Canadian75 said:
I'll start slow with one topic. What can you, or anyone else, tell me about the role of public confession, excommunication, etc? I've been reading and many things are pretty straight forward, but the reference to public expulsion and re-entry after repentance was not expanded upon. I don't know if this a regular event or under what circumstances it occurs. I may be way off base.
I don't know. The Mennonite Brethren mostly dropped that practice about 50 years ago. I remember about 30 years ago one MB pastor who refused to marry couples if the bride was pregnant and they refused to confess publicly, so there were a lot of weddings from that church in the MB church in the next town.
Everything else I've been reading on the websites make perfect sense to me (somewhat surprisingly I must admit). I was surprised also to find a prohibition on divorce (something that reminds me of the RCC), but then again that is pretty much in line with Jesus' teaching anyway.
Peace.
Again, for the MB, you won't find the same kind of divorce prohibition as in the RCC. Divorce is considered a serious matter, and you are likely to see much more serious efforts at intervention to prevent it than in most other protestant churches, but I have not seen MB churches treat marriage and divorce in the same way as the RCC. First of all, you will not hear Mennonites speak of sacraments, whereas the RCC position is based on its sacramental position on marriage. Also, today you are not likely to find many MB pastors saying, as does the RCC, that divorce does not really dissolve a marriage. While they will discourage both divorces and remarriages, in general, their reasoning is based more on 1 Corinthians 7 (remain as you are or reconcile, if you can), rather than on any theory that the first marriage still exists.
I can't speak for other Mennonites. I have heard of one or two Mennonite groups taking the extreme view that a divorced and remarried person must divorce the second spouse, but I'm sure most Mennonite pastors and lay people would consider this unbiblical, since both Jesus and Paul taught against divorce in general, not only against divorcing a first spouse.
I congratulate you for doing some research on historical Anabaptist theology and practice. However, I think you'll find most MB churches (at least in the US - Canada might be a bit more conservative) closer to mainstream Evangelical theology and practice than traditional Anabaptist theology and practice. I think in someways this is good and in some ways unfortunate.
If any other Mennonites here have experience with such issues, I would be interested to learn more too - especially about any churches that still practice public confession.