My husband & I had no religious background, other than like hearing about Jesus on Christmas or just very basic things. I was heavily led into the occult by my grandpa, whose farm we grew up on & it turned out I had a knack for it from a young age. I still have to be careful sometimes.Verity wrote: ↑Tue Feb 06, 2024 11:31 am I'd like to hear your personal experiences.
If you are from non-anabaptist background, what is it that drew you to the anabaptist?
If you came but never joined, what held you back?
If you joined but later left, what was the main reason why?
If you are looking on with no interest in joining, what is it that intrigues you?
What drew me to anabaptism, is when I became a Christian (by reading a Gideons pocket Bible), I soon got a regular big Bible… and just saw anabaptism in it, without having a clue there was such a word. I just read women should cover their heads, be modest, and we shouldn’t kill, we should live holy lives, marriage for life in most cases, etc.
But every church we went to told us that was extreme & wrong, out-dated interpretations, ‘only cultural’ or whatever.
So naturally (even if it was ten years later) when we learned the word ‘anabaptist’ by someone giving a copy of “The Kingdom that Turned the World Upside Down” by David Bercot, we were amazed that these people existed today… and went by “Mennonite” or “Charity” as far as we understood at the time.
We not only ‘came’ but we moved ~3,000 miles to Lancaster County. We wanted the real deal, and thought that’s where we’d find it, for us & our children.
After over ten in years in PA now, we are all plain anabaptist (my husband & myself, our adult married children, & our youth and younger ones at home). But only our oldest children are church members anywhere, not my husband or myself.
I have been so disillusioned by what I’ve seen, I don’t even know where to start. This isn’t to knock any plain or anabaptist church… It’s just that we never found a place to stay at. Either the nice little home fellowship fell apart, or the church had huge issues at brothers meetings, or the church was more deeply concerned with enforcing rules than anything spiritual, or something.
Right now, I’m attending a Keystone-like church & our family also hangs out with a lot of OO Brethren (whose church didn’t work out for us for personal reasons), but my husband & I aren’t members anywhere, by choice.
We had been members in good standing at two legitimate conservative plain churches, but withdrew our memberships both times.
I know, maybe it’s us… but I hope I’m going to be at my Keystone-like church for a long, long time. I’m in no rush to join though.
Having had some hard experiences, I really just need a season to reconnect with God, before officially joining somewhere.