Martin, Abraham W. (1834-1902)
Abraham Weber Martin: bishop and farmer; b. 27 April 1834
near St. Jacobs in Waterloo County, Ontario to John and Anna (Weber) Martin. He
was the second son and third child in a family of three sons and nine daughters.
On 17 March 1857 he married Elizabeth Bauman (1838-1902). Soon after their
marriage they took possession of the farm on which Abraham was born and they
lived there the rest of their lives. Abraham and Anna had three sons and seven
daughters. Abraham died 8 February 1902. Elizabeth died 30 April of the same
year.
Little is known of Abraham Martin's education, although it was certainly limited
to the primary schools of the day. He was said to be of "medium height, well
proportioned and rather fleshy," with a "pleasing countenance" and an easy and
dignified bearing.
On 1 September 1861 Joseph Hagey ordained Abraham Martin
as the minister for the congregations in the Woolwich Township area north of the
village of Waterloo. On 17 September 1867 Hagey ordained Martin as the bishop
for these congregations—one of three bishops in the Waterloo County Mennonite
community.
Abraham Martin can be considered the father of the Old Order Mennonite movement
in Ontario. He corresponded frequently with leaders
of the earlier conservative movement in the United States, and he took traditional
positions on most of the contentious issues. In the 1870s he called a meeting
of ministers and deacons at his home to discuss disputed issues within the Mennonite
Conference of Ontario.
The conservatives indicated that they would drop their objections to protracted
evening meetings and English-language preaching only if Sunday schools were
not continued in the conference. Their objections to Sunday schools included
the following: 1) Sunday schools promoted associations with other churches
that were not nonresistant; 2) teaching was often done from books or materials
other than the Bible, and 3) Sunday schools usurped
the parental role of teaching their children. This effort at reconciliation
ceased, and conservative opposition on all these issues continued. Evening
meetings and English preaching also encouraged relationships beyond the Mennonite
community, and the emerging Old Order group ultimately rejected these innovations
as well.
In 1885 preachers Noah Stauffer and Solomon Gehmen
held evening meetings in Woolwich Township, the geographic area in which Abraham
Martin was bishop. Thirty persons requested baptism because of their experience
in the meetings, but Martin refused to give them instruction or to baptize them
because of the nature of these meetings. Bishop Elias Weber
later baptized the group, but this quickly led to a more formal schism in 1889
when the two factions within the Mennonite Conference of Ontario held separate
annual meetings with their ordained leaders.
Despite his conservative theology, Martin was not as rigid as other conservative
leaders. In 1885 he decried the "inflexible" discipline of the
Stauffer Mennonites in Pennsylvania.
As bishop of the largest group of Old Order Mennonites in Ontario, Abraham
Martin had enormous influence on the first years of the group's development. He
was not a flamboyant, charismatic leader, but he represented the theological
views of a high percentage of those in congregations for which he was
responsible.
Bibliography
Burkholder, L. J. A Brief History of the Mennonites in Ontario.
Kitchener, ON: Mennonite Conference of Ontario, 1935: 149, 197ff.
Eby, Ezra E. A Biographical History of Early Settlers and Their
Descendants in Waterloo Township, with additional information by Eldon D.
Weber. Kitchener, ON: E.D. Weber, 1971: 226, S-27.
Horst, Isaac R. Close Ups of the Great Awakening. Mt. Forest, ON: I.R.
Horst, 1985: 128-129, 147-148, 173 ff.
Additional Information
©1996-2009 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.
MLA style: Steiner, Sam. "Martin, Abraham W. (1834-1902)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. July 2002. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 21 November 2009 <http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/M37842.html>
APA style: Steiner, Sam. (July 2002). "Martin, Abraham W. (1834-1902)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 21 November 2009 <http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/M37842.html>
