I recently attended a government-sponsored event that invited the church into a conversation regarding the role and function of faith in our intercultural Canadian society. What does the church have …
New Testament Theology: Extending the table
Author: Jon M. Isaak
Jon Isaak has significant ministry experience in Mennonite Brethren circles, most recently as a New Testament professor at MB Biblical Seminary and Fresno Pacific University, and prior to that as a missionary with MB Mission and Service International (now MB Mission)….Mennonite Brethren, like other Anabaptist groups, vigorously pursue the question of identity. Nowhere is this quest more evident than in the field of hermeneutics, which, for the purposes of this article, I will simply define as the science and art of interpreting the Bible.
ICOMB unites international delegates at CMU; BC flood leaves many homeless; Mennonite Historical Society of Canada unveils news projects; Ottawa summit asks for action against poverty; Ten Thousand Villages marks World Fair Trade Day; Ontario church invests in solar energy system; MCC Canada to reduce programs and staff; Conrad Grebel University College sppoints new president
Text Examined: Acts 17:11 – “There is a city in northern Greece named Veria. Ever heard of it? Probably not, unless I tell you the name in Bible times – Berea. Ever heard if it? Only a million times. There are Berean schools, churches, denominations, Christian bookstores.”
Oral researchers in DR Congo collect stories of faith; Canadian baritone honoured; WebPurify filters online profanity
In Mennonite Brethren circles, we often talk about community hermeneutics, and affirm it as the primary way of reading and understanding the Bible. Yet most Sunday mornings, one person stands up and tells everyone else what a certain text means. Is there another way?
As Mennonite Brethren, we say we are people of the Book. If this is true, some natural questions ought to come to our minds. Questions like “Who gets to interpret the text and with what tools?” and “How do we discern if our interpretation is correct?” or “What happens when there is a divergence of opinion?”
Hans Kasdorf, a prominent theologian whose writing guides the mission endeavours of the Mennonite Brethren church, died Mar. 26, 2011, in Fresno, Cal., at 82.
“We promise to uphold you, walk alongside you, to pray for you, and to accept you into the family of God.”