Sam Goudie 1866-1951

  • The Pandemic of 1918-1920 and the MBiC: Part 1

    Spanish Flu. The COVID-19 pandemic is fading from memory already, but before it does, we should look back at North American Christian churches’ response to an earlier pandemic in 1918-1920. The pandemic affected nearly every country in the world and… Continue reading

    The Pandemic of 1918-1920 and the MBiC: Part 1
  • The Sherkston field: Forgotten MBiC believers

    Not only have there been forgotten workers, men and women, in the EMCC, there are forgotten communities of believers that flourished for a while but have died out. Jesus in the book of Revelation warned a church their lamp stand… Continue reading

    The Sherkston field: Forgotten MBiC believers
  • Christmas in the Church

    Since my family didn’t begin attending the United Missionary Church until I was 11, my earliest memory of a Christmas church celebration is from the United Church of Canada. If the United Churches my family attended held Christmas pageants or… Continue reading

    Christmas in the Church
  • Nonconformity to the World Part 3, Mennonite Brethren in Christ Experience

    When I was a young preacher in the Missionary Church of Canada, before the 1993 merger produced the EMCC, I attended a conference promoting a simple lifestyle. I signed a promise to live a simple lifestyle as much as possible.… Continue reading

    Nonconformity to the World Part 3, Mennonite Brethren in Christ Experience
  • Peace and War and the EMCC Part 2

    The remoter wars of the USA and Canada in the second half of the 19th century did not greatly disturb the Mennonite Brethren in Christ Church, but the outbreak of a Great War in Europe in 1914 did. By 1917,… Continue reading

    Peace and War and the EMCC Part 2
  • Troubled Borders

    Does it matter where an EMCC General Assembly meets? Could the world take interest in any action or teaching of our church today? We grumble in many congregations about issues supported by current Canadian culture with which we disagree, but… Continue reading

    Troubled Borders