Author: Admin account

  • Tree planting as a hopeful solution in DR Congo

    Tree planting as a hopeful solution in DR Congo

    Many of us in North America do not rely on wood for cooking or shade trees for cooling. In contrast, millions in the Global South depend on trees for life-saving shade, livestock fodder, cooking fuel, and building materials. As deforestation continues worldwide, people and the environment suffer.

    Mennonite Men is committed to addressing deforestation and caring for God’s creation. Historically, our JoinTrees grants funded projects in the U.S. and Canada, but we now support initiatives in Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico, Angola, Benin, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). These projects help mitigate climate change by planting trees that absorb carbon dioxide. We are also evaluating how to support tree planting for firewood alternatives, recognizing the complexities of deforestation globally.

    A recent news report on violence in DRC led me to reconnect with Ndunge Sefu, a seminary friend, for insights. Ndunge and his wife, Micheline Ilonga, who have lived in DRC and other African countries, offered valuable perspectives. They expressed gratitude that the world is beginning to notice DRC’s struggles, but as Ndunge noted, ‘If an issue doesn’t touch the interests of superpowers, the world doesn’t hear about it.’

    The eastern DRC faces severe violence, with tens of thousands dying monthly due to armed rebel groups. Over 120 rebel factions operate there, many profiting from ‘mineral wars’ over coltan, a metal vital for electronic devices. These conflicts result in child labor, environmental devastation, and human suffering. People flee violence, trees are burned, and forests are depleted as displaced communities seek firewood.

    Wildlife also suffers. Unique species like the okapi and mountain gorilla are vanishing due to habitat destruction. ‘War affects nature, too,’ Micheline said. Even in areas without conflict, people cut trees for firewood without replanting due to a lack of awareness. ‘You can plant a tree. This side of the conversation is missing.’

    The discussion turned to solutions. Micheline asked, ‘How can you think about trees when you have an empty stomach?’

    Ndunge suggested, ‘People can farm trees instead of cutting indigenous forests.’ Micheline added, ‘Many women farm in Congo. Growing fruit trees can provide them with income. The land is fertile, and trees will grow.’

    This conversation reinforced our commitment to tree-planting initiatives in DRC and Angola. Supporting our African brothers and sisters in these efforts is part of our call to love our neighbors and participate in Christ’s mission of reconciliation.

    To date, Mennonite Men has only provided half the funding needed for these projects. We need financial support to complete them. These efforts create livelihoods, inspire communities, and offer sustainable alternatives to deforestation while providing ecological benefits.

    Join us in planting hope by supporting these tree-planting projects in DRC and Angola. Your contributions will help restore forests, empower communities, and protect creation for future generations.

    To learn more about JoinTrees projects and how you, your company, your men’s group, or your congregation can get involved, visit mennonitemen.org/jointrees.


  • Faith and Forestry in the Great Plains

    Faith and Forestry in the Great Plains


    Forestry runs in my family. As a second-generation forester in Kansas, my father served as an Extension forester at the Fort Hays Experiment Station. Dad helped farmers plant and care for windbreaks. He worked with towns and communities when Dutch elm disease arrived in ’57 killing thousands of American elms. My spouse Melissa Atchison also has a forestry degree, and after raising kids and attending the Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary, she now serves as pastor of Manhattan Mennonite Church. Faith and forestry find common ground in our family.

    I spent most of my career working for the Kansas Forest Service at Kansas State University, in Manhattan. Like my father, I worked with Kansas farmers and landowners interested in planting and caring for trees. These were usually people who genuinely cared for God’s creation and literally sowed the seed or planted the trees that benefit the next generation.

    During my career I have seen the value of planting trees in the Great Plains come into question. Woody encroachment into grasslands of eastern red cedar, and honey locust both indigenous to Kansas, and other non-native trees, threaten our precious grasslands and the wildlife that require prairie to survive. Even so, I continue to advocate for agroforestry and forestry in Kansas and here’s why: trees continue to provide the same important benefits they have always provided to Kansans and woody encroachment is a land management issue that will always need to be addressed. Eastern Kansas is what ecologists describe as an ecotone, where the central hardwood forests of the United States transition into the tallgrass prairies. Historically there has always been changes in vegetative types in this transitional zone.

    Kansas trees provide wildlife habitat to threatened and endangered species, and without them the American Bald Eagle would still be listed. They reduce streambank erosion improving water quality and slowing the sedimentation of our water supply reservoirs. Trees add to the quality of life providing shade and wind protection to our homes. They sequester carbon, add beauty to our landscape with spring and fall colors, and turn carbon dioxide into the oxygen we breathe. Trees provide value even to a prairie state, but they must be managed and contained to appropriate landscapes.

