Prayers of gratitude and intercession

  • Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada – When Toronto United Mennonite Church (TUMC) decided it was time to renovate and expand their building, the congregation wanted the project to reach beyond their usual sphere of influence. Located in Canada’s largest, multicultural city, TUMC has some 200 people from five continents speaking 10 mother tongues, with a particularly strong connection to Central America.

    “We spoke with Arli Klassen about how to share our donation with Mennonite World Conference,” says building committee chair Richard Ratzlaff, and she directed them to the Global Church Sharing Fund Jubilee account. TUMC had done a similar “tithe” on expansion fundraising for a building project 20 years earlier.

    “The GCSF is the MWC account to which member churches can apply for financial assistance on a building project,” says Klassen. Grant requests must be approved by the national church office and the recipient group must contribute to the cost of the project.

    The Global Church Sharing Fund’s aim is to put into action the apostle Paul’s words on equality: “your surplus meets their need, but one day your need may be met from their surplus” (2 Corinthians 8:13–15).

    Two-thirds of the 1.8 million Anabaptist believers reside in Africa, Asia and Latin America, but 95 percent of Anabaptist wealth resides in North America and Europe. The GCSF provides a means “to redistribute wealth in the biblical spirit of jubilee.”

    TUMC designated 2 percent ($20,000) of their fundraising ($900,000) to MWC’s GCSF. Their project involved creative transformation of their existing building to make more space “to greet, meet and learn; offer hospitality and play,” and the addition of wheelchair accessible features and more office space for ministry partners.

    There was no hesitation to share the funds with MWC, says Ratzlaff. “We’re a very wealthy church, and we know it. If anything, there was a perception we were spending too much on ourselves and not enough on our brothers and sisters elsewhere.”

    Ironically, the percentage TUMC is donating to MWC may be capable of funding a larger portion of a building project elsewhere than the full amount does in Canada.

    When TUMC dedicated their expanded and refreshed building Nov. 13, 2016, the celebration service invoked 2 Corinthians 8:15: “The one who had much did not have too much, and the one who had little did not have too little.”

    FIEMN (Fraternidad de Iglesias Evangélicas Menonitas Nicaragua) 
    Office and Retreat Centre, in Nicaragua, applied for funds to assist their
    comprehensive plan for land plot acquisition for 2 congregations,
    national office renovations and retreat campground improvements.
    Photos: FIEMN
    (Fraternidad de Iglesias Evangélicas Menonitas Nicaragua).

    “The actual GCSF target each year is $100,000, although the Deacon’s Commission can only spend based on what is actually received,” says Klassen. About half the monies are for building projects, the rest cover Deacon’s visits to member churches under duress.

    In 2016, there were five requests of approximately $10,000 each for construction of church buildings, schools and office remodelling from Africa, Asia and – of particular interest to TUMC – Colombia and Nicaragua.

    “Several families in the congregation have roots in Colombia,” says Ratzlaff, and the two partner congregations in the building are composed of and active in helping immigrants and refugees from Central America.

    “We’re very happy to know that we can contribute to others in our global church,” says Ratzlaff.

    —Mennonite World Conference release by Karla Braun

     

  • The International Community of Mennonite Brethren (ICOMB) is made up of 21 national churches in 19 countries with approximately 450,000 members. ICOMB exists to facilitate relationships and ministries to enhance the witness and discipleship of its member national churches – connecting, strengthening and expanding.

    I travelled by car in a snow storm to visit pastors in Canada and the USA in late November and early December. My purpose was to introduce ICOMB to those who are not aware of our global family. For others who know, it was a chance to provide more information and ask for prayer support. Praise God for safety: the road is slippery in the cold and some cars went off the road because of it.

    —David Wiebe, executive director, ICOMB

  • Bogotá, Colombia – Taking a risk and trusting in God are sure ways to grow in faith. For Marisela Dyck and Xavier Chen, serving with the Young Anabaptist Mennonite Exchange Network (YAMEN) program in 2015-2016 was a year of lessons in relying on God.

