Extending greetings to all those present at the 5th Brethren World
Assembly on July 11-14 in Brookville, Ohio, Brethren Heritage Center
board secretary Larry E. Heisey noted the unique location of the
meeting. All of the seven main Brethren groups in North America
descended from the believers brought together by Alexander Mack Sr. in
Schwarzenau, Germany, are represented in the Miami Valley area near
Dayton, Ohio.
“This makes us unique in Brethrendom,” Heisey said.
Brethren spirituality was the theme of the assembly, which is held
every five years with sponsorship from the Brethren Encyclopedia Board.
The 2013 assembly was hosted by the Brethren Heritage Center, a
nonprofit organization based in Brookville and started in 2001 to
preserve historical and current information on the various Brethren
bodies.
The uniqueness of a cooperative venture between these Brethren
groups--now numbering seven--was remarked upon during the assembly by
several people including Donald Miller, former general secretary of the
Church of the Brethren and professor emeritus at Bethany Seminary. He
credited the impetus for such conversations to peacemaking icon and On
Earth Peace founder M.R. Zigler, who also helped to start the Brethren
Encyclopedia.
The planning team for the 2013 assembly included representatives from
six of the seven main Brethren bodies in North America: chair Robert E.
Alley, Church of the Brethren; Jeff Bach, Church of the Brethren;
Brenda Colijn, Brethren Church; Milton Cook, Dunkard Brethren; Tom
Julien, Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches; Gary Kochheiser,
Conservative Grace Brethren Churches, International; Michael Miller, Old
German Baptist Brethren Church-New Conference. Although not on the
planning team, the Old German Baptist Brethren are represented on the
Brethren Encyclopedia Board and at the Brethren Heritage Center.
Having the Brethren Heritage Center host a meeting convened by the
Brethren Encyclopedia board was a match made in Brethren heaven--like
peanut butter and chocolate, or perhaps more like chocolate and even
more chocolate. The Brethren Encyclopedia Inc. since its founding has
provided the platform for cooperative work and planning between the
Brethren bodies descended from the 1708 baptisms. The Brethren Heritage
Center has exemplified the same cooperation and fellowship among all the
Brethren groups in the Miami Valley, even as they continue to
experience splits based on differences of doctrine and practice.
Although differences in dress, beliefs, and practice were immediately
apparent at the assembly, the gathering succeeded in large part because
it was not a business meeting but instead a place for Brethren to be
present with each other and with God. The participants expressed a
hunger to teach and learn more about a shared heritage, and simply to be
together as a faith family.
Presentations, panels, tours, worship--and ice cream
The assembly started off with keynote presentations on Brethren
spirituality in the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. Other main sessions
focused on the place of Jesus in Brethren spirituality, Word and Spirit
in Brethren spirituality, community aspects of Brethren spirituality,
and the Brethren ordinances such as love feast, feetwashing, and
anointing
Seminars and panel discussions gave insight into evangelism and
mission as a form of Brethren spirituality, the role of the Bible in
Brethren spirituality, Brethren spiritual formation, Brethren worship
practices, Brethren separation from the world and engagement with the
world, Brethren hymnody, Brethren devotional literature and poetry, and
the spiritual writings and poetry of Alexander Mack Jr. A panel of youth
and young adults gave responses to close out the presentations.
Bus tours took participants to see Miami Valley sites important to
Brethren history. Included were sites related to the schisms of the
1880s when the “conservatives”--who became the Old German Baptist
Brethren, and the “progressives”--who became the Brethren Church and the
Grace Brethren, first organized and broke off from the body that
continues as the Church of the Brethren. Tours also visited Lower Miami
Church of the Brethren, a “parent” congregation for the Brethren
churches of the area, and other sites of interest.
Each evening the assembly ate and worshiped together at a local
congregation, hosted by Brookville Grace Brethren Church and Salem
Church of the Brethren. Ice cream socials closed out the days.
Although the event was dubbed a “world” assembly, the majority of
Brethren who attended were from the United States, many local to the
Miami Valley. A group of Nigerians attended from Ekklesiyar Yan’uwa a
Nigeria (EYN--the Church of the Brethren in Nigeria). Bernd Julius, who
had been on the planning committee for the 2008 assembly in Schwarzenau
on the 300th anniversary of the Brethren, brought greetings from the
village in Germany where the Brethren movement began.
Keynoters explore Brethren spirituality through the centuries
Nuances of spirituality may have been demonstrated or experienced in
different ways and languages during the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries,
but one unvarying thread was that it was expressed through dedication to
scripture and prayer, in community, and was considered most faithful
when expressed in a manner that brought the gospel of Jesus Christ to
life.
“There is no such thing as a generic spirituality,” said Jeff Bach,
director of the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at
Elizabethtown (Pa.) College, as he approached the topic of 18th century
Brethren spirituality--but he nevertheless looked for common elements to
a complex story.
The first Brethren were wary of basing their spirituality upon the
lives of “holy men,” but devotional sources such as the Martyr’s Mirror
provided great inspiration. These Anabaptist sources had a profound
effect on a spirituality that inspired Brethren practices and
ordinances. The first Brethren preferred spontaneous prayer to outward
practices and an “outward prayer book.”
Bach chose to focus on lesser known Brethren individuals from the
18th century including John Lobach, Catharine Hummer, Michael Frantz,
and Jacob Stoll.
