representatives from MWC member conferences paraded into the arena carrying banners. A brass trio playing "When the Saints Go Marching In" led the procession.

Danisa Ndlovu of Zimbabwe, president of MWC since 2009, called this assembly “an exciting moment,” the result of many prayers offered worldwide.

“We live in a time of great upheaval and change,” he said. Drawing freely from the book of Revelation, Ndlovu said, “The urgent need of our world today is for [our church] to be one body from many nations.”

“Walking with God,” the assembly theme, said Ndlovu, calls us to examine our relationship with God, our lifestyles, and to test and approve God’s will. “Nothing is more beautiful than God’s people walking with God in harmony,” he said.

Recounting many areas of suffering around the world, he added, we cannot claim to be walking with God and not identify with those who have suffered. “We must set the pace for the world to follow,” he said.

Referring to the examples of offering forgiveness among the Amish at Nickel Mines and the African-American Christians in Charleston, S.C., Ndlovu said, It is in such times as these that people can see God at work.

Cesar Garcia of Colombia, left, MWC general secretary, presented the sermon, based on Luke 24:13-35. He recalled himself at age 17, a soldier in the Colombian army, being asked by his captain what he would do if faced with an enemy attacking him. Garcia said, “I would pray.” The captain then hit him with metal sticks used for a musical instrument.

Military service was obligatory, and he did not have Anabaptist convictions at that time, yet he called himself a Christian, even though it cost him a beating.

Is it possible, Garcia asked, to walk together if we are not in agreement. He noted that in Luke 24, the disciples did not agree with each other and carried doubts following Jesus’ death.

Garcia quoted an African proverb: “If you want to go quickly, go alone. If you want to go far, walk together.” He looked at the meanings of “walking” in English, Spanish (“caminemos”) and French (“marche”). It means, he said, a continuous action, leaving behind our fears and opening our hearts, and implies being involved in the journey.

“With God,” the rest of the theme phrase, speaks of communion with God and with each other, Garcia said. We will have moments of doubt on our journey, he said, and we will have conflicts and may prefer to walk by ourselves. But “we will recognize our need to walk together [and] our need for each other,” he said.

He concluded by finishing his story of his encounter with his captain at age 17. He was able to confess that he was a Christian and could not kill, he said, because four others his age had already confessed the same and been beaten. “I had found a new community with these four friends,” he said. And with them he could walk with God.

Photographs by Dale D. Gehman for Meetinghouse

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