Difference between revisions of "Blumenort Mennonite Church (Gretna, Manitoba, Canada)"

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The Blumenort Mennonite congregation near Rosetown (previously known as Rosenort), [[Manitoba (Canada)|Manitoba]] traces its origins to the Mennonites who came to Manitoba in the 1920s. These immigrants settled in villages on the [[West Reserve (Manitoba, Canada)|Mennonite West Reserve]] filling the vacant farms the [[Reinland Mennonite Church (Manitoba)|Reinländer Mennonite Church]] members left when they immigrated to [[Mexico|Mexico]]. Under the leadership of Jacob J. Klassen, these Russian Mennonites, began meeting in homes for worship services in September of 1923. In 1926 the [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Reinland, Manitoba, Canada)|Blumenort Mennonite Church]], at Reinland, was officially formed and operated as a separate congregation until September 1968 when they joined the Rosenort (Rosetown) congregation.
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[[File:Blumenort Mennonite Church (Rosetown, MB).jpg|400px|thumb|right|''Blumenort Mennonite Church<br>Photo: Google street view.'']]
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The Blumenort Mennonite Church is located a little east of Gretna at Rosetown (known as Rosenort until 1976), [[Manitoba (Canada)|Manitoba]]. It traces its origins to the Mennonites who came to Manitoba in the 1920s from the Soviet Union. These immigrants settled in villages on the [[West Reserve (Manitoba, Canada)|Mennonite West Reserve]] filling the vacant farms the [[Reinlander Mennoniten Gemeinde (Manitoba)|Reinländer Mennonite Church]] members left when they immigrated to [[Mexico|Mexico]]. Under the leadership of Jacob J. Klassen, these Russian Mennonites, began meeting in homes for worship services in September of 1923. In 1926 the [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Reinland, Manitoba, Canada)|Blumenort Mennonite Church at Reinland]] was officially formed, and operated as a separate congregation until September 1968, when they joined the [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Rosenort West, Manitoba, Canada)|Rosenort congregation]]. During the early years the Blumenort church of Manitoba (<em>[[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Manitoba, Canada)|Blumenorter Mennoniten Gemeinde]]</em>) had 10 centers of worship. These included [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Blumenfeld, Manitoba, Canada)|Blumenfeld]], Neuhorst, Rosenort, Schoenwiese, [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Gnadenthal, Manitoba, Canada)|Gnadenthal]], [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Reinland, Manitoba, Canada)|Reinland]], Hochfeld, Osterwick, [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Chortitz, Manitoba, Canada)|Chortitz]] and [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Eichenfeld, Manitoba, Canada)|Eichenfeld]]. Most of these dissolved gradually and the church was centralized at one meeting place in 1958.  
  
The church is located on Government Road Allowance West. In 1950 there were 337 members; in 1965, 393; in 1975, 262; in 1985, 247; in 1995, 228; in 2000, 214; in 2009, 221. The congregation has been affiliated with the [[Mennonite Church Manitoba|Conference of Mennonites in Manitoba]], [[Conference of Mennonites in Canada|Conference of Mennonites in Canada]] / [[Mennonite Church Canada|Mennonite Church Canada]] (1926-) and [[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)|General Conference Mennonite Church]] (1927-1999). The language of worship is English and German.
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Johann P. Bueckert was the elder from 1928 until 1954 followed by [[Schaefer, Paul J. (1899-1969)|Paul J. Schaefer]] 1954-1969. Other ministers who were called to minister in the Blumenort Mennonite Church include: A. A. Teichroeb 1970-1974, C. C Thiessen 1975-1982, Peter D. Zacharias 1983-2006, and Rudy Franz, 2009-2020.
  
Johann P. Bueckert was the elder from 1928 until 1954 followed by [[Schaefer, Paul J. (1899-1969)|Paul J. Schaefer]] 1954-1969. Other ministers who were called to minister in the Blumenort Mennonite Church include: A. A. Teichroeb 1970-1974, C. C Thiessen 1975-1982, and Peter D. Zacharias 1983-2006). The pastor in 2009 was Rudy Franz.
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In 1950 there were 337 members; in 1965, 393; in 1975, 262; in 1985, 247; in 1995, 228; in 2000, 214; in 2009, 221.
 
 
During the early years the Blumenort church had 10 centers of worship. Most of these dissolved gradually and the church was centralized at one meeting place in 1958.
 
  
 
In March 2017 the congregation voted to leave [[Mennonite Church Manitoba]] and [[Mennonite Church Canada]]. The decision was primarily a response to a resolution passed in July 2016 by Mennonite Church Canada related to same-sex matters.
 
In March 2017 the congregation voted to leave [[Mennonite Church Manitoba]] and [[Mennonite Church Canada]]. The decision was primarily a response to a resolution passed in July 2016 by Mennonite Church Canada related to same-sex matters.
  
See also [[Blumenort Mennonite Church (Manitoba, Canada)|Blumenort Mennonite Church (Manitoba, Canada)]]
 
 
= Bibliography =
 
= Bibliography =
 
''Canadian Mennonite'' (24 January 1958): 8.
 
''Canadian Mennonite'' (24 January 1958): 8.
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Mennonite Heritage Centre, Winnipeg, MB: [http://www.mennonitechurch.ca/programs/archives/ Mennonite Heritage Centre].
 
