Mennonite
See also Amish page.
Beliefs
"Mennonite Brethren have their roots in the Anabaptist-Mennonite movement of sixteenth century Europe. Anabaptists regarded their confessional statements simply as a public testimony of what they believed, based on the Word of God. Confessions are used as an outline for instruction, church polity and discipline." See site for various versions of the Confession of Faith and other issues of theology as well as liturgical readings.
- http://www.anabaptists.org; Annabaptist Mennonite homepage.
- http://www.cmcrosedale.org; Conservative Mennonite Conference homepage.
- http://www.mennolink.org; MennoLink online.
- http://www.mennonites.org; Mennonite Church homepage.
- http://southwind.net/gcmc; General Conference Mennonite Church homepage.
- Mennonite Historical Library of Goshen (Ind.) College.
- Menno-Hof Mennonite-Amish Visitors Center, Shipshewana, Ind.; 219:768-4117.
Canada
- Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches, 3-169 Riverton Avenue, Winnipeg, MB CANADA R2L 2E5; 204:669-6575, 204:654-1865 (fax).
Individual congregation sites
- Forest Grove Community Church, 502 Webster Street, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 3P9; 306:933-2266, 306:249-4464, e-mail.
(created 2000)
SITE and LINKS UNDER (perpetual) CONSTRUCTION
(last updated 9 July 2002)