    “During my service I learned that looking for God every day is the best thing that I can do to make myself feel better emotionally and spiritually,” said Dyck, from the Iglesia Anabautista Menonita Unida de México.

    YAMEN, a joint program between Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) and Mennonite World Conference (MWC), is for young adults, ages 18–30, who are not Canadian or U.S. citizens. The participants must attend an Anabaptist church in their own country or serve an Anabaptist organization.

    “When I’m looking for God, he tells me that he is with me in every situation, easy or difficult, and that I should wait and trust that he will show me his will and that I should put everything in his hands.” Dyck served in South America, in the daycare of an organization which ministers to at-risk women.

    Back at home in Mexico teaching 10-12 year-old children, Dyck lives into the lessons she learned. “With what God showed me this year, he took away my fear of failing when I do service.”

    Chen also worked with children – in Peru and Colombia – through which he experienced God’s faithfulness. “During every moment of my YAMEN term I kept relying on God. I prayed and asked him to guide me to his way. Now, my faith and thoughts to God are stronger than before. To trust and rely on him is the unchangeable way to have a fruitful and blessed life.”

    Now, when he is serving in his home congregation of the Fellowship of Mennonite Churches in Taiwan, Chen tries “to see from different viewpoints, because there are many possible ways to approach the situation with empathy and understanding for the feelings of other people.”

    The goals of the YAMEN program are that participants will develop leadership skills, grow spiritually and personally, and gain cross-cultural knowledge and experience.

    “Something important that God showed me is that the main point should not be the service itself, but the relationship one has with him and that you should let God work through you to bless other people. God will give you the strength and wisdom that you need,” writes Dyck.

    Chen’s experience taught him humility. “I had very high expectations for my term: I would give myself to people in need and I believed I could do it perfectly.” Instead, standing outside his comfort zone, he often felt he had nothing to offer. “It’s not applicable to act the way as before; to face any new thing with humility is the correct choice.”

    The YAMEN program continues to grow young leaders for the benefit of churches around the world.

    2016-2017 YAMEN participants:

    Name (home country):  Serving in: 
    Tirzah Hea Halder (Bangladesh) Nigeria
    Juan “Beto” Alberto Torrico Soliz (South America) Mexico
    Ariane Ribeiro de Souza (Brazil)  Ukraine
    Cecile Sanou (Burkina Faso) Uganda
    Kimleng Chung (Cambodia) Nicaragua
    Sokea Im (Cambodia)  South Africa
    ChunLei Xun (China) Colombia
    Jhon Alex Martinez Lozano (Colombia) Nicaragua
    Juliana Arboleda Rivas (Colombia) South America
    Laurey Segura (Costa Rica)  Cambodia
    Johanna Sommer (France)  Laos
    Dina Molina (Honduras) South America
    Marlly Aceituno (Honduras) South America
    Nathanial Hembram (India)  Colombia
    Marsellina “Selly” Marliona Wamebu (Indonesia) India
    Primadinar Sekar Ratri “Dinar” (Indonesia) South Africa
    Tamarscha Pradhini Putri “Dhini” (Indonesia) Colombia
    Jason Were (Kenya) Cambodia
    Sonephan Lakongseng (Laos)  Honduras
    Felizarda Atanásia Filimone (Mozambique) Colombia
    Susma Rasaili (Nepal) Cambodia
    José David Dávila Godinez (Nicaragua) El Salvador
    Gabriel Goddard (South Africa) Colombia
    Rastone Hamapande (Zambia) Cambodia

    A Mennonite World Conference and Mennonite Central Committee joint release. Article by Kristina Toews.

