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The Groffdale Conference Mennonite Church, also called Wenger Mennonites, is the largest Old Order Mennonite group to use horse-drawn carriages for transportation. Along with the automobile, they reject many modern conveniences , while allowing electricity in their homes and steel-wheeled tractors to till the fields.
The John Dan Wenger Mennonites are an Anabaptist Christian denomination that belongs to the Old Order Mennonites. They use horse and buggy transportation and are mainly located in Virginia . Under the leadership of Bishop John Dan Wenger, they separated from the Virginia Old Order Mennonite Conference in either 1952 or 1953.
There was another split in 1927 over disagreements over the use of automobiles. The Weaverland Mennonite then allowed the use of cars, but only with black bumpers. Those opposed to car usage formed a new church, the Groffdale Conference Mennonite Church, also called Wenger Mennonites. The remainder of the Weaverland Conference since then have ...
Glimpses of Mennonite History and Doctrine, 1947. Separated Unto God, 1951. Introduction to Theology, 1954. The Mennonites in Indiana and Michigan, 1961. Even Unto Death, 1961. Mennonite Church in America, 1966. God’s Word Written, 1966. Disciples of Jesus, 1977. The Book We Call the Bible, 1980. Wenger also edited a number of books including:
One third of members of the Virginia Old Order Mennonite Conference left with bishop John Dan Wenger and formed the John Dan Wenger Mennonites. [3] Another divisions occurred in 2006/7 with the help of bishops from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and Ontario. The new group under bishop Lloyd Wenger had 99 members.
Joseph Wenger (1868–1956) [1] was an Old Order Mennonite preacher, who, in the 1927 schism of the Weaverland Old Order Mennonite Conference was ordained bishop by bishops in Indiana, Michigan, and Virginia, and made head of a new branch broken from the Weaverland Conference.
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Its main leader decided to join a bigger Old Order Mennonite group, some followed, others joined other Reidenbach Mennonites groups or even the Wenger Mennonites (Groffdale Conference). The John Martin group split in 2007, which is described in a book from one side (Mark Z. Hoover: The Inside Story). in 2009/10 one side was called the "strict ...