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Who we are
Greeley Mennonite Church Greeley CO is closed. The building houses Redemption Church of Greeley:
https://www.joinmychurch.com/churches/Redemption-Church-of-Greeley-Greeley-Colorado-United-States/469574
https://www.joinmychurch.com/churches/Redemption-Church-of-Greeley-Greeley-Colorado-United-States/469574
Street Address
402 11th Street
Greeley,
CO
80631
United States
Phone: 970-353-7224
Fax: 970-353-7224
Download Greeley Mennonite Church vCard with Service Times
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Denomination
Mennonite Church
Affiliations
Mennonite Church USA
Church Website
Greeley Mennonite Church on Social Media
Leadership
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970-353-7224
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Greeley Mennonite Church Service Times
Greeley Mennonite Church Greeley CO is closed. The building houses Redemption Church of Greeley:
https://www.joinmychurch.com/churches/Redemption-Church-of-Greeley-Greeley-Colorado-United-States/469574
Greeley Mennonite Church service times last updated on the 11th of July, 2024
https://www.joinmychurch.com/churches/Redemption-Church-of-Greeley-Greeley-Colorado-United-States/469574
Greeley Mennonite Church service times last updated on the 11th of July, 2024
Worship Languages
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Sunday School / Children and Youth Activities
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Local outreach & community activities
At Greeley Mennonite Church, we enjoy a friendly and casual atmosphere (and tasty potlucks). Our pastor and a worship team, that values both contemporary Christian songs and traditional hymns, lead us each week. Our congregation is composed of folks from many different backgrounds. Some are long-time Mennonites while others come with no Mennonite background at all. We are teachers, engineers, mechanics, drivers, designers, farmers, authors, stay-at-home parents, nurses, accountants, retirees, students, and a few that haven’t figured it out yet.
Come join us on our journey to make a positive impact in our homes, our communities, and our world.
Come join us on our journey to make a positive impact in our homes, our communities, and our world.
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Mennonite Church Greeley Photos
Greeley Mennonite Church History
The Mennonite Church of Greeley (Colorado) held its first official meeting on Sunday morning, 12 July 1964, in the home of Howard and Marge Yost. An organizational meeting was held that afternoon at the Greeley Community Building with nine charter members. The congregation’s purpose was to provide for fellowship and witness outreach in the north-central Colorado city – an agricultural center, seat of Weld County, and the home of the University of Northern Colorado. Glenn B. Martin, a chaplain of Colorado General Hospital in Denver, served as pastor of the new congregation for one year. On 20 June 1965, the first resident pastor, Wesley Jantz, was installed and served in that capacity until 1973. The congregation began meeting in a Seventh Day Adventist Church, but in 1968 the Rocky Mountain Mennonite Conference provided the church with funds to purchase four building lots in the city’s Highland Hills section. In 1971 the congregation bought a former Evangelical United Brethren church building and parsonage at 12th Avenue and 12th Street and thereafter disposed of the previously purchased lots.
Shortly after his arrival to serve as pastor of the Mennonite Church of Greeley in October 1979, John T. Kreider was approached by Gerald Mininger, pastor of the Majestic View Mennonite Church, about the prospects of an eventual merger. Majestic View, a former Church of God in Christ Mennonite (Holdeman) congregation which had been established in Greeley in 1968, was received into the Rocky Mountain Mennonite Conference as an associate member in 1978 and as a full member in 1981. This congregation and the Mennonite Church of Greeley conducted a joint Bible School in 1982 and began holding joint worship services in February 1983. The two congregations, each having approximately 45 members, merged in June 1983 to establish the Greeley Mennonite Church. On 5 June Kreider was installed as pastor of the new congregation, and on 30 June "Articles of Consolidation" were signed to complete the organizational merger. The merged congregation began using and continued to use the former Majestic View facility at 4th Avenue and 11th Street. That congregation had purchased the building from a Lutheran church in 1969; the Mennonite Church of Greeley's former building was subsequently sold. During 2006 the Greeley Mennonite Church purchased a property in west Greeley.
Under the pastoral leadership of Curt Kuhns, who became pastor on 15 March 2010, the congregation, which then had 57 covenanted members, worked at determining its mission in Greeley. A Spanish language congregation used the church facility three nights per week.
In 2015 the Greeley congregation withdrew from the Mountain States Conference. This move was part of a larger realignment of Mennonite congregations in the 2010s that were formerly part of Mennonite Church USA. These congregations were unhappy with Mennonite Church USA's failure to take stronger disciplinary actions against area conferences and congregations who expressed openness to the inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender persons.
In 2017 the congregation joined the Fellowship of Evangelical Churches and took the name Living Water Fellowship.
From: https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Living_Water_Fellowship_(Greeley,_Colorado,_USA)
Shortly after his arrival to serve as pastor of the Mennonite Church of Greeley in October 1979, John T. Kreider was approached by Gerald Mininger, pastor of the Majestic View Mennonite Church, about the prospects of an eventual merger. Majestic View, a former Church of God in Christ Mennonite (Holdeman) congregation which had been established in Greeley in 1968, was received into the Rocky Mountain Mennonite Conference as an associate member in 1978 and as a full member in 1981. This congregation and the Mennonite Church of Greeley conducted a joint Bible School in 1982 and began holding joint worship services in February 1983. The two congregations, each having approximately 45 members, merged in June 1983 to establish the Greeley Mennonite Church. On 5 June Kreider was installed as pastor of the new congregation, and on 30 June "Articles of Consolidation" were signed to complete the organizational merger. The merged congregation began using and continued to use the former Majestic View facility at 4th Avenue and 11th Street. That congregation had purchased the building from a Lutheran church in 1969; the Mennonite Church of Greeley's former building was subsequently sold. During 2006 the Greeley Mennonite Church purchased a property in west Greeley.
In 2015 the Greeley congregation withdrew from the Mountain States Conference. This move was part of a larger realignment of Mennonite congregations in the 2010s that were formerly part of Mennonite Church USA. These congregations were unhappy with Mennonite Church USA's failure to take stronger disciplinary actions against area conferences and congregations who expressed openness to the inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender persons.
In 2017 the congregation joined the Fellowship of Evangelical Churches and took the name Living Water Fellowship.
From: https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Living_Water_Fellowship_(Greeley,_Colorado,_USA)
Greeley Mennonite Church Historical Photos
Greeley Mennonite Church listing was last updated on the 11th of July, 2024