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Where the People Go: Community, Generosity, and the Story of Everence

by John D. Roth

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"Where the People Go tells the story of Anabaptist-Mennonite efforts to enable communal forms of sharing. Mutual aid, stewardship, and generosity are deeply embedded in the Christian faith and have been actively nurtured among Anabaptist-Mennonite groups. Spontaneous forms of assistance-a barn raising, a quilting bee, shared meals-are the best-known expressions of such compassion and generosity, but the commitment to "sharing one another's burdens" has also found expression in more formal structures. Seventy-five years ago, Mennonite Mutual Aid emerged to organize the principle of sharing within growing Mennonite and Anabaptist-related denominations. A dynamic organization from the beginning, MMA moved quickly from burial and survivor's aid to include health and other insurance plans along with a charitable foundation. In coming decades, the organization expanded its focus on stewardship and generosity, symbolized by a growing emphasis on socially responsible investments, financial planning, and a credit union. Always an agency of the Mennonite church, MMA, now known as Everence, has balanced its spiritual commitments with an increasingly complex regulatory environment, the national strains associated with the health-care debate, the shifting sensibilities of its customers, and the organizational complexities of running a financial services business. This story of Everence captures the stresses and idealism of a church-related institution committed to mutual aid, stewardship, and generosity during its seventy-five-year history"--… (more)
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"Where the People Go tells the story of Anabaptist-Mennonite efforts to enable communal forms of sharing. Mutual aid, stewardship, and generosity are deeply embedded in the Christian faith and have been actively nurtured among Anabaptist-Mennonite groups. Spontaneous forms of assistance-a barn raising, a quilting bee, shared meals-are the best-known expressions of such compassion and generosity, but the commitment to "sharing one another's burdens" has also found expression in more formal structures. Seventy-five years ago, Mennonite Mutual Aid emerged to organize the principle of sharing within growing Mennonite and Anabaptist-related denominations. A dynamic organization from the beginning, MMA moved quickly from burial and survivor's aid to include health and other insurance plans along with a charitable foundation. In coming decades, the organization expanded its focus on stewardship and generosity, symbolized by a growing emphasis on socially responsible investments, financial planning, and a credit union. Always an agency of the Mennonite church, MMA, now known as Everence, has balanced its spiritual commitments with an increasingly complex regulatory environment, the national strains associated with the health-care debate, the shifting sensibilities of its customers, and the organizational complexities of running a financial services business. This story of Everence captures the stresses and idealism of a church-related institution committed to mutual aid, stewardship, and generosity during its seventy-five-year history"--

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