Beachy Amish Mennonite Fellowships, Belize
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Beachy Amish Mennonite Fellowships, Belize | |
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175 |
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Inmediatamente después de la destrucción causada por el huracán Hattie en 1961, Amish Mennonite Aid, una agencia de ayuda, empezó a trabajar en reconstrucción en Belize y organizó la primera congregación de menonitas Beachy Amish en 1962. Este grupo tiene seis congregaciones con alrededor de 175 miembros. El grupo tiene congregaciones relacionadas en Canadá, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Nicaragua, y los Estados Unidos.[1]
Stories
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History
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Origins
The Beachy Amish Mennonites came to Belize because of Hurricane Hattie in 1961.[2]. Many Amish Mennonite Aid workers went to Belize to help the hurricanes victims. "Amish Mennonite Aid is the mission organization of the Beachy Amish Mennonites and Belize was one of the first countries the organization went to for mission work[3]." After AMA had done there work with helping the hurricane victims the Belizean people asked them to stay. According to Roessingh,"This way the initial Beachy Amish Mennonite response to the cleanup and assistance of the homeless in Belize led to continued involvement in rebuilding and assisting the people of Belize spiritually[4]." The Beachy Amish Mennonite Fellowships in belize are still continuing to grow and create a mixture of American Beachy Mennonites and Belizean converts.
Contemporary
"In Homestead Acres, Esperanza village, Belize a young married couple, an Amer- ican man and a Belizean woman sit on the porch of their house built by Amer- ican hands in Belizean style (built on wooden poles). The man still wears his ‘work clothes’, a dark shirt and jeans. His wife wears a long, covering pink dress with puff sleeves, and a white veil. They are relaxing now and enjoying the time together, after a hard day of work. The man has been working at the chicken business next to the house all day and his wife had her ‘washing day’ and she also finished her rice and beans for the upcoming unit meeting. They have been looking forward to this moment and enjoy every minute of it. On the volleyball field below, the youths have started a game of volleyball. They gathered an hour ago at the church, for singing English and Spanish hymns, to listen to devotions of a Belizean youth, and to pray in their separate prayer groups. Now they are on the volleyball field and one of the boys is telling the girls to stand on one side of the field, while the boys stand on the other side, so he can give everybody their team number. After a short while, there are teams on each side of the net and the boys give every team member a position in the field and start the game. The couple listens to the encouragement of the young people: ‘nice try’, ‘good hit’. They remember the days when they used to play volleyball with their youth group and think about the day when their child will play the same game with the church people his age. The sound of the porch fence makes the young couple look in that direction. A family is climbing the stairs, an American missionary family. They run the mission post next to the chicken busi- ness. The couple saw the family eat on their little porch with their ten children a few hours ago. The woman carries her youngest child, while her other nine chil- dren are already downstairs to play and watch the volleyball game. The Belizean and American women sit together and talk about working on a quilt tomorrow for a poor family at the sowing fellowship of church women the next morning. The men wander off together to discuss the situation of a young couple that wants to join the church." [5].
This is what an average day might be like for someone who is part of the Beachy Amish living in belize. A person who is part of the Beachy Amish has a very traditional life. The women can only wear plain dresses with little to no ornaments and must also be wearing a white head covering at all times, which is used as a praying veil.[6] The Beachy Amish Mennonite men wear trousers and a shirt. The Beachy Amish of Belize live in modern houses and are allowed to use electricity and drive cars but most still don't. The Beachy Amish Mennonites do not feel they have to have a hard time on earth to deserve a place in heaven but they do believe that they have to keep away from the seductions of the world..[7]
Personas importantes en la vida de la iglesia
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Citas
- ↑ Donald B. Kraybill, Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010), 227. Translation by Daniel Moya.
- ↑ roessingh, Carel Henning. "7.2 Homestead Acres." Between Horse & Buggy and Four-wheel Drive: Change and Diversity among Mennonite Settlements in Belize, Central America. Amsterdam: VU Univ., 2009. 176. Print.
- ↑ Roessingh, Carel Henning. "7.2 Homestead Acres." Between Horse & Buggy and Four-wheel Drive: Change and Diversity among Mennonite Settlements in Belize, Central America. Amsterdam: VU Univ., 2009. 176. Print.
- ↑ roessingh, Carel Henning. "7.2 Homestead Acres." Between Horse & Buggy and Four-wheel Drive: Change and Diversity among Mennonite Settlements in Belize, Central America. Amsterdam: VU Univ., 2009. 176. Print.
- ↑ roessingh, Carel Henning. "7.2 Homestead Acres." Between Horse & Buggy and Four-wheel Drive: Change and Diversity among Mennonite Settlements in Belize, Central America. Amsterdam: VU Univ., 2009. 171-72. Print.
- ↑ oessingh, Carel Henning. "7.2 Homestead Acres." Between Horse & Buggy and Four-wheel Drive: Change and Diversity among Mennonite Settlements in Belize, Central America. Amsterdam: VU Univ., 2009. 171-73. Print.
- ↑ oessingh, Carel Henning. "7.2 Homestead Acres." Between Horse & Buggy and Four-wheel Drive: Change and Diversity among Mennonite Settlements in Belize, Central America. Amsterdam: VU Univ., 2009. 171-72. Print.