Difference between revisions of "Old Order Mennonite Church in Ontario"

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Revision as of 18:38, 2 May 2022

Established in 1889, the Old Order Mennonite Church in Ontario was a division from the (Old) Mennonite Church (now Mennonite Church Canada). Throughout the mid-1800s, several of the more traditional Mennonites in Waterloo County (in southwestern Ontario) felt increasingly uncomfortable with changes in the church, including revival meetings, the addition of Sunday Schools, and prayer and other services in English.

As of 2012, the Church consisted of 3,366 members in 30 congregations (not including youth under 17).

History

Largest of the Old Order Mennonite groups in Canada, the Old Order Mennonite Church in Ontario has weathered technological change, divisions, and challenges from within and without over the 130 plus years of its existence. The Old Order Mennonites have their roots in an earlier division among the Mennonites in Indiana in the early 1870s. At that time, Bishop Jacob Wisler took a stand for traditional Anabaptist beliefs and practices during changing times. Wisler was excommunicated for his stand, and the Wisler Old Order movement was born. With close ties across the border, Ontario Mennonites were bound to be influenced.

In Waterloo County, Ontario, it was Bishop Abraham Martin of Woolwich who led the traditionalists into a schism from the Mennonite Conference of Ontario. Martin reacted to the many changes in his Conference in that time period. Largely influenced by Methodist revivalism, Mennonites were being heavily influenced to make changes in the ways they worshiped, made converts, and even educated their children, especially in urban areas. Indeed, it is no accident that the Old Order Mennonites we know today are entirely rural, mainly living on farms, with clothing styles from days gone by, and driving horse and buggy. This was and is intentional on their part.

In its first century, the "Old Orders" were largely centered in Waterloo County, Ontario. They expanded into the Mount Forest area of Wellington County in the late 1960s, and Bruce County (Kinloss) in the 1990s. Presently (2022), there are also colonies in Paisley, Chesley, Matheson, and Massey, in Ontario, and have expanded into the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Prince Edward Island.

Meetinghouses

In Alphabetical Order (As of 2022):

  • Cedarview
  • Clover Valley
  • Conestoga
  • Country Vale
  • Creekbank
  • Farewell
  • Hillside
  • Klearview
  • Langside
  • Linwood
  • Mapleton
  • Martindale
  • Martinfield
  • Meadow Grove
  • Northbend
  • North Woolwich
  • Olivet
  • Riverdale
  • Russel Creek
  • Spring Creek
  • Springfield
  • Taylor
  • Valleyview
  • Weaverland
  • Westdale
  • White Pines
  • Winterbourne

Ministry

As of 2022, there are 9 Bishops, 44 Ministers ("Preachers"), and 44 Deacons in the Old Order Mennonite Church.

Bishops, in order of ordination, are (According to 'Kalender fur die Bersammlungen der Mennoniten-Gemeinden in Kanada' (2022)):

  • Ian M. Shantz, 1986 (Waterloo Region)
  • Elam F. Weber, 1992 (Mount Forest, Wellington County)
  • Onias Frey, 2002 (Waterloo Region)
  • Oscar M. Martin, 2007 (Mount Forest)
  • Peter Brubacher, 2010 (Waterloo Region)
  • Lloyd Shantz, 2013 (Chesley, Bruce County)
  • John Weber, 2015 (Massey, Sudbury District)
  • Cleason Gingrich, 2016 (Lindsay, Kawartha Lakes)
  • Eli Bowman, 2017 (Holyrood, Huron-Kinloss, Bruce County)

See Also

Moderate Old Order Mennonite Groups
Old Order Mennonite Groups in Ontario
S. S. G. Edwards