  • World Fellowship Sunday celebrates koinonia amid suffering

    Bogotá, Colombia – “We celebrate World Fellowship Sunday because it is a way to remember the origin of our church: clearly, first comes the teachings of Jesus, but we also remember that 500 years ago some brave women and men, motivated by the real teachings of Jesus, decided to follow him even though that action cost them their lives,” says Oscar Suarez, member of Iglesia Menonita de Ibagué (Ibagué Mennonite Church), Colombia.

    Each year, Anabaptist-related churches around the world are encouraged to worship around a common theme on a Sunday close to 21 January. On that date in 1525, the first Anabaptist baptism took place in Zurich, Switzerland. Mennonite World Conference’s World Fellowship Sunday provides an opportunity to remember our common roots and celebrate our worldwide koinonia.

    For 22 January 2017, the churches in Europe have prepared materials with the theme “My cry is heard.”

    “This theme has to do with the current situation of many refugees and migrants arriving in Europe. As such, it speaks to the reality in which many of our churches are immersed and to the pain and suffering of those of whom we are a part,” says MWC general secretary César García.

    The materials (now in a new format) contain biblical texts, prayers, song suggestions, sermon ideas, stories and other resources.

    A new 3-minute video, MWC Year in Review: 2016, that is now available online and for download, can also be used as part of World Fellowship Sunday celebrations.

    Emmanuel Mennonite Church, Abbotsford, B.C., Canada, will use these materials to celebrate World Fellowship Sunday and the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity on 22 January 2017. “As a local congregation, we realize that we are part of a worldwide body of Christ that includes followers of Jesus from many different cultures and walks of life,” says pastor April Yamasaki. “The same Spirit enlivens and leads us, and draws us together: that’s good reason to celebrate, to pray for one another and learn from one another.”

    “We remember the foundation of our Anabaptist faith and that we have sisters and brothers around the world, brave men and women motivated by the teachings of Jesus,” says Suarez.

    MWC encourages congregations who celebrate World Fellowship Sunday to designate “one-lunch” offerings to Mennonite World Conference, and to appoint a reporter to send photos and event commentary to photos@mwc-cmm.org.

    —Mennonite World Conference release

  • 2nd annual Lancaster international hymn sing

    Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada – Anabaptist Christians in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA, had a taste of Revelation 7:9 worship when they hosted Mennonite World Conference’s Assembly 16 in July 2015. A local committee is building on that experience with an annual sing-along in the spirit of that international gathering. This year’s event will be 21 January 2017 at Akron (Pennsylvania) Mennonite Church.

    The goal is “to get Anabaptists together from diverse churches to celebrate the international church with international music, learning international songs and supporting MWC and the global church,” says Lynn Roth, MWC North America regional representative. The January date coincides with World Fellowship Sunday (the Sunday closest to 21 January).

    “The focus is on congregational singing, not performance,” says Roth, though some of the musicians were part of the stage team at Assembly 16.

    The songs primarily come from the Assembly songbook, but there is opportunity for new additions, especially from local ethnic churches, says Roth. In 2016, they sang “Fabricante de paz,” a new song Marisol Arriaga Aranda of Mexico wrote for WFS and shared with MWC.

    “Having experienced the joy of singing together at the global assembly in Harrisburg a few months earlier, this hymn sing felt very meaningful for many of us,” says pastor Jon Carlson of Forest Hills Mennonite Church, Leola, Pennsylvania, host to the first sing-along 31 January 2016. “Forest Hills was thankful to host an event that reminded us of our connections to sisters and brothers around the world.”

    In 2017, organizers are planning a morning workshop for congregational song leaders to learn international worship songs.

    Roth hopes the event “can evolve a local committee committed to MWC, working with a local host church.”

    Earlier, in Ontario, Canada, some 60–70 Anabaptists participated in at an international songfest at Waterloo North Mennonite Church, 6 December 2016 with MWC general secretary César Garcia and president Nelson Kraybill as special speakers.