    During my forestry career, tree planting often served as an act of prayer for me. I remember times when I sang hymns while sowing oak seed in early spring. God invites us to sow the seeds of the kindom on this good earth and to take joy in the gifts it yields. When we plant trees thoughtfully, we show respect and gratitude for the creation God has given us, and love to the generations that follow.

    My interest in tree planting and forestry have now connected with another issue where I try to practice my Anabaptist faith: peace and justice in Israel and Palestine. Working to seek peace and understand the violence in Israel and Palestine became important to me after participating in a Christian Peacemaker Team delegation to the West Bank in 1998. Since that time I have worked on the issue in a variety of ways and currently chair the Mennonite Palestine Israel Network (MennoPIN), serve on the Steering Committee for Mennonite Action and chair the Western District Conference Task Force on Israel Palestine.

    In Palestine, olive trees symbolize Palestinian identity, resilience, and most importantly connection to their land. They are an important source of income and food for many Palestinian families. Olive trees represent Palestinian resilience because of their ability to grow in poor soil conditions, survive droughts, and in some cases produce fruit for thousands of years. For these reasons and the expansion of Israeli settlements, the destruction of olive trees has been a common experience in the West Bank and Gaza. According to the Applied Research Institute in Jerusalem, 800,000 olive trees have been destroyed by Israeli Settlers and the Israeli army since 1967.

    Tree planting can indeed be an act of peace and there are many excellent tree planting initiatives to consider supporting. The Mennonite Palestine Israel Network (MennoPIN) and Mennonite Men’s JoinTrees initiative are working collaboratively to plant olive trees in Palestine. The JoinTrees campaign has a goal to plant one million trees by 2030, targeting climate change. Their goals include mitigating global warming, resilient ecosystems, preserving biodiversity and supporting vulnerable communities.

    There are a variety of ways to participate in the JoinTrees initiative. For more information check out their web site at https://mennonitemen.org/jointrees or call them at 574-202-0048.


  • Self exploration through Mens’ Rites of Passage

    Self exploration through Mens’ Rites of Passage


    ‘You should seriously consider doing the men’s rites of passage (MROP) with Illuman someday, Jon. If you decide to go, I’d even help make that happen,’ a good friend told me. I knew in my gut that someday I’d follow through on his invitation and sign up for such a journey. It took me about five years after that conversation, but in September of 2024, I finally went to the four-day gathering in the mountains of western Virginia. Having been through the COVID19 pandemic, years of work stress, and finishing a seminary degree program, the timing finally felt right. I was also hearing about the MROP experience from several guys in my life, including Mennonite Men Executive Director Steve Thomas and Mennonite Men board member and pastor Phil Schmidt.

    Jon Zirkle, center above, serves as US co-director for Mennonite Men

    I had my own reservations and perhaps a bit of cynicism before going. Would this be an over-the-top woo-woo experience or worse yet, four days loaded with one-size-fits-all portrayals of masculinity I find uncomfortable? Turns out, my experience was neither of these things, and almost every guy I met also had questions and doubts coming into the experience.

    I didn’t know anyone there when I arrived, agreed to not use my phone for our days and left work behind. I met men from eastern Canada, Maine, Ohio, Massachusetts, D.C., North Carolina, and Alabama, representing a wide range of life experiences and faith traditions. Ranging in age from 29 to 81 years old, 49 of us came for rites of passage, and 42 who’d previously done the rites of passage were present to support the gathering and to pray for us initiates. Yes, 90 total! I can’t recall ever being in an all-male gathering with men willing to get vulnerable, find healing, and go deep.

    Months after my MROP, I still remember the large painting displayed in the pavilion each time the full group gathered: an image of Christ hanging on the cross, eyes looking out, and a diverse depiction of others who witnessed his suffering. As a Mennonite Christian, I’m not that used to seeing huge painted depictions of Jesus’ crucifixion. I’ve seen plenty of images of Jesus on the cross before, but this particular image of Jesus—naked Jesus, looking straight ahead at me—was both searing and healing. I had the time and permission to sit with the excruciating pain I could only fathom Jesus felt as his flesh tore. Deep learnings were etched in me: suffering and pain are unavoidable. I’m not alone on that journey. ‘I see you, and you see me,’ it seemed he said to me.

    Like other memorable spiritual experiences I can recall in my life, the MROP was not just an individual experience. It wasn’t just about me and my personal journey. Rather, it was other guys I met who made the biggest mark on me. Through this four-day experience, I made friends. Soul brothers. We spent time in the woods together, witnessed vulnerable confessions, prayed and cried silently and aloud, participated in powerful rituals, sang, and even danced. Every man was assigned to a smaller ‘council’ group of 5 or so guys, guided by a group leader. My council was incredibly important to my experience, and we’ve stayed in touch after three virtual gatherings together. I do not and will not forget these brothers.

