Mennonite Quaintness
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JohnL
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
This thread has been educational for this old Free Willer. I never thought of y’all as quaint. I think of Amish as old school lifestyle. Mennonites I didn't know much about but I’m learning. Any group that can quote Star Wars or Star Trek really doesn’t qualify as “quaint” in my brain.
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Free Will Baptist <-> Anabaptist
”Try hard not to offend. Try harder not to be offended.” Robert Martz
”Try hard not to offend. Try harder not to be offended.” Robert Martz
Re: Mennonite Quaintness
Wife: To be fair, most of them can’t, and they prefer it that way. Then there’s people like us who were Star Trek junkies before going to the Mennonites. I remember switching to Star Trek and other sci-fi books/media when I decided to get away from magic stuff but I actually drew away from that and stargate when I saw a lot of stuff mocking religion. Hubby and I still quote things like that all the time out of habit, as well as breaking into the occasional VeggieTales song (even though I don’t overly like VeggieTales, they do have some funny songs). A lot of sci-fi was funny/interesting; it was just not something that actually edified, and the anti-religion themes bothered me a lot.JohnL wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 4:05 pm This thread has been educational for this old Free Willer. I never thought of y’all as quaint. I think of Amish as old school lifestyle. Mennonites I didn't know much about but I’m learning. Any group that can quote Star Wars or Star Trek really doesn’t qualify as “quaint” in my brain.
Just throwing this out there for anyone reading this. Mennonet is not a good sample survey of Mennonites, especially on the conservative end. Many do not engage in online forums/social media, and the argumentative nature of these kind of forums turns a lot of them off. Also, a vast majority have never even heard of it.
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
“The Anabaptist View of the Church” by Jeff Jarmon. I got it from an EPMC church member.Ernie wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 10:11 amWhere can I read this pamphlet?Anthony wrote: ↑Sun Mar 15, 2026 8:42 am I was re-reading a pamphlet from a conservative mennonite preacher with a NMB and he referred to the world’s perception of mennonites as “quaint, cute, rural, and happy in our misery”. Ive always had the same impression but have never seen mennonites talk about themselves like this.
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
I think the “misery” he was talking about was low status/income jobs in the eyes of the world (Plumbing, Roofing, Small farm), lack of technology, living in underdeveloped rural areas. Strict rules to follow, etc. This is mainly talking about conservative/old order mennonites.Ernie wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 10:13 amWhat all do you and the world include in this word "misery"?Anthony wrote: ↑Sun Mar 15, 2026 8:42 am I was re-reading a pamphlet from a conservative mennonite preacher with a NMB and he referred to the world’s perception of mennonites as “quaint, cute, rural, and happy in our misery”. Ive always had the same impression but have never seen mennonites talk about themselves like this.
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Judas Maccabeus
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
I think I know the one he is talking about. It is no longer in our church library. I think it was "Come and Stay." That is from the deep recesses of my memory.Ernie wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 10:11 amWhere can I read this pamphlet?Anthony wrote: ↑Sun Mar 15, 2026 8:42 am I was re-reading a pamphlet from a conservative mennonite preacher with a NMB and he referred to the world’s perception of mennonites as “quaint, cute, rural, and happy in our misery”. Ive always had the same impression but have never seen mennonites talk about themselves like this.
In my estimation, it presented barriers that were not actually there, and to see things as "slights" that were never intended as such.
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Judas Maccabeus
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
We do not think of ourselves as such. We have simply rejected the eternal dammnation of what is now routine middle class America.JohnL wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 4:05 pm This thread has been educational for this old Free Willer. I never thought of y’all as quaint. I think of Amish as old school lifestyle. Mennonites I didn't know much about but I’m learning. Any group that can quote Star Wars or Star Trek really doesn’t qualify as “quaint” in my brain.
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Judas Maccabeus
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
So much of what passes for "christianity" in the evangelical world I left is words without any impact on a person's life.JohnH wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 1:05 pmIt could be that "faith without works is dead", and that the evidence of our doctrines is indeed the fruits people see. It does seem reasonable for people to be more impressed by the evidence of faith versus empty words.ohio jones wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 12:52 pm It's lost to history so I can't quote it exactly, but Wayne in Maine had a post years ago about wishing that Anabaptists could be appreciated for our theology. Instead, when outsiders look at us, all they think of is "pies cooling on the windowsill."
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Judas Maccabeus
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
But jobs that will not be replaced by AI.Anthony wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 9:19 pmI think the “misery” he was talking about was low status/income jobs in the eyes of the world (Plumbing, Roofing, Small farm), lack of technology, living in underdeveloped rural areas. Strict rules to follow, etc. This is mainly talking about conservative/old order mennonites.Ernie wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 10:13 amWhat all do you and the world include in this word "misery"?Anthony wrote: ↑Sun Mar 15, 2026 8:42 am I was re-reading a pamphlet from a conservative mennonite preacher with a NMB and he referred to the world’s perception of mennonites as “quaint, cute, rural, and happy in our misery”. Ive always had the same impression but have never seen mennonites talk about themselves like this.
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Judas Maccabeus
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
I can't seem to find this at all. Maybe the Eastern Bookstore in Epthrta?Anthony wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 9:16 pm“The Anabaptist View of the Church” by Jeff Jarmon. I got it from an EPMC church member.Ernie wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 10:11 amWhere can I read this pamphlet?Anthony wrote: ↑Sun Mar 15, 2026 8:42 am I was re-reading a pamphlet from a conservative mennonite preacher with a NMB and he referred to the world’s perception of mennonites as “quaint, cute, rural, and happy in our misery”. Ive always had the same impression but have never seen mennonites talk about themselves like this.
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Re: Mennonite Quaintness
I think the “pies cooling on the windowsill” flows from anabaptist theology naturally like JohnL mentioned earlier in the thread. Anabaptism doesnt offer much in the way of systematic theology, its a (in my eyes) more practical, lived out experience of being a christian.ohio jones wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 12:52 pmIt's lost to history so I can't quote it exactly, but Wayne in Maine had a post years ago about wishing that Anabaptists could be appreciated for our theology. Instead, when outsiders look at us, all they think of is "pies cooling on the windowsill."Valerie wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 12:46 pmHonestly I think we can all learn from each other “something”. I’ve said before our orthodox priest friend said they all have a piece of the pie. (denominations)JohnH wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 9:50 am Something interesting to me is evangelical sort of Christians who really "admire" the Amish & Mennonites, yet think it would somehow be an improvement if they adopted evangelical (or Catholic, or Orthodox, or whatever) doctrines, failing to see that Mennonite & Amish life flows out of their devotion to following the doctrines they find in the scriptures.
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