    As Assembly 17 draws nearer, an international sing-along presents an opportunity to learn Indonesian songs in preparation for worship sessions in Semarang, Indonesia, in 2021.

    “Our musical traditions may be different, but they all express a common desire to glorify God through song,” says Carlson.

    —Mennonite World Conference release by Karla Braun

  • Bogotá, Colombia – Tremendous change rocked the Western church 500 years ago as successive groups discovered new things about God through Scripture and separated from the Roman Catholic church. Renewal 2027 is a framework for a 10-year series of events within the Mennonite World Conference (MWC) global family, commemorating Anabaptism’s role in that period of culture and religious change called the Reformation.

    “Renewal 2027 will be a celebration of a historical tradition that has now found expression in many different cultural settings around the world,” says John Roth, secretary of the MWC Faith and Life Commission and Renewal 2027 organizer. “We hope that the events will strengthen our identity by engaging conversations – especially with young people, lay church members and ecumenical friends – that reflect on what it means to be Anabaptist today in the global church, while also being in fellowship with the broader Christian church.”

    Each year, an event will take place in a different region, following the locations of executive committee and general council meetings and Assemblies. A theme for worship, singing and discussion will be chosen in conversation with global partners. Local planning committees will infuse each event with the nuances of their own culture, tradition and history. Speakers from all five regions and ecumenical guests will represent the global nature of Anabaptist belief and Christian witness in the world today.

    The first event, “Transformed by the Word: Reading the Bible in Anabaptist perspectives,” is 12 February 2017, in Augsburg, Germany, coinciding with the year and country of the start of the Reformation.

    The next year’s Renewal 2027 event, focused on the Holy Spirit, will take place in Kenya alongside the General Council meeting.

    Renewal 2027 occurs in the context of world-wide recognition of the Reformation. Ecumenical events, like Together in Hope, 31 October 2016, attended by MWC general sectary César García, celebrate fellowship between formerly divided groups like Lutheran and Catholic communions.

    Renewal 2027 commemorates the 500th anniversary of the Schleitheim Confession and the first Anabaptist mission conference (the Martyrs’ Synod in Augsburg), and celebrates the globalization of the Anabaptist-Mennonite by culminating with the 2027 MWC Assembly.

    —Mennonite World Conference release

    Renewal event schedule
    2018 – Kenya (General Council meetings)
    2019 – Latin America (Executive Committee meetings)
    2020 – Western Canada (Executive Committee meetings)
    2021 – Indonesia (Assembly 17)
     
  • Almost a year ago, a step onto a plane was the first into a whole new world of not only learning many new things, but meeting a bunch of inspiring people. In February 2016, my first year as a member of the Young Anabaptists (YABs) Committee started. A little nervous, a little apprehensive, but a whole lot excited, I stepped into the plane that would take me to Semarang, Indonesia where the Mennonite World Conference (MWC) Executive Committee, staff, regional representatives, and of course, the YABs Committee would have their annual meeting.

    In Indonesia, where I met all these people who will organize the next MWC Assembly, I encountered Anabaptists who live in a world where Christians form a minority, but still they build a church as big as a soccer arena where they can come and celebrate with thousands of people on Sunday. It was a bit overwhelming for a girl who is used to church gatherings of 30–50 people, but amazing to see.

    The MWC Young Anabaptists (YABs) Committee in 2016.
    Photo: LIFE TV (Indonesia)

    A second time I stepped into an airplane this year was to meet up with the European Mennonite national conference leaders. Again, I was a little nervous since I would be the only young person there, representing of course the YABs of Europe, but also the global family. I thought I would feel like the odd one out, but never before have I met so many adults who were so welcoming and interested in what I do. They inspire me to continue on the path I am following, to keep working in this great Anabaptist world-wide community.

    While these were the big events I’ve joined, the work of a YABs committee member is mostly through skype, email, Facebook and Instagram. During this year, I met many people online whom I would love to meet in person one day. And who knows, we might. For example, at the MERC (the Mennonite European Regional Conference) in 2018, or at the first Renewal 2027 event in Augsburg this February, or even in Indonesia at the next Assembly in 2021.