    It wasn’t just about me and my personal journey.
    Rather, it was other guys I met who made the biggest mark on me.

    The Illuman Men’s Rites of Passage is not for everyone. For me it was transformative and continues to help me on my faith journey and in approaching life with greater wisdom, honesty, and deep friendships. I am left with a new sense of freedom and courage, peace about my own limitations, and more compassion for myself and from God. I am also filled with gratitude that Mennonite Men also promotes the MROP on our website and that several Mennonites encouraged me to pursue this.

    I pray more men find the permission, resources, and experiences to grow deeper in their faith, relationships, and sense of God’s belovedness. Whether it’s doing MROP, attending Mennonite Men retreats, joining or starting a men’s group, or checking out our online resources for men, there many ways for me to take a next step.


  • Giving and receiving: Chin Emmanuel Church, Houston

    Giving and receiving: Chin Emmanuel Church, Houston

    While we provide support to churches, we also receive much in return. As I listened to stories of the suffering these Chin people have endured due to ethnic and religious persecution in Myanmar, I was deeply moved by their remarkable resilience. God’s Spirit has clearly shaped in them a character of long-suffering. As they stay connected with family and friends still suffering in Myanmar, they offer meaningful support and encouragement. Many of them must also show resilience in balancing two jobs to make ends meet.

    In worship, the congregation gave a powerful witness to the joy they find in God and their dedication as followers of Jesus. I was personally touched by their spiritual enthusiasm. For our worship, the Chin congregation contributed ‘Zisuh nih a zultu hna sinah (Peace Be With You! Jesus Told His Friends),’ #165 in Voices Together.

    They also offer a practical example of how to engage youth in worship. Pastor Simon shared his concern about retaining youth, a challenge faced by many churches today. In response, he encourages all youth to learn a form of music, which they eagerly do. The youth play an active role in worship, leading and contributing music with joy. Their worship truly reflects the sense of community central to their faith practice.

    This Chin congregation, like the Mennonite Chin in Omaha, Nebraska, extends their support beyond the church by helping refugee families adjust to life in a new country and culture. They are as passionate about mission as they are about worship, eager for others to experience the abundant life found in Christ. After I presented the Mennonite Men JoinHands grant, they graciously gave a sum of money to be used to assist another church with their building project—a beautiful example of generosity and community spirit.

    In all these ways, they have much to offer the broader Mennonite Church.

    Postscript
    This is the second grant we have made to Chin congregations joining Mennonite Church USA. These congregations are a prominent part of the new church movement within our Mennonite family. Approximately half of all new MC USA congregations come from ethnic-racial backgrounds, including African American, Hispanic, Native American, and Asian groups. This trend reflects the church’s growing racial and ethnic diversity, particularly in urban and immigrant communities, where congregational growth has been most pronounced.

    Thanks to the generosity of our donors, we have provided over $2.5 million to 93 new congregations to support their building projects. In the past twelve months, Mennonite Men distributed $91,500 through JoinHands grants to four Mennonite churches.


  • Regenerative Agriculture with Maguey

    Regenerative Agriculture with Maguey

    ​

    In the last decades, deforestation, monoculture, and large corporate agriculture interests have devastated native landscapes and dried up watersheds for local small-scale farmers in Tlaxcala, Mexico. Maguey, a traditional feature of Mexican landscapes, has been cleared from ecosystems, seriously affecting local biodiversity. In response to this, the Vicente Guerrero group is supporting communities in Tlaxcala to restore their ecosystems, as well as mitigate and adapt to the changing climate patterns which are already impacting livelihoods.

    The Vicente Guerrero group is a small NGO with national and international reach. With forty years of experience spearheading agro-ecological techniques to support food security and sustainability, their newest challenge is restoring local biodiversity and adapting to the climate crisis. Their innovative approach is to focus on recovering ancestral agricultural practices and encouraging community members to become custodians of their lands.

    Farmers in Tlaxcala need to adapt to longer periods of drought, add moisture to their soil, capture carbon in the atmosphere, and cultivate species that can be commercialized or consumed in times of resource scarcity. To meet these needs, the Vicente Guerrero group is now engaged in a project of transplanting 20,000 Maguey (Agave atrovirens) seedlings (grown with the support of JoinTrees in 2022-2023), plus reproducing an additional 20,000 Maguey plants and 10,000 Mexican Pinyon Pine trees (Pinus cembroides). These two species are planted together using an ancient indigenous agriculture system called Metepantle, which is an agroforestry system in which a variety of species are intercropped. In this project, and in all of the program’s regenerative agriculture work, the Vicente Guerrero team is promoting interventions that will restore native biodiversity, increase soil fertility, and further natural solutions to the climate crisis.