Mennonite Heritage Centre, Winnipeg, MB: [http://www.mennonitechurch.ca/programs/archives/ Mennonite Heritage Centre].
 
= Additional Information =
 
= Additional Information =
'''Address:''' Box 457, Gretna, Manitoba
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'''Physical location:''' 12159 Rd 3 N W, Gretna, Manitoba <br>
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[Co-ordinates 49.045278, -97.750278 (49° 02' 43" N 97° 45' 01" W)]
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'''Postal Address:''' Box 457, Gretna, Manitoba R0G 0V0
  
 
'''Phone:''' 204-327-5208
 
'''Phone:''' 204-327-5208
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'''Website:''' http://blumenortchurch.com/
  
 
'''Denominational Affiliation''':
 
'''Denominational Affiliation''':
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[http://www.mennochurch.mb.ca/ Mennonite Church Manitoba] (Until 2017)
 
[http://www.mennochurch.mb.ca/ Mennonite Church Manitoba] (Until 2017)
  
[http://www.mennonitechurch.ca/ Mennonite Church Canada] (Until 2017)
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[http://www.mennonitechurch.ca/ Mennonite Church Canada] (1926-2017)
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[[General Conference Mennonite Church (GCM)|General Conference Mennonite Church]] (1927-1999)
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=July 2017|a1_last=Epp|a1_first=Marlene|a2_last= |a2_first= }}
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=July 2017|a1_last=Epp|a1_first=Marlene|a2_last= |a2_first= }}
 
[[Category:Churches]]
 
[[Category:Churches]]

Latest revision as of 23:06, 2 December 2020

Blumenort Mennonite Church
Photo: Google street view.

The Blumenort Mennonite Church is located a little east of Gretna at Rosetown (known as Rosenort until 1976), Manitoba. It traces its origins to the Mennonites who came to Manitoba in the 1920s from the Soviet Union. These immigrants settled in villages on the Mennonite West Reserve filling the vacant farms the Reinländer Mennonite Church members left when they immigrated to Mexico. Under the leadership of Jacob J. Klassen, these Russian Mennonites, began meeting in homes for worship services in September of 1923. In 1926 the Blumenort Mennonite Church at Reinland was officially formed, and operated as a separate congregation until September 1968, when they joined the Rosenort congregation. During the early years the Blumenort church of Manitoba (Blumenorter Mennoniten Gemeinde) had 10 centers of worship. These included Blumenfeld, Neuhorst, Rosenort, Schoenwiese, Gnadenthal, Reinland, Hochfeld, Osterwick, Chortitz and Eichenfeld. Most of these dissolved gradually and the church was centralized at one meeting place in 1958.

Johann P. Bueckert was the elder from 1928 until 1954 followed by Paul J. Schaefer 1954-1969. Other ministers who were called to minister in the Blumenort Mennonite Church include: A. A. Teichroeb 1970-1974, C. C Thiessen 1975-1982, Peter D. Zacharias 1983-2006, and Rudy Franz, 2009-2020.

In 1950 there were 337 members; in 1965, 393; in 1975, 262; in 1985, 247; in 1995, 228; in 2000, 214; in 2009, 221.

In March 2017 the congregation voted to leave Mennonite Church Manitoba and Mennonite Church Canada. The decision was primarily a response to a resolution passed in July 2016 by Mennonite Church Canada related to same-sex matters.

Bibliography

Canadian Mennonite (24 January 1958): 8.

Mennonite Reporter (15 May 1978): 11; (15 June 1992): B1.

Ens, Adolf. "A Contribution to the History of the Blumenort Mennonite Church, Gretna, Manitoba." Research paper, Mennonite Biblical Seminary, 1962, 26 pp. Mennonite Heritage Centre.

"Two More Manitoba Churches Leave MC Canada." Canadian Mennonite (3 July 2017): 21, no. 14: 16.

Zacharias, Peter D. Footprints of a Pilgrim People: Story of the Blumenort Mennonite Church. Gretna: Blumenort Mennonite Church, 1985, 291 pp.

Archival Records

Mennonite Heritage Centre, Winnipeg, MB: Mennonite Heritage Centre.

Additional Information

Physical location: 12159 Rd 3 N W, Gretna, Manitoba
[Co-ordinates 49.045278, -97.750278 (49° 02' 43" N 97° 45' 01" W)]

Postal Address: Box 457, Gretna, Manitoba R0G 0V0

Phone: 204-327-5208

Website: http://blumenortchurch.com/

Denominational Affiliation:

Mennonite Church Manitoba (Until 2017)

Mennonite Church Canada (1926-2017)

General Conference Mennonite Church (1927-1999)


Author(s) Marlene Epp
Date Published July 2017

Cite This Article

MLA style

Epp, Marlene. "Blumenort Mennonite Church (Gretna, Manitoba, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. July 2017. Web. 18 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Blumenort_Mennonite_Church_(Gretna,_Manitoba,_Canada)&oldid=169520.

APA style

Epp, Marlene. (July 2017). Blumenort Mennonite Church (Gretna, Manitoba, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 18 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Blumenort_Mennonite_Church_(Gretna,_Manitoba,_Canada)&oldid=169520.




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