7,500 Anabaptists share joys, burdens at global assembly
Paul Schrag for Meetinghouse
In his friendship group at the Mennonite World Conference assembly, Francis Ojwang found that getting to know fellow believers from distant places brought an unexpected blessing.
The Kenyan pastor had hoped that his wife, Everline Achieng, could travel with him to the 16th global assembly of Anabaptists. The once-every-six-years event drew more than 7,500 people from 65 countries to the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex in Harrisburg, Pa., July 21-26. The theme was “Walking with God.” It was the first time since 1978 that U.S. churches hosted the global assembly.
But, like about 300 others from various countries, Ojwang’s wife’s visa was denied. The couple had spent more than $1,000 on expenses such as visa interviews and passports—and half of it had been for nothing.
“I was disappointed, but not to the breaking point, because I believe all things work to good for those who love the Lord,” Ojwang said July 25.
He shared his story with friendship group No. 348—one of more than 250 circles of about 10 people each that met for 45 minutes after each morning worship service. The rest of Ojwang’s group, all from the United States, took up a collection. At their last meeting, they gave the father of six an envelope containing enough cash to cover a significant part of his loss.
“This is a great surprise and blessing,” he said. “Now I will be able to buy a couple of books and a T-shirt for my wife.”
He could do more than that. Not knowing how much was in the envelope, he promised some of the funds would help the orphans who make up about half of the 120 children in his congregation’s Sunday school.
Before the gift, he had $5 in his pocket.
Appropriately, the day’s theme was “Walking in Giving and Receiving.”
Friendship group No. 348’s experience of cross-cultural sharing was one of countless moments—worshiping with the multitude, listening to music in the Global Church Village, competing for the Anabaptist World Cup or visiting in the hallways—that drew Anabaptists from around the world into closer fellowship.
“The church will test our faith. After all, you and I are in it,” Tom Yoder Neufeld of Canada said in a July 22 sermon. “But the church is also God’s gift of us walking together.”
With colorful MWC banners hanging on each side of the stage and a huge video screen behind the podium, worshipers gathered in a 1930s-vintage arena that hosts events such as rodeos, tractor pulls, motorcycle races and farm shows.
The assembly rented 30 large tents to create more space for smaller meetings, such as afternoon workshops, within the complex. Volunteers sped to their errands on big-wheeled Amish-made scooters that resemble bicycles.
Spirit-filled music
Each evening worship service featured songs from various countries and cultures. On July 22 the crowd sang consecutive songs from Korea and India, the latter with Hindi words, but both with one word in common: “Hallelujah!”
On the day that featured Europe, a string ensemble played while the crowd sang Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring. American folk songs like Down by the Riverside and I’ll Fly Away enlivened the closing service, which became a clap-along hoedown.
“The spirit touches our hearts as we sing together, as our brothers and sisters sing in different parts of the world,” said worship leader Don McNiven of Canada.
“They are not the only group that experienced this kind of heartbreak,” worship leader Don McNiven of Canada said before the five Kenyans sang. He invited the crowd to stand for 30 seconds in prayer and solidarity with those who didn’t get their visas and to show that “we care for them and miss them here.”
Critique and praise
At twice-daily worship services, sermons brought encouragement and challenge. Each morning service included a “young Anabaptist” response from a different continent.
Kevin Ressler, the young North American speaker, said “many of us have become Pharisees” eager to condemn the sins of others while ignoring our own. With a Tanzanian mother and an American father, Ressler called himself a “Suba-Luo-Swiss-German-Tanzanian-American-Anabaptist-Mennonite.”
As one who considers Anabaptism his core identity, he said, “I am unicultural. . . . We are all ethnically Anabaptist, for we carry that version of Christ with us wherever we go.”
Rebecca Osiro of Kenya emphasized MWC’s unifying power. “Through MWC, we have a forum to fellowship,” she said. “It is not a time for us to be critical of or distance ourselves from one another.”
Canadian Brethren in Christ pastor Bruxy Cavey praised Anabaptists for carrying the simple, clear message of Jesus through the centuries: that love for others is an essential reflection of love for God. “We are a peace church because we are first and foremost a Jesus church,” he said.
Diverse contexts
Workshops included testimonies about living out the Anabaptist principles of peace and community in diverse contexts.
In Indonesia, with the world’s largest Muslim population, Mennonites face the challenge to build a positive image of Christianity among people who distrust it as a “foreign faith.”
“We live among 150 million Muslims, and they don’t want to read the gospel, so we must help them read the gospel in our lives,” said Paulus Hartono, an Indonesian pastor. He told of befriending a military commander of Hezbollah, a radical Islamist group.
Mennonites in the Netherlands, by contrast, navigate a post-Christian society mostly populated by people content to avoid church. Henk Leegte, a pastor from Amsterdam, said many Dutch view the church as a place for hypocrites. But he is happy to be a listening ear for spiritual seekers.
“Sometimes the people who come in are very different from us, but we open up still,” he said. “When people knock on the door and think maybe this is a place to ask spiritual questions, I always say, ‘Yes, come in.’ ”
New leadership
The final worship service included the symbolic passing of a shepherd’s staff from outgoing President Danisa Ndlovu of Zimbabwe to new President Nelson Kraybill of the United States. Rebecca Osiro of Kenya succeeded Janet Plenert of Canada as vice president.
Sunday morning, July 26, at least 34 local congregations hosted international guests, concluding the assembly activities. Many Mennonite Brethren attended a worship service hosted by the International Community of Mennonite Brethren at nearby Messiah College.
The United States had the largest number of registrants, 3,931, followed by Canada with 1,162. Other leading countries included Zimbabwe with 265, India with 250, Congo with 215, the Netherlands with 125, Germany with 112, Mexico with 106 and Switzerland with 97.
The 17th world assembly is scheduled for 2021 in Indonesia. —by Paul Schrag, editor of Mennonite World Review. This article was written for Meetinghouse, a group of Mennonite publications. Full coverage of PA 2015 is available here.
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