    This Renewal 2027 event, at which all the YABs committee members will participate by giving a short sermon on Matthew 28, will remember the 500th anniversary of the beginnings of the Anabaptist movement. During this day, there will not only be testimonies, but also music and singing from the international songbook and the possibility to meet Anabaptists from all over the world! We would love if you could join us in the celebrations: you can sign up here.

    A year ago, I stepped into a plane with one thing in mind: wherever I would go, the Lord would always be with me… and he brought me further into this wonderful international Anabaptist community. I can’t wait to see where he will bring me the next few years.

    Blessings, Jantine

  • MWC Global Church Sharing Fund helps build mission church in southern Tanzania

    A church building is a space to encounter God. This encounter is one of the most basic acts of drawing the kingdom of God into the heart of a community.

    When we build a church building, we set a place for God. People go there to seek God together, to pray, mourn, celebrate, ask and seek God’s blessing. God responds.

    Kanisa La Mennonite Tanzania (KMT) Eastern Diocese is driven by its vision and mission of seeing our community changed and reconciled through Jesus Christ – spiritually, physically and mentally for the glory of God. We do this through preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ that brings salvation, love, forgiveness, righteousness and peace to all people and making them disciples of Jesus Christ. We encourage them to be at peace with God, people and with creation as whole.

    In the efforts of KMT Eastern Diocese in 2010 to do church planting and reach out to the unreached, we were able to establish three congregations in an area predominantly resided by Muslims, located in the southern part of Tanzania. In Msikisi, the largest of the three mission congregations, KMT Eastern Diocese is constructing a church building.

    We construct our church building according to the foundations set by heroes of faith who built a house for the Lord: the Shunamite woman (2 Kings 4:10), Moses (Exodus 33:7–11), David (2 Samuel 6:17) and Solomon (1 Kings 5:4–5). Elijah built a sacrifice altar on which God’s fire fell (1 Kings 18:32–38).

    A building project requires a church to mobilize resources from internal and external sources. Many church buildings fail to reach to the completion stage because of budget constraints to fund the entire project. In the case of KMT’s Msikisi church construction, Mennonite World Conference (MWC) contributed project funds amounting to $10,000 and KMT Eastern Diocese contributed $15,000. The contribution from MWC’s Global Church Sharing Fund gives us assurance of completing the project to final stage. It is a great joy to partner with MWC to meet the needs of our people.

    Through this church building in Msikisi, the church will achieve four goals: reaching unreached, providing the community with a space for worshipping God and fellowshipping together, supporting the local church holistically by establishing participatory social services and strengthening the newly converted Christians by equipping them with fundamental biblical principles.

    The partnership with MWC gives KMT the assurance of working with an organization that shares our values of faith, integrity and dignity. This collaboration with MWC strengthens networking, results in sharing gifts and blessings and helps us to reach our goals in saving God’s people for his glory.

    —Bishop Steven W. Mang’ana, Kanisa La Mennonite Tanzania

             Temporary worship place for Msikisi church.

    A photo of a typical Mennonite Church building in Tanzania.
    This one is in Dar es Salaam, the third fastest growing city in Africa.

       

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  • Like the chambers of a heart, the four MWC commissions serve the global community of Anabaptist-related churches, in the areas of deacons, faith and life, peace, mission. Commissions prepare materials for consideration by the General Council, give guidance and propose resources to member churches, and facilitate MWC-related networks or fellowships working together on matters of common interest and focus. In the following, one of the commissions shares a message from their ministry focus.


    “If one member suffers, all suffer together with it; if one member is honoured, all rejoice together with it” (1 Corinthians 12:26).

    “This visit made me realize we are part of a large global family. Now we know that we are not alone!”