    Ancestrally, Maguey is known as the wet nurse of Mexican ecosystems. The first archaeological evidence of Maguey cultivation dates to 6,500 years ago. The core of the plant, known as the ‘heart’, holds up to ten liters of water, sustaining moisture on the land. The whole plant serves as a haven for pollinators and small fauna. According to research carried out by the Vicente Guerrero group, the soil where Maguey are growing remains just as fresh or cooler than the topsoil of nearby forests. There have been studies that state that this species is also as efficient as trees at capturing carbon. In fact, some studies suggest that Maguey might even be better than trees, given that Maguey’s carbon capture continues into the night, while trees do so during daylight hours.

    By incorporating Maguey into the farming practices of local communities, it will be possible to restore the ancient indigenous agricultural technology called Metepantle. In a Metepantle system, a variety of species are grown together on the same field. In Nahuatl, ‘metl’ means Maguey or Agave and ‘pantil’ means division or flag. This ancestral agricultural system has an successful track record of over 2000 years. It is particularly effective in regions with sloping fields, steep hillsides, or mountain ranges where it prevents erosion. The Maguey are placed on terraces as living fences or are inserted between rows of trees, such as Pinyon Pine (Pinus cembroides) or Tejocote (Crataegus mexicana). Within these living fences, native corn is planted (Vicente Guerrero has a seed bank of over 58 species), alongside a variety of beans (Phaseolus Vulgaris, Phaseolus Coccineus, Vicia faba L.), Chiles (Capsicum spp.), and various species of squash (Cucurbita ficifolia, Cucurbita pepo L.). This mix of plants is enriched further with edible Nopal Cactus (Cactus opuntia), and a variety of edible and highly nutritious greens called ‘quelites’. Some Metepanles also include medicinal herbs. The result is a field which can provide highly nutritious food for vulnerable communities while also encouraging biodiversity, mitigating climate change and regenerating the soil as its fertility is increased.

    The Metepantle system being promoted by the Vicente Guerrero program will include the Native Pinyon Pine, as it is also a species that prevents erosion and it connects its roots to underground aquifers providing further moisture to the soil. Recent research suggests that this Mexican variety of Pinyon Pine also has significant carbon capture abilities.

    The Vicente Guerrero Group has now grown and cared for 30,000 Magueys that are mature enough to be transplanted into their permanent locations. More small Maguey and 10,000 Pinyon Pine seedlings are growing in their nursery. The team members have been sharing with 100 farm families the virtues and importance of Maguey and Pinyon Pines and reintroducing Metepantles for the local ecosystem. The Vicente Guerrero team visits the families and their farms, answering any questions the families might have, and supporting the design of each individual Metepantle system. In parallel to this process of farmer to farmer educational exchange, they have now begun to transplant Maguey onto newly created Metepantle fields.


    The objective of the program is to expand these agroforestry actions, recovering bio-diversity and ancestral regenerative agricultural practices on 800 small scale farms. This will translate into between 200 and 300 hectares of restored lands. The goal is that these actions will serve as an example to others in the country who wish to mitigate climate change, restore local biodiversity, and mitigate food insecurity.




  • Initiation! Adventure through wilderness and water

    Initiation! Adventure through wilderness and water

    As a congregational pastor, I was in the middle of a three-month sabbatical. What a gift! I had abundant time to be with family, to camp and spend time out in creation, to rest and renew… and yet the cycles of anxiety and anger within me remained. In fact, with so much time to think, the anxiety was actually getting worse. I was feeling stuck, tired, frustrated and ready for something new.

    In early August I journeyed from my home in Goshen, Indiana to Pilgrim Park Camp near Princeton, Illinois for the Men’s Rite of Passage (MROP) sponsored by the Illinois chapter of Illuman. Steve Thomas had encouraged me to attend this formational experience, and it is something that Mennonite Men has been encouraging for a while. As a Mennonite Men board member, I was also interested in attending to see how it might help me focus on men’s work in the future.

    I left home uncertain of what lie ahead. I was aware that the five-day MROP had been originally designed by Richard Rohr, someone whose wisdom I trusted. I knew there would be several other men there. I knew the experience would include fasting and time in the wilderness. But a lot of what I would experience remained a mystery.

    When I arrived at camp, I was welcomed warmly along with 23 other initiates. Additionally, several elders were there the whole time to guide the process and hold the space for us to do deep soul work. We didn’t wade into the work slowly; The expectation was participation and vulnerability, and all of us brothers dove right in.