Lobach (1683-1750) wrote in his autobiography that he engaged in the
same practices before and after his spiritual awakening, but even as a
child he considered these practices faked and fruitless. After a vivid
conversion in 1713 he found that singing hymns, reading scripture, and
prayer were now a powerful part of a personal relationship with God. In
1716 he was arrested and sentenced to a life of hard labor as one of the
“Solingen Brethren,” although eventually he was released. His
experiences in prison led to a deeper identity with the sufferings of
Jesus and a deeper desire to love and forgive enemies.
Michael Frantz (1687-1748), minister to the Conestoga congregation in
Pennsylvania, wrote his Doctrinal Confessions that included a short
prologue of spiritual self-examination, a lengthy account of various
Brethren practices and doctrines (both of these sections in verse), and a
prose piece that encouraged nonconformity but warned, among other
things, that “taking pride in simple clothing might become the greatest
arrogance of all.”
Catharine Hummer (fl. 1762) of the White Oak congregation in
Pennsylvania, found expression of a powerful spirituality in dreams and
visions that were recorded by the breakaway Ephrata community. Her
warnings about the end time and her visions of baptism after death,
expressed in her powerful preaching, found expression in hymn texts and
demonstrated that their spiritual value was found not just in singing,
but in reciting and meditating upon these poems.
Conestoga elder Jacob Stoll, whose devotional works were published
posthumously in 1806, used Bible verses as the starting point for short
devotional poems that were widely read by the Brethren. His were the
“most mystical of Brethren writings” yet remained anchored in community.
The mystical union with Christ expressed in terms of marriage still
relied on a gathered community.
“Like a precious gem (spirituality) has many facets,” said Dale R.
Stoffer, who spoke on 19th century Brethren spirituality. Stoffer is an
elder in the Brethren Church and professor of Historical Theology and
former academic dean at Ashland Theological Seminary.
He noted that while Catholic spirituality was grounded in mysticism,
and Protestant mysticism was grounded in correct doctrine and an inward
private experience, for Brethren spirituality “ordered all of life under
Christ’s Lordship.”
Scripture, hymnbooks, the devotional literature of the Sauer and
Ephrata presses, and eventually the Brethren periodical literature that
began with Henry Kurtz’s “The Monthly Gospel Visiter” were the
ingredients of a spirituality that over the course of the century
encountered Revivalism and the Holiness Movement. This was especially
apparent in the differences in the categories included in German and
English hymnals of the Brethren.
“The Brethren, like the Anabaptists and the Pietists, did not
distinguish between doctrine and spirituality or doctrine and practice,”
Stoffer said. He brought attention to the writings of Henry Kurtz,
Peter Nead, and Abraham Harley Cassel--but the eye-opener for most
attendees was the story of Charles H. Balsbaugh (1831-1909) who, having
been reduced to permanent and painful disability, nevertheless wrote
over 1,000 articles scattered over various periodicals. Balsbaugh
confessed that he moved from a position as a legalist to one who
discovered that “Christ demonstrated how God lives and how the Holy
Spirit made it possible for us to live the same life.”
Speaking on the Brethren of the 20th century, William Kostlevy of the
Brethren Historical Library and Archive at the Church of the Brethren
General Offices, illustrated the breadth of influence of liberal,
conservative, and evangelical Christianity on Brethren spirituality.
“How does one get from Gottfried Arnold to M.R. Zigler?” Kostlevy
asked, then continued, “What in the world is spirituality, anyway? No
other word has been the subject of so much misunderstanding and useless
argument.”
He suggested that the Keswich movement, founded in northern England,
was a major influence on American Protestantism and the Brethren.
Keswich theology insisted that “sinful nature is not extinguished but
countered” by Christian spirituality, as opposed to the Brethren hope
that transformation would lead to a more Christlike life. Kostlevy also
pointed to the influence of the school of Dwight L. Moody, which
demanded surrender to Christ, and emphasis on the cross instead of the
life of Jesus.
Diverse Brethren personalities of the 20th century were touched on,
such as A.C. Wieand, one of the founders of Bethany Theological
Seminary, who encouraged Brethren to seek “the higher Christian life”;
Bethany professor Floyd Mallot, who “was always suspicious of religious
emotionalism”; Anna Mow, who found the essence of spirituality in Bible
study, corporate worship, and prayer; and especially Dan West, founder
of Heifer Project, now Heifer International, who “often annoyed his
superiors, his behavior was erratic, he could be caustic and he was not
incapable of insulting the denomination that paid him,” in Kostlevy’s
words. West especially had an impact and even a cult-like following
among Brethren, Kostlevy said, perhaps because he had a spiritual side
expressed in poetry and action despite the fact that he was “impatient
with orthodoxy.”
The reinvigorated Believer’s Church, as influential 20th century
Brethren historian Donald F. Durnbaugh characterized the Brethren
movement, found spiritual expression in the authority of Christ, the
authority of scripture, the restoration of the New Testament church,
separation from the world, and, paradoxically, ecumenical engagement.
For more about the 5th Brethren World Assembly
Find a photo album from the assembly linked at www.brethren.org/album. DVDs of each major presentation and worship service are available,
with taping was done by Church of the Brethren videographer David
Sollenberger and crew. DVDs are $5 each, or any three for $10, with
shipping added. See story below for details or contact the Brethren
Heritage Center, 428 Wolf Creek St., Suite #H1, Brookville, OH
45309-1297; 937-833-5222; mail@brethrenheritagecenter.org ; www.brethrenheritagecenter.org.
-- This coverage of the 5th Brethren World Assembly is by Frank
Ramirez, pastor of Everett (Pa.) Church of the Brethren, and Cheryl
Brumbaugh-Cayford, director of News Services for the Church of the
Brethren.
Source: 7/17/2013 Newsline Special
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