    This is what we heard when a delegation of the Mennonite World Conference (MWC) Deacons and Peace Commissions visited the Mennonite Brethren churches in Panama. When you live with challenges that threaten your traditional way of living, what is more important than knowing that you are not alone? Knowing that brothers and sisters are praying – even if they don’t know you personally – can be the difference between giving up or going on in hope, trusting the Lord.

    “We do not ask you to solve our problems. All we ask from you is to tell our story and to pray for us.”  

    Church members pray for a sick child 
    in Panama. Photo: Henk Stenvers.

    Being a deacon within MWC is not about giving financial aid or creating relief programs. The deacons walk with churches, listen, share and pray with churches in distress or in joy. We feel so powerless to help sometimes, but we must not underestimate the power of walking together, listening and praying.

    “The Deacons Commission must be the warm hand of the global church.” In 2009, Danisa Ndlovu, then president of MWC, spoke these words at the first meeting of the Commission in Paraguay. A hand on your shoulder, to show that others care, to feel the warmth of unity with others who share the same convictions. Even though we live in such different situations, express our faith in such different ways and have different histories, we know that we belong together in our faith. In our wish to follow Christ, we are part of one body of Christ.

    The Global Church Sharing Fund can support churches in the Global South to do projects to advance the life and mission of the church. It can be so very important for a local church to have its own place for worship or to build a school. The significance of rebuilding after destruction from a disaster or violence is beyond imagination. It is all about being a community – local and global.

    And like Paul writes to the Corinthians, the parts of the body belong together, even if they are different. They are interdependent; if one is missing, you are not complete (1 Corinthians 12:14–25).

    The global community is like the church in Pimpimsu in Ghana. We visited the small church in the evening, after it was already dark. One by one, people came to the church to welcome us. And everybody brought a light along. Every time someone came in, the church became better lit. When the church was full, it was bright in the church because of all the little lamps.

    That is what community is about. If you are not there, the church is a bit darker. Whether we are together in person at Assemblies or in spirit in prayer, we can be witnesses of the wonderful message of peace that Christ gave us. If you are not there, you are missed, because the light is less clear!

    The Deacons Commission wants to be a tool to support and strengthen that community. Join us in walking with our global Anabaptist family through the MWC Prayer Network. *

    —Henk Stenvers is secretary of the Mennonite World Conference Deacons Commission.    

                               

    *In 2016, the Deacons Commission relaunched an email-based prayer network, following the success of the prayer initiatives at Assembly 16. The Prayer Network sends out an email every two months containing four to five prayers. There may also be extra emails when an urgent call to prayer arises. The emails are available in English, Spanish or French. If you would like to share a prayer with us, please write to prayers@mwc-cmm.org.

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  • Bogotá, Colombia – Where can you find testimonies from church leaders in the Global South, perspectives on current events from global Anabaptist church leaders, and keep up with the latest resources and events in the Mennonite World Conference community? In MWC Info, a monthly newsletter that points to news and stories on our website.

    Subscribers around the world receive Info free in MWC’s official three languages – and soon more. If you’ve appreciated these stories, please consider including MWC Communications in your year-end giving. Here are a few of the ways your donation makes a difference:

    1. Stories from the global church help us to grow. When we discover the global Anabaptist family through Mennonite World Conference Communications, we become part of something larger than us. The maturity and energy of other congregations instructs and inspires us to remain faithful in following Jesus in our context. We move past an attitude of “we know better,” into one of working together and learning from each other.
    2. We can better support each other in our global family. When we pray for each other, we help bear each other’s burdens. With the MWC Prayer Network, and prayers in Info and on Facebook, we better know how to pray for brothers and sisters around the world.
    3. We hear from people from each continent: “My spiritual journey,” a testimony of the first woman ordained to the Brethren in Christ Church in southern Africa; “We need each other” a report on Northeast Asian regional representative Kyong Jung Kim’s visit with Japanese churches; “My Cry is Heard” World Fellowship Sunday worship resources prepared by our European churches; “The road to peace after the plebiscite in Colombia,” reflections on the role of churches in Colombia’s long awaited peace process by Latin American (Andean) regional representative and peacebuilding professional Pablo Stucky.
    4. You, and brothers and sisters around the world, can access all of our content and resources for free! We offer stories, resources, and the Courier magazine for free to Anabaptists, churches and church leaders around the world in English, Spanish and French. In 2016 we have begun to work on having some content also available in German, Hindi, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. We are only able to provide this free resource due to the generosity of donors and supporters.