    Over the next days, we kept diving deeper into our soul work through learning, ritual, time alone, and time in small groups. We explored our mortality, we grieved, we practiced contemplation and we celebrated. Through the experience, I dove deeper into myself than I had before. I discovered inner wounds and lies of my false self. I discovered that my constant anxiety and anger had been churning from those wounds for a long time.

    I discovered that the patterns and mindset of my
    first half of life just weren’t working anymore.

    Throughout the deep dive experience, I also encountered God’s love at my core, energizing my true self. While fasting and sitting alone in the wilderness, I contemplated the presence of a caterpillar and later a butterfly. I began to know in my gut the transformative realities that God is love, that God’s abundant love is within me, and that through God’s love I am interconnected with all things. During this time of awareness, I sat with some deep truths: Life is hard; I am going to die; I am not that important; I am not in control; My life is not about me. With each truth that on the surface sounded negative, I discovered joy and freedom. And in that joy and freedom, I began to discover within myself a new way of being, countering the churning anxiety, connecting with my true self and the divine spark within me and all things. I also experienced an ongoing call to work not only with men in their spiritual journeys, but also to encourage boys in their journey toward authentic manhood.

    Now I am home again. Sabbatical is over and ‘normal life’ has resumed. But somehow I am different on the inside: in my mind, heart, and gut. Yes, anxiety and anger will still be companions on my journey, but they are no longer my guides. I am a beloved son of God, initiated as a man into my second half of life. The journey still lies ahead and the challenges are still real. But instead of fearing the journey, I embrace the path of descent and seek to live one moment at a time, contemplatively centered on the truth of God’s abundant love.

    I’ll end with a few invitations as well as another Haiku

    • To my brothers who have not yet attended an MROP: if you find yourself feeling stuck and discouraged in life, I strongly encourage you to consider attending one. It will help guide you on the journey of transformation.
    • To my sisters and other siblings, if you know a man who is stuck, searching for meaning in life, struggling with his false self, I encourage you to mention the MROP to him.
    • To those who have already been initiated through the MROP experience, may we continue the journey of contemplation, soaking in and overflowing with the love of God.


    Every little thing
    A true piece of God’s Shalom
    Interconnected!




    I, Phil, am a beloved Son of God. I am in my late 30s, am married to Mary, and
    we have two sons, Ethan (10) and Noah (8). I enjoy running, biking, hiking,
    camping, and spending time with my family, including coaching sports my
    boys are involved in. I work as a congregational pastor at Belmont Mennonite
    Church in Elkhart, Indiana. I also serve on the board for Mennonite Men.

  • Good intentions aren’t enough

    Good intentions aren’t enough

    Men can dismantle patriarchy with actions that support women in leadership


    Three years ago, when I started my practice as a process consultant, I wondered if I could ever shake free of the Anabaptist World article that potential clients often found when they googled my name.

    The article reported on my resignation as superintendent of a Mennonite school, in which I cited the patriarchal assumptions of a group of people in the school community that became abusive and made my leadership unsustainable.

    Image: Jeanne Zimmerly Jantzi and Joel Gaines (joining virtually) lead a seminar on ‘The Messy Struggle of Antiracism’ at the Mennonite Church USA convention in Cincinnati in 2021.

    Before taking the role at the school in 2017, my husband and I had served internationally with Mennonite Central Committee since 1989. During those years, I’d observed the effective leadership of women in the countries where we lived. We’d worked under a woman’s leadership. After living outside of the United States for so long, I naively assumed that in my home community any questions about women’s ability and calling to lead had been settled long ago.

    I assumed my generation was having a different experience than my mother’s. She lived through a time of squelched dreams for women who felt called to lead. As a child, I remember leaning forward between the seats of our VW hatchback to hear her vent to my dad on the way home from church.

    The 1963 Mennonite Confession of Faith, Article 14, stated: ‘[I]n the order of creation God has fitted man and woman for differing functions; man has been given a primary leadership role, while the woman is especially fitted for nurture and service. Being in Christ does not nullify these natural endowments, either in the home or in the church.’

    This was the Confession used by the Mennonite Church. By 1995, theConfession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective — used at that time by the Mennonite Church and General Conference Mennonite Church and now by Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada — reversed that way of thinking, at least on paper.

    Article 6 states, ‘The rule of man over woman is a result of sin (Genesis 3:16) and is therefore not an acceptable order among the redeemed (Galatians 3:28; 1 Corinthians 7:4; 11:11-12).’

    Article 15 states, ‘The church calls, trains and appoints gifted men and women to a variety of leadership min- istries on its behalf.’

    Women alone cannot change the historic ranking system that places men at the leadership pinnacle. Men need to be committed to dismantling patriarchy.

