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| Singing At The Fire: Voices of Anabaptist Martyrs | View shopping basket | |
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CD, $15.95
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Audio
Recorded Music
Martyrs
| Singing at the Fire: Voices of Anabaptist Martyrs
combines choral settings of 10 Anabaptist hymns and martyr ballads,
original poetry, and three solo organ pieces to evoke the spiritual
witness of 16th century Anabaptist martyrs. Inspired by and designed to
accompany the Mirror of the Martyrs exhibit, the CD recording features
the Eastern Mennonite University (EMU) Chamber Singers directed by Ken
Nafziger, organist Shirley Sprunger King, with original works by
composer Brent Weaver and poet Sarah Klassen. Included with the CD is
a 16-page illustrated booklet with the complete text of the martyr
hymns and poems. The Mirror of the Martyrs exhibit developed after
longtime Mennonite historians Robert S. Kreider and John S. Oyer became
aware of 23 existing copper plates from etchings included in the 1685
publication of the Mennonite book Martyrs Mirror. An Inter-
Mennonite Martyrs Mirror Trust Fund purchased them and, in 1990,
Kreider and Oyer mounted a traveling exhibit of the plates and their
prints. When Oyer and Kreider agreed that hymns related to these
plates would enrich the visual experience of the exhibition, Oyer began
searching 16th and 17th century German hymnals for texts written by the
martyrs represented in the prints, or about the martyrs. Later, tunes
were chosen by a hymnology class at the Associated Mennonite biblical
Seminary in Elkhart, Indiana, and combined with the texts. The Eastern
Mennonite University Chamber Singers perform choral settings of these
martyr hymns and ballads. The recording also features 20th century
responses to stories from the Martyrs Mirror. Prompted by organist and
CD producer Shirley Sprunger King, composer Brent Weaver wrote three
works for solo organ inspired by poetry by Sarah Klassen. Klassen's
poems, a response to the Mirror of the Martyrs exhibit, are included on
the recording, read by Raylene Hinz-Penner. A final composition by
Weaver, I Sing With Exultation, is a setting of a hymn text
by Anabaptist leader Felix Manz and features the EMU Chamber Singers
with organ accompaniment by Shirley Sprunger King. | | | | Hungry, Thirsty, a Stranger: The MCC Experience | View shopping basket | | by Robert S. Kreider and Rachel Waltner Goossen | |
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paper, 392 pages, $14.95
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Mennonite Central Committee
| With programs in 50 countries, 1,000 workers and 10,000 part-time volunteers,
Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) generates countless stories. The value of
these stories lies even beyond their worth simply as a story. Each should
prompt readers to ponder and discuss, "What would I have done if I had been
there? Should Christians be prudent or prophetic? Are we to be pragmatic or
faithful? Can we be both?" These issues may well be akin to contemporary ones
in our home church and community. Robert S. Kreider and Rachel Waltner
Goossen chose a selection of stories from each decade of MCC history with
significant episodes from six continents. | | | | My Early Years: An Autobiography | View shopping basket | | by Robert S. Kreider | |
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paperback, 628 pages, $44.00
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| Robert S. Kreider has moved at the center of the American
Mennonite story for three quarters of a century-as an administrator,
scholar, church leader ad impassioned activist-and did much to shape
its very course. This insightful autobiography places readers inside
the personal, familial, and churchly dynamics of Mennonite life in the
first half of the 20th century. Copyright 2003. | | | | Looking Back into the Future | View shopping basket | | by Robert S. Kreider | |
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paperback, 302 pages, $25.00
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Civilian Public Service
History
Colleges
Peace
| Robert Kreider has taken part in almost every Mennonite initiative in the last six decades: higher education, peace activism, voluntary service, Civilian Public Service, MCC relief service and administration, environmentalism, historical research and writing, and China missions. This collection of sixty-six essays, speeches, letters, articles, poems, and other reflections runs the gamut from a 1934 high school oration to a 1998 commentary at a Mennonite history conference. The range of writing includes not only commentary on public activities but also stories of family and personal life. Looking Back into the Future was released at the "Walls and Windows: Creating and Nurturing Viable Community" symposium held at Bethel College, Nov. 19-21, 1998, in Robert Kreider's honor. | | | | Mirror of the Martyrs | View shopping basket | | by John S. Oyer and Robert S. Kreider | |
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paperback, 96 pages, $9.95
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History
Anabaptist
| Some four centuries ago, thousands of Christians died because they dared to refuse to join the state church in medieval Europe. Their reading of the Holy Bible and their consciences led them to believe that church membership should be a voluntary, adult decision. These believers died public, tortured deaths as martyrs. Many modern-day Christians claim these persons of courage as their spiritual ancestors. Many of those scenes were etched on copper plates by Jan Luyken, A Dutch artist who worked in the late 1600s. Numerous of these copper plates still exist. Mirror of the Martyrs reproduces 30 of these etchings and tells the courageous stories of these people of faith.
Stories of courage, inspiringly retold, of sixteenth-century
Anabaptists who gave their lives for their faith. Offered is a series
of short tales about martyrs. The intention is to give a more
composite picture of martyrdom--touching upon its many aspects and its
much variety--than only a few stories could sustain. Each story,
therefore, was selected for some singular, often unique, element in
order to show the variety that was the sociopolitical reality for the
victims of sixteenth-century religious discrimination. More complete
details for each martyr are usually found in the Martyrs
Mirror itself, or more frequently, in the Mennonite Encyclopedia. The authors have
chosen source material not used by either van Braght or writers in the
Mennonite Encyclopedia. | |
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