About

Strasburg Mennonite
Church

Our congregation originally met in Front Royal, VA, first downtown in the old Union Hall, then later in the Rivermont Fire Hall. In 2004 our congregation purchased the old Strasburg Middle School and in November of 2005, after almost a year of renovating, we were able to start holding services there.

Our congregation is one of seventeen sister churches that make up the Southeastern Mennonite Conference, which was formed in the 1970s by a number of people who wanted to work together to preserve the Anabaptist vision of living out the New Testament in practical, everyday life.

Ministerial Team

Our congregation’s leaders are selected and ordained from the membership. They are bi-vocational, which means they support themselves and their families with full-time jobs while giving their time and energy to the leadership and work of the church.

What's a Mennonite?

More than four centuries ago in Zurich, Switzerland, a new fellowship of Christian believers was formed. The Roman Catholic Church had become unspeakably corrupt. Martin Luther had separated himself from it but had continued the un-Scriptural practice of infant baptism. Ulrich Zwingli also had separated from Romanism, but continued to grant to the political rulers the right to decide the policies and practices of the church. The new fellowship, led by Conrad Grebel and Felix Manz, was formed to give men and women the opportunity to follow the Lord Jesus Christ according to the whole Word of God, the Bible. The group, hunted and tortured and persecuted at first, was mockingly called “Anabaptist” because of their rejection of infant baptism and the practice of believers’ baptism. Later they were called “Mennonite” because of the spiritual leadership of Menno Simons, who left the Catholic priesthood to follow Christ. Many Mennonites, because of the fierce intensity of persecution, migrated to Russia. When their religious freedom was threatened there, they joined others in North America who had come from Germany, Switzerland and Holland. Today, Mennonites worldwide number well over a million.

Faithful Mennonites believe that no person can be accepted by God except through confessing His Son, Jesus Christ, as master, and trusting Him as Saviour from sin. This continued trust in Christ brings from Him power over sin in the present, and confident hope of heaven in the future.

 Faithful Mennonites believe that the only spiritually successful life, the life acceptable to God, is that lived by the power of God in obedience to the Holy Scriptures. Such a life is possible only through a continuing fellowship in Christ.