    Revised wording in a Confession of Faith cannot bring down a deeply engrained culture that stratifies wom- en (and other intersecting identities) below men. Many men would say that they fully believe in women’s leader- ship. The lack of tangible evidence of this support may be unintentional.

    Still other men continue to affirm the sentiments found in the 1963 Mennonite Confession of Faith. The intent or motive is irrelevant when experiences of patriarchal behavior diminish a woman’s ability to lead.

    Men’s privilege in the workplace is so familiar and unquestioned that it may not even be recognized. Take something as simple as asking questions. When a male leader asks a question, it can be seen as a helpful coaching tool, or a way to get people to explore a new idea. When a female leader uses a question to engage thinking, men often assume she is asking because she doesn’t know the answer. Her teaching device is assumed to be an invitation to launch into a lengthy explanation.

    From a position of unquestioned privilege, men have confidently written many books explaining how to lead. Few books by men recognize the variable in the leadership context if the leader is a woman.

    There are men who want to learn about their blind spots and to change. My husband is one. We job-shared as co-leaders for 24 years in cultures that traditionally assumed the man would lead. We continuously analyzed our roles, giving and receiving feedback and striving to learn and grow.

    I’ve also had opportunities to work with and observe men in the school context and in my other circles who work hard to support women’s leadership. They don’t always get it, but they want to keep learning to do it better.

    I share the following suggestions for men who want to do better. The list began with a blog post I wrote and expanded with suggestions from other women’s experiences.

    1. Sit down. Consider whether this is the time to make space for a woman to step up in leadership instead of you. Are you ready to be in the No. 2 role? What changes would you need to make to support a woman leader?
    2. Notice who is taking up the talking time in a meeting. Create space for a woman leader by turning to her and asking, ‘What do you think?’
    3. Stop interrupting. You might not even notice when you do it. Be aware. Ask for feedback. Apologize. If a man and a woman speak up at the same time, encourage the woman to go first. Don’t accept her deferring to you.
    4. Steer the conversation back to a woman if she is interrupted and the topic shifts off track. Intervene on her behalf. State to the group the facts what just happened: ‘Sarai was speaking, and Michael interrupted. Let’s go back to Sarai.’
    5. Reinforce what a woman leader says if the man in charge ignores her point. Make sure the woman gets the credit for her contribution.
    6. Refer to and defer to a woman leader. Outsiders may assume the man is in charge. Correct their mistake imme- diately. Introduce the woman as your leader. Use titles in the same way it’s done for men. Sometimes you may need to leave the room to reinforce the woman’s leadership.
    7. Quote what women leaders have said or written and publicly give them credit for it. Elevate and promote women’s voices, including famous people and your colleagues. What they have to say is worthy of atten- tion.
    8. Pay attention to the optics. In public, note whose name is listed first. It matters who comes to the podium and who communicates publicly. Notice who sits in what chair. Step back, even if moving forward comes naturally to you.
    9. Encourage confidence and affirm women in their leadership. Privately, let a woman colleague know if you notice her apologizing for her input or being tentative when she clearly knows what she is talking about.
    10. Base your promotion and hiring practices on substance rather than on style. Women’s leadership does not need to follow a male mold to be effective and powerful.
    11. Stop protecting women leaders. It undermines a woman’s leadership when you withhold information that you assume will be too emotionally distressing. It disempowers a leader when you assume her plate is too full and you step in to handle what she should address.
    12. Learn history. Recognize how men have shaped culture in ways that ben- efit men by disempowering women. Honor the ways women are rejecting this historic injustice.
    13. Unlearn your tendency to take charge or to feel entitled to lead. Recognize that you’ve been shaped by a patriar- chal system and that it’s possible to disrupt that system.
    14. Engage in your own inner work to recognize that your value does not depend on being higher than a woman in our cultural caste system. A man with healthy self-confidence and
    15. self-respect will accept that a woman in leadership is not an attack on your value or masculinity.
    16. Believe women when they tell you about their experiences of sexism. When they point out disempowering behavior or patriarchal assumptions by you or others, be curious rather than defensive. Don’t try to explain the ‘harmless’ intent. Find out how it could be done better.
    17. Join in women’s justified anger when their leadership is not respected. Let a woman see your anger at the injustice. Use the energy of righteous anger to learn, and carry that learning forward to help other men learn.

    Good intentions aren’t enough. Men can learn to do better and call upon other men to change their hearts and actions. That’s the workload they carry. Women have their own work to do to thrive as leaders.


    This article originally appeared in Anabaptist World, May 2024. Read or download a PDF of this article HERE.


  • Why Trees?

    Why Trees?

