Mennonite church opens doors for Hispanic faithful

Photos

Cristina Janney

Sandra Guete, wife of pastor Marco Guete, leads singing during dedication of Bethany House Church. The Guetes are from Texas and are helping plant the church in Newton. The church members take turns leading worship but hope to someday have their own pastor.

  

Yellow Pages

By Cristina Janney
Posted Apr 30, 2008 @ 12:08 PM
Last update Apr 30, 2008 @ 12:18 PM
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The two-story white house at 510 S.E. Second in Newton looks like any other family home on the block, but a different kind family has made this house a home — a religious family. A new Hispanic Mennonite church has been planted in Newton and is meeting in the house, which is owned by the First Mennonite Church, which is located across the block.
The church is the only Mennonite service in Spanish offered in the state, according to its members and allows them to be closer to God by worshiping in their native tongue.
“When I pray, when I sing and have my devotion with God, I feel better if I do it in Spanish,” said Rosa Flores a member of the church.
Flores came to the United States 15 years ago from Guatemala with her husband who was a Mennonite minister and now works for Mennonite Church USA.
Flores is a member of First Mennonite Church in Newton, but her English is not good, and she said she found it difficult to understand sermons in her own church.
There are other churches in the community that offer Spanish services, but Flores said she believes in the non-violence and service doctrines of the Mennonite church and wishes to continue worshiping in this tradition.
Flores and another church founder Norma Stoltzfus said many families from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Central America grew up in Mennonite churches established by missionaries in those regions.
Stoltzfus is originally from Puerto Rico. She came to the states 33 years ago when her sister was studying at Hesston College and met her husband here.
Her parents recently came to live in the United States from Puerto Rico.
They were attending Whitestone Mennonite Church in Hesston, but they too struggled with the language, Stoltzfus said. “For them, because they understand everything (in the Spanish church), worship feels like God is there,” Stoltzfus said.
Stoltzfus’ parents grew up Catholic, but they joined the Mennonite church when Mennonite missionaries traveled to Puerto Rico in the early 1940s and ’50s to establish churches and hospitals and do work to improve sanitation and agriculture on the island.
“They feel more at home and a part of a family in the Mennonite church,” she said.
Stoltzfus attended a Mennonite church and taught at a Mennonite school before she immigrated to the United States. The church’s first service was March 30, and the a dedication was conducted April 11 at Bethel College Mennonite Church.
The two-story white house at 510 S.E. Second in Newton looks like any other family home on the block, but a different kind family has made this house a home — a religious family. A new Hispanic Mennonite church has been planted in Newton and is meeting in the house, which is owned by the First Mennonite Church, which is located across the block.

The church is the only Mennonite service in Spanish offered in the state, according to its members and allows them to be closer to God by worshiping in their native tongue.

“When I pray, when I sing and have my devotion with God, I feel better if I do it in Spanish,” said Rosa Flores a member of the church.

Flores came to the United States 15 years ago from Guatemala with her husband who was a Mennonite minister and now works for Mennonite Church USA.

Flores is a member of First Mennonite Church in Newton, but her English is not good, and she said she found it difficult to understand sermons in her own church.

There are other churches in the community that offer Spanish services, but Flores said she believes in the non-violence and service doctrines of the Mennonite church and wishes to continue worshiping in this tradition.

Flores and another church founder Norma Stoltzfus said many families from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Central America grew up in Mennonite churches established by missionaries in those regions.

Stoltzfus is originally from Puerto Rico. She came to the states 33 years ago when her sister was studying at Hesston College and met her husband here.

Her parents recently came to live in the United States from Puerto Rico.

They were attending Whitestone Mennonite Church in Hesston, but they too struggled with the language, Stoltzfus said. “For them, because they understand everything (in the Spanish church), worship feels like God is there,” Stoltzfus said.

Stoltzfus’ parents grew up Catholic, but they joined the Mennonite church when Mennonite missionaries traveled to Puerto Rico in the early 1940s and ’50s to establish churches and hospitals and do work to improve sanitation and agriculture on the island.

“They feel more at home and a part of a family in the Mennonite church,” she said.

Stoltzfus attended a Mennonite church and taught at a Mennonite school before she immigrated to the United States. The church’s first service was March 30, and the a dedication was conducted April 11 at Bethel College Mennonite Church.

The church only has three families at this time, but the founders of the church hope to publicize the new congregation and grow the church.

The church does not have a full-time pastor. A minister from Texas, Marco Guete, is helping plant the church and has been traveling back and forth to assist the new congregation.

Until the congregation has a full-time minister, they will take turns leading worship.

Founding members like Flores and Stoltzfus hope someday they will be able to have a full-time minister and their own church building.

But for now, just being able to come together and sing and praise in their native language is an answer to a prayer. “This is what we were dreaming for — to have Mennonite services in Spanish,” Stoltzfus said.
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