    Consider donating to sustain this important work of virtually gathering the global family.

    Click here to donate.

    -Mennonite World Conference release

  • Leaders of Mennonite national churches in Europe held their annual meeting 28–30 October 2016, in Vienna, Austria. Mennonite World Conference was represented by Chief Events Officer Liesa Unger, Europe Regional Representative Henk Stenvers, YABs committee member Jantine Huisman, and Executive Committee members Rainer Burkart and Jean Paul Peterschmidt.
     
    Pray for the needs of the participating churches (listed below):
     
    Mennonitische Freikirche Österreich (Austria):
    • Strengthen our Mennonite identity.
    • Mennonite leaders and Mennonite youth leaders for part-time work with German skills.
    Association des églises évangéliques mennonites de France (France):
    • Unity of the church in the midst of changes in our conference.
    Arbeitsgemeinschaft Mennonitischer Brüdergemeinden in Deutschland (AMBD – Germany):
    • Strengthening of small churches.
    • Holistic ministry to refugees.
    • Incorporation of new converts from Muslim background.
    • Making disciples.
    Arbeitsgemeinschaft Mennonitischer Gemeinden in Deutschland (AMG – Germany):
    • Small congregations especially are full of fear for their future. This fear is creating demotivation.
    Verband der Evangelischen Freikirchen Mennonitischer Brüdergemeinden in Bayern (Germany):
    • Strengthen the churches.
    • Pray that we are not satisfied with the status quo but want to grow.
    Laisv?j? krikš?ioni? bažny?ia (Free Christian Church Lithuania):
    • Strengthen discipleship, develop new leaders to be more involved with inner and outside mission work.
    • We are very open to receive missionaries to work in Lithuania.

    Algemene Doopsgezinde Societeit (the Netherlands):

    • To encourage and to inspire us being a Christian every moment of the day, in every place we are.

    Associação Irmãos Menonitas de Portugal (Portugal):

    • There is a dramatic financial crisis in our conference that might affect the future of the same.

    Anabautistas, Menonitas y Hermanos en Cristo – España (Spain):

    • Growth in number of churches and membership.
    Konferenz der Mennoniten der Schweiz (Alttäufer) = Conférence Mennonite Suisse (Anabaptiste) (Switzerland):
    • Thanks for growing solidarity among the churches, especially in refugee-work/help in Switzerland and abroad.
    • Finding a youth coordinator for French part of Switzerland conference.
    • Unity in diversity: working toward a common understanding of mission.
    • Convergences: a new church is about to be born in Geneva, a joint effort of Swiss Mennonite conference and the church of St. Genis, France.
     

  • The International Community of Mennonite Brethren (ICOMB) is made up of 21 national churches in 19 countries with approximately 450,000 members. ICOMB exists to facilitate relationships and ministries to enhance the witness and discipleship of its member national churches – connecting, strengthening and expanding.

    The International Steering Committee has almost completed its planning for the mission/prayer consultation in March. All main speakers and workshops are confirmed; the stories and testimonies are selected. We must finalize Bible study presenters in December. Pray for Rudi Plett who has the challenging task to find translators for several languages for each session; for Esther Corbett who will develop the prayer program; for Andy Owen who will set up the worship music.

    —David Wiebe, executive director, ICOMB