    In the spring of 2023, my spouse Anna Ruth Hershberger and I planted 6500 trees on the north side of Goshen Indiana. A JoinTrees grant from Mennonite Men helped with purchasing and planting these native seedlings. After our tree planting it did not rain for 3 weeks and the temperature hit 90 degrees many days during that time period. Talk about stress.

    We were blessed to have a faith community, friends and family during this time. Clay Bottom Farms let us borrow their tractor. A good friend lent us a trailer which we could load a 300 gallon tote of water on. Five evenings a week we watered. Volunteers from our church’s youth group, a next door neighbor, family, friends, ages ranging from 8 years old to 79 all helping us. Thanks to this group and Steve Thomas, who I consider to be my tree mentor, the tree seedlings made it through the drought with 90+ percent of them surviving.

    Photo: Anna Ruth Hershberger and Darren Miller and daughter Iona, Steve Thomas with Mennonite Men, and forester Michael Denman.

    When I was a teenager growing up on a farm in central Illinois my father’s hobby for those years seemed to be planting trees. Our family planted trees on our farm, at church, at a cemetery and at the local elementary school where my father served on the board. My job was to water them week after week after week. Did I enjoy this job? Not really. At this stage of life I wanted to get done as soon as possible and sneak away to play baseball. However watering and working with trees as a youth did plant a seed in me that grew into a love for nature and a love for planting trees as an adult.

    My professional career for the last 30 plus years has been supplying stains and varnishes to the cabinet and furniture industry. I worked closely with Amish communities mainly in Indiana but also in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Illinois. People often ask, ‘Can you build furniture?’ The answer is no. I cannot build it, but I can make it look beautiful. However, to build beautiful furniture, trees need to be cut down for lumber to make furniture. This industry has provided me with a weekly paycheck for many years.

    One of my favorite Psalms is 24.1. It starts with, ‘The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it’. For me these words are powerful and need respect. I believe a responsibility of mine as a Christian is to help care for God’s creation and not just take from it. Try to leave it the same or a little nicer for the next generation. It only seems right to me to plant trees and help replace at least a part of all the trees that I have supplied stain and finish for over the years.

    My family is another reason I am planting trees. Anna Ruth has worked with Anabaptist Climate Collaborative and caring for the environment is important to her. Through her and by watching how she loves and cares for the earth has rubbed off on my life. I also have two daughters who I want to pass on a love of nature to.

    Why plant trees now? For some it may be climate change. For others from the furniture industry it may be to have lumber for their children to have future cabinet shops. I have Amish friends who have converted 50 and 60 acres of agricultural land into natural habitat for deer hunting. For me, I plant trees to care for God’s creation. The reason doesn’t really matter, as long as people are planting more trees. If anyone has interest in planting trees contact Mennonite Men and help them reach their goal of planting 1,000,000 trees by 2030.


  • Guys Growing Through Gaming

    Guys Growing Through Gaming

    ‘There are good ships and wood ships, and there are ships that sail the sea,
    but the best ships are friendships, and may they always be.’ – Irish Toast


    What does every journey require? A crew. A team with a shared sense of purpose and trust. A group of people you can trust enough to show vulnerability in order to be held accountable. In working with boys and men, I see them struggling with finding their crew. Historically this crew would be found in church, on an athletic team, or maybe through work. As society has evolved, so have the places in which boys and men find their crews. Looking for friends to connect and develop meaningful relationships with other men. I am proud to say I found my crew in Kevin (aka KK, pictured left) and Brandon (pictured right). This is our story of how we have remained connected for over 10 years, adapting to the pandemic by using video games as a tool to regularly check in, encourage one another, and hold each other accountable.


    Our origin story, according to KK:

    ‘Three friends met and reconnected serendipitously amidst major life changes. We have remained friends for more than 10 years and have seen one another through career changes, devastating breakups, and difficult divorces. We have helped one another grieve and celebrate, and we’ve never done it perfectly which is why we’ve lasted this long.’

    The three of us met while I was living in Oregon. Brandon and I met working with homeless youth. KK and I met through a mutual friend. In 2019 Brandon and KK graciously agreed to join me on a life changing journey to return to the Midwest. Not many friends would give up a week of their summers on a 2000+ mile road trip to Indiana, of all places. KK wasn’t even for sure coming until the last possible moment and he always reminds us, ‘I put my own job on the line.’ As he only got his shifts covered the morning we left.

    Long story short, we made it to Indiana, but of course the journey came to an end and they both returned home to Oregon. Less than a year later we found ourselves amidst a ‘2 week global shut down’. Reconnecting over Zoom, laughing became crucial to overcome the uncertainty and loneliness, and we discovered that checking in with one another helped. So in April of 2020, when the shutdown moved from a short break to indefinitely we each decided to buy an Xbox and began playing weekly. Now the point was never about excelling past a mediocre skill level, and I’m proud to say that in just over 4 years, with hundreds of hours of playing together, we have remained true to that commitment.

