Sunday, January 23, 2011

CMW Response

            In the current issue (Vo. 2 No. 8) of the CMW journal, the Indianapolis Writers Group focuses on Mennonite Identity.  The five members of the group each submitted article(s) and/ or poems that seek to uncover what it means to be a Mennonite, each having different answers because of their wide scope of experiences as Mennonites.
            This issue of the CMW journal caught my attention because of its theme.  Being a United Methodist, I do not know very much about Mennonites and their customs, beliefs, and focuses.  This issue is all about Mennonites seeking to explain what is a Mennonite.  In seeking to find the answer to this question I was pulled to this issue because of the different backgrounds of each of the writers who try to answer this question, especially “An Aggressive Mennonite” by Rodney Deaton.  I was excited to read a “non-cradle” Mennonite’s view of the Mennonite world.
            All of the authors in the issue seek to explain their viewpoint on Mennonite identity by telling their experience in the Mennonite world.  Daniel Hess, a “cradle” Mennonite, describes growing up in the very conservative Lancaster county Mennonite community and trying to keep harmony with them as he becomes less conservative.  Martha Yoder Maust talks of her experiences with many Mennonites all over the world and learning from their different viewpoints.  Ryan Ahlgrim started attending the Mennonite church when he was a boy and discusses coming into the Mennonite world with different traditions and habits than the other children in his Sunday School classes.  Rodney Deaton’s experience as a Mennonite is quite different from the other authors in the issue because he became a Mennonite as an adult.  He talks about mixing his non-Mennonite customs with those of the Mennonite ones he adopted.  Shari Wagner Miller’s poems talk of the life of a Mennonite farm wife.
            This issue of the CMW journal is inherently Mennonite, not solely because the subject is being a Mennonite.  Each article seeks to find peace and harmony where there is disunity.   Many of the articles show a belief in the importance of service and supporting each other and how the authors practice these beliefs throughout their daily lives.  Although their Mennonite journeys may have had twists and turns to get to where they are, they still hold to the core values of the Mennonite faith of following Jesus’ example, striving for nonviolence and harmony, and providing service and support for each other.  Hess not only tries to create harmony with his parents and home church in his autobiographical article but also in the three Garden poems he wrote.  Martha Yoder Maust seeks to do service through her gleaning while also seeking to keep harmony with those who do not understand why she gleans.  Rodney Deaton takes a different approach to harmony.  He sees the world differently than Mennonites who grew up in the Mennonite church and is okay with that.  He simply asks others to try to understand his hybrid view of nonviolence.
            After reading this issue on Mennonite identity, I still have questions about the views of Mennonites.  However, these questions center around the views of the more conservative Mennonite outlook.  I do not understand the strictness of their rules.  But then again, I have found that in almost every denomination one can find a conservative branch that is hard to grasp, or a branch of the same faith quite different from the others.

4 comments:

  1. "This issue of the CMW journal is inherently Mennonite..........Each article seeks to find peace and harmony where there is disunity."

    nicely put.

    That's something that did not occur to me when I read and reviewed that journal. I didn't notice the effort for harmony within each article. I definitely sensed that harmony in the issue as a whole: five Mennonites with such different backgrounds, struggles and views who are all friends, coming together and coming up with very different perspectives on Mennonite Identity. I'm wondering if this 'seeking unity' theme is something I'm failing to pick up in our other Mennonite Lit readings - I'm definitely going to be aware of it from now on! Thanks for writing on this!

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  3. Kim--thanks for pointing this out. Sara--sometimes it's hard to see things when they are part of your world view. It's great to have perspectives from both inside and outside the Mennonite world in this class for this very reason.

    (I removed my previous post because it had a typo in it.)

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  4. I agree with Sara -- it's really interesting how you picked up on the CMW journal being inherently Mennonite as it 'attempts to find peace and harmony where there is disunity'. I think that responses from non-Mennonites or Mennonites who aren't 'cradle Mennonites' are valuable, especially as we attempt to work at our issue of the journal. Much perspective can be gained from outside of the church too, as Ryan Ahlgrim and Rodney Deaton both show.

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