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Partnership fruit: Mission and renewal
by Lynda Hollinger-Janzen
CDuring a missions rally sermon in October
2007, Sergio Flores had the entire congregation
stand up and walk over to the
south windows of the Strawberry Lake
Mennonite Church near Ogema, Minn.
He asked what they saw.
“It was the dark shadows of an autumn graveyard.
He bluntly told us that there lay some of God’s
best potential—the books not written, the prayers not
given, the cities not built, the businesses not developed,
the songs not sung,” reported Marty Wenger,
chairperson of North Central Mennonite Conference’s
Mission and Service Commission, in the NCC
Bulletin.
The missions rally was the grand finale of a two week
visit by five Argentine Mennonites tending the
sprouts of a partnership with the conference.
The seeds were sown two years before during the
2005 missions rally by Mennonite Mission Network’s
partnership coach, Dean Heisey, and Juan Sieber,
an Argentine missionary working with Illinois congregations.
These seeds fell into the fertile soil of a
conference-wide renewal process.
Heisey and Sieber brought the story of
PROMINOA (the mission program of a group of
Mennonite churches in Buenos Aires, Argentina)
to the attention of the North Central Conference.
Encouraged by other partnerships between Argentine
mission efforts and groups of churches in the United
States that were bearing fruit on both continents,
PROMINOA had been searching for an American
mission partner for years.
NCC selected the leader of their renewal team,
Jesse Swiers, and his wife, Rhonda, to further
explore the viability of a partnership by visiting the
PROMINOA churches and their mission outreach
locations in February 2007. The Swiers were joined
by Delmar and Tammy Yoder, the pastoral couple of
the Strawberry Lake congregation.
Of that visit, Rhonda Swiers said, “It was exciting
to see how passionate the Argentine church leaders
are about worship and mission, and how much energy
they put into outreach. Our congregations have so
much to learn from them and, I hope, vice versa.”
Following their visit to Argentina, the Swiers
traveled to all 11 NCC congregations telling about
what they had seen and heard. Then, in October,
the Argentine delegation of which Sergio Flores was
a member visited most of the NCC congregations,
bringing with them a spiritual infusion.
“I just loved the freedom of the Spirit in which the
vibrancy of Christ’s love was so readily shared and
received,” Wenger said.
The partnership became official in June 2008.
“This experience has been a beautiful example of
how relating church-to-church across cultures with
a focus on mission and renewal can have mutual
benefi ts,” said Linda Shelly, Mennonite Mission
Network’s director for Latin America. “We see how
the Argentine focus on mission has already impacted
NCC in its search for renewal and a more missional
vision. We look forward to next steps in this growing
relationship.”
Heisey emphasizes that in today’s era of mission
networking, the impetus for a partnership can come
from anywhere. In this case, the vision originated with
one of Mennonite Mission Network’s global partners.
“While many small, rural congregations are dealing
with the pain of closing their doors, NCC wants
to reverse this process and is looking for renewal and
is brimming with energy for mission,” Heisey said.
“God is doing powerful things in this, the smallest,
conference of Mennonite Church USA.”During a missions rally sermon in October
2007, Sergio Flores had the entire congregation
stand up and walk over to the
south windows of the Strawberry Lake
Mennonite Church near Ogema, Minn.
He asked what they saw.
“It was the dark shadows of an autumn graveyard.
He bluntly told us that there lay some of God’s
best potential—the books not written, the prayers not
given, the cities not built, the businesses not developed,
the songs not sung,” reported Marty Wenger,
chairperson of North Central Mennonite Conference’s
Mission and Service Commission, in the NCC
Bulletin.
The missions rally was the grand finale of a two week
visit by five Argentine Mennonites tending the
sprouts of a partnership with the conference.
The seeds were sown two years before during the
2005 missions rally by Mennonite Mission Network’s
partnership coach, Dean Heisey, and Juan Sieber,
an Argentine missionary working with Illinois congregations.
These seeds fell into the fertile soil of a
conference-wide renewal process.
Heisey and Sieber brought the story of
PROMINOA (the mission program of a group of
Mennonite churches in Buenos Aires, Argentina)
to the attention of the North Central Conference.
Encouraged by other partnerships between Argentine
mission efforts and groups of churches in the United
States that were bearing fruit on both continents,
PROMINOA had been searching for an American
mission partner for years.
NCC selected the leader of their renewal team,
Jesse Swiers, and his wife, Rhonda, to further
explore the viability of a partnership by visiting the
PROMINOA churches and their mission outreach
locations in February 2007. The Swiers were joined
by Delmar and Tammy Yoder, the pastoral couple of
the Strawberry Lake congregation.
Of that visit, Rhonda Swiers said, “It was exciting
to see how passionate the Argentine church leaders
are about worship and mission, and how much energy
they put into outreach. Our congregations have so
much to learn from them and, I hope, vice versa.”
Following their visit to Argentina, the Swiers
traveled to all 11 NCC congregations telling about
what they had seen and heard. Then, in October,
the Argentine delegation of which Sergio Flores was
a member visited most of the NCC congregations,
bringing with them a spiritual infusion.
“I just loved the freedom of the Spirit in which the
vibrancy of Christ’s love was so readily shared and
received,” Wenger said.
The partnership became official in June 2008.
“This experience has been a beautiful example of
how relating church-to-church across cultures with
a focus on mission and renewal can have mutual
benefi ts,” said Linda Shelly, Mennonite Mission
Network’s director for Latin America. “We see how
the Argentine focus on mission has already impacted
NCC in its search for renewal and a more missional
vision. We look forward to next steps in this growing
relationship.”
Heisey emphasizes that in today’s era of mission
networking, the impetus for a partnership can come
from anywhere. In this case, the vision originated with
one of Mennonite Mission Network’s global partners.
“While many small, rural congregations are dealing
with the pain of closing their doors, NCC wants
to reverse this process and is looking for renewal and
is brimming with energy for mission,” Heisey said.
“God is doing powerful things in this, the smallest,
conference of Mennonite Church USA.”
In this issue:
Features
Give & receive compiled by Mission Network Staff
A cord of three strands by Aaron Kauffman
When strangers become friends by Grent Nebel
Bridging cultures by Angela Rempel
Additional Articles
Partnership = Coparticipación
Mission picks up momentum
Partnership fruit: Mission and renewal
Growing together
Viewpoints
Editor's note by John D. Yoder
Partnerships reflect reconciled humanity by Stanley Green
Partnership is based on community by Jim Schrag
Return to Beyond OurselvesSummer 2008
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