    The point was always to remain connected and be a lifeline for one another. On any given week no topic is off limits – from politics, terrible dad jokes, and new hobbies we either started or wanted to start. To what came out during our recent therapy sessions or how our medication is affecting us. In those 4+ years we have only missed a few weeks of killing zombies and losing to 12 year olds. So if you’re of the mindset that video games are solely for kids and immature adults, I will let Brandon explain why we do it:


    ‘Playing video games is just an activity to keep our hands busy and engage in something together. We use gaming to have a shared purpose and to practice teamwork. Win or lose, we do it together. I think it continues to work because we sincerely want to be better versions of ourselves. Talking freely, calling each other out, asking for help, and sharing what we have learned for ourselves in hopes that it might help someone out. Knowing that we are on the same page when it comes to destigmatizing mental health is critical in building that sense of trust with one another.’


    Men tend to communicate with one another ‘side to side’ by ‘participating’ in shared passive activities – like watching sports or fishing for example. These often result in shallow relationships involving no sense of intimacy. Yes I said intimacy, because I believe that is what men are actually seeking in partners and friends, but those same gender norms have led us to understand intimate as strictly romantic or sexual. Intimacy to me means being truly seen and heard by someone else, without fear of judgment or ostracization. Outdated gender norms have placed restrictions on the ways in which men are allowed to communicate with each other, so it is important that all forms be accepted so long as they involve that desire for intimacy.


    That original trip also introduced them to new crew members – Brent (yellow sunglasses) and Scott (far right in the river). While Brent is not much of a gamer, his brother Scott wanted to be and he was also seeking connection and the support of male friends. The only issue was the cost of a new Xbox, so we agreed to pitch in and help. Thus our team of 3 weekly gamers became 4, and we continue to play (albeit at a mediocre skill level). KK points out:

    ‘This weekly game night continues to allow us to open up and to be vulnerable with one another. This has helped me avoid isolating myself when it has felt so tempting. These guys have been there for me through all of it, and I am fortunate enough to have them in my life to look up to and to help me strive to be a better person. Without any shame I am proud to say I love them and I know they feel the same for me. It’s important for men to have healthy connections where they can communicate and open up about their feelings.’

    Thanks to that first trip in 2019, we have spent a week together each summer, building on the intimacy we curate each week. We really are a crew, there to support one another through the journey. I feel out of sorts the whole week and recognize how important our relationship is to my mental health and general well being.


  • Sharing Spaces: Walnut Hill’s Legacy of Hospitality

    Sharing Spaces: Walnut Hill’s Legacy of Hospitality


    In 1956, Walnut Mennonite Church in Goshen, Indiana was a brand-new church plant born from North Goshen Mennonite Church. 33 years later, after a fire destroyed part of its building, North Goshen welcomed Walnut Hill back into their space, for free, for two years until reconstruction was complete. Area congregations with Indiana-Michigan Mennonite Conference also helped Walnut Hill rebuild after its crisis with their generous financial support.

    These were gifts that Walnut Hill never forgot, and ones which they determined to pass along when they could.


    Over the years, Walnut Hill has hosted various groups including crafting groups, Al Anon, Alcoholics Anonymous, and Music Together, and more recently Jail Ministry of Elkhart County and the Repair Network (Mennonite churches connected to the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery). Then in 2021, it opened its doors to another congregation. A small, Latinx church—the Goshen Seventh Day Adventist Church, was seeking a space to meet. With little hesitation, in large part due to how North Goshen had treated them, Walnut Hill became the home for the Goshen Seventh Day Adventist church.

    The arrangement worked quite well, so well in fact, that in 2024, when Goshen Haitian Church needed a place to meet, Walnut Hill was ready to welcome them into their space, too. And none of the groups or churches using Walnut Hill’s space is ever charged a fee. This is Walnut Hill’s way of paying forward the generosity it received. The actual building costs are kept low by using solar panels and other energy-efficient features.


    Scheduling-wise, it’s worked well as one meets on Saturday and the other on Sunday afternoon while Walnut Hill meets on Sunday morning. And the congregations are slowly getting to know each other, which benefits Walnut Hill as they are a largely homogeneous congregation. Not only does it allow Walnut Hill a way of growing community with two racially marginalized groups in the local community, but it expands their understanding of the different denominations locally, too.


    Both the Latinx population in Goshen, and the growing Haitian community, face certain challenges that Walnut Hill is becoming more familiar with and seeks to minister to.


    It’s a mutually beneficial arrangement that Walnut Hill is glad to be part of.