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Articles

The Beautiful Completion of Alpha Mennonite

January 8, 2026 by Cindy Angela

There’s a season for everything and a time for every matter under the heavens.

Ecclesiastes 3:1, CEB

Sunday, December 7, 2025, marked the final worship gathering at Alpha (NJ) Mennonite Church. During 2025, the congregation celebrated its 50th anniversary and spent time in discernment about their identity and calling, guided by Pastor Charlene Smalls. Through prayer, conversation, and honest reflection, the congregation made the courageous, faith-filled decision to bring its journey to a close. For Smalls, this was less an ending than a “beautiful completion.”

Founded in 1975 by Henry and Ida Swartley, Alpha Mennonite began as a mission in a small New Jersey community. The first gatherings were held in a former Hungarian Presbyterian church.  

By the mid-1980s, nearly 125 people gathered regularly for worship. The congregation drew believers from varied traditions who found unity in their love for Jesus Christ and their shared commitment to practicing Mennonite faith in community. Sunday School, multigenerational worship, fellowship, and service shaped the rhythm of church life. 

In recent years, as members aged and numbers shifted, the congregation navigated change, most recently without a permanent pastor. Smalls joined them for a season of transition while they asked a tender and honest question: When is it time to trust God with our past and release what we have known for the sake of what the Spirit may yet do? 

In their final weeks, the church studied the Gospel of John with emphasis on relationships. The Sunday before the last service, longtime participant Barbara Bajkowski asked to be baptized and officially welcomed as a member before the congregation’s closure. Leadership Minister Gary Alloway joined Smalls in celebrating her baptism. 

Baptism of long-time attendee Barbara Bajkowski who wanted to be counted as a member of Alpha and be baptized before the doors closed.

Those gathered in early December came to mourn, to remember, and to give thanks for decades of shared faith. The final worship service included times of storytelling, a historical reflection from Jim Lee, a “cloud of witnesses” remembrance led by Bajkowski, a Litany of Remembrance and Release, and a ritual of placing stones inscribed with scripture. 

The service was deeply emotional. Member Nancy Lee later reflected that during the time of worship she recalled “forty years of memories… Bible study, worship, shared sadness and celebration, and always a lot of love.”  

Jim Lee, Jr. found the day to be “a moment of closure, which was not a failure, but a celebration of every life the church has touched since 1975.” He was touched by those who were present on the final Sunday who hadn’t participated with Alpha in recent years but offered their support.  

Bajkowski reflected on the countless ways the congregation had encouraged her, recalling even a simple moment of being cheered on to try a zip line at a retreat as a symbol of Alpha’s steady support. 

Pastor Smalls expressed gratitude for “the opportunity to serve Alpha and to walk with them as they discerned what a new beginning looks like after years of faithful service.” 

Alpha Mennonite Church has completed its season faithfully. Its legacy continues in the lives it shaped, the relationships it nurtured, and the seeds of faith it planted—beautifully, and in God’s time. 


Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Alpha

Watching Together in Bristol

January 8, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Gary Alloway

Last February, I had breakfast with my friend Don, who is in his 70’s, a life-long Bristolian, and a like-minded soul. Don expressed that he had always wanted to start a movie club in Bristol. So we began dreaming. As contemplative Christians, we thought it would be fun to show movies with spiritual themes and have discussion afterwards. We pulled in our Mosaic Summer Ambassador Lincoln to help us build this ministry. Thus, the Bristol Film Club was born. 

But then a weird thing happened. We planned our first business meeting and none of our Christian friends showed up. But our neighbors did. And our planning team became a diverse and eclectic mix of people from all walks of life. Then the event took off.  

We’ve had a full event every month. In September, we had a successful potluck as we watched Big Night, a movie about an Italian restaurant. In October, we partnered with the Bristol Ghost Tour, showed a short horror film made by a Bristol High School student, and watched Night of the Living Dead.  The room was full of life and energy.   

I’ve struggled to articulate whether this is a church event or even to know for sure what God is up to in this. But I can say, six months in, Bristol Film Club has opened more relational channels than just about any church event I have created. My sense is that it is because I am building this with people, not for them.  

We are working together. I am not trying to get them to come to my thing. It is our thing. Defensiveness is down and the sense of friendship is up. Some on our team would have little to do with church but know far more about film than I do. More often than not, I follow their lead and learn from them. Suddenly, we are next to each other. And suddenly, we are friends.   

Photos courtesy of Gary Alloway

The recent Christmas season reminds us that Jesus is ‘Immanuel,’ God with us. Despite being God, Jesus eats with sinners. He walks with the disciples. Jesus is with those in need, ready to break bread with them. He walks with people into the Kingdom of God, rather than waiting for them to show up.

Ultimately, I don’t know what God is doing with Bristol Film Club. But I have cherished the opportunity to work with my neighbors and create something beautiful together. I can’t help but feel that we are walking towards God together. 


Gary Alloway

Gary Alloway is a Leadership Minister for Mosaic Conference. He is also pastor and church planter of Redemption Church of Bristol (PA). Gary serves with his wife, Susan, and his children who deeply love pretzel dogs from the Bristol Amish Market. Gary has a passion for Philadelphia sports, crossword puzzles, and for seeing broken people connect to the amazing love of God.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To contact Gary Alloway, please email galloway@mosaicmennonites.org.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gary Alloway, Redemption Church of Bristol

Ministerial Committee Update – December 2025

January 1, 2026 by Cindy Angela

The Ministerial Committee makes decisions on ministry credentials and policies that promote the support, health, and training of credentialed leaders and safe church practices for congregations. They meet quarterly to act on recommendations from the credentialing committee, review and revise current policies around credentialed leaders, and provide leadership in cases of misconduct. 

Report from the December 3, 2025, Ministerial Committee Meeting   

Committee Actions

Credentialing 

Transfers of Ordained Pastors 

  • Rigoberto Negrón – Iglesia Menonita del Cordero (Brownsville, TX)
  • Maria Alma Solis – Iglesia Menonita Fuente de Agua Viva (Los Fresnos, TX) 
  • Jose Alejo Solis – Iglesia Menonita Fuente de Agua Viva (Los Fresnos, TX) 
  • John Holsey – Providence Mennonite Church (Collegeville, PA) 

Updates, Discussions, and Upcoming Conversations  

Credentialing Requests in Process – There are currently 15 leaders in process for licensing towards ordination, licensing for special ministry, transfers, and ordination. 

Credentialing Procedure Update – An overview was given of the recent changes and updates reflecting the change in relationship with Mennonite Church USA. Further revisions will be presented at the next meeting. 

Posture Document Application in Ministerial Committee and Credentials Committee –There was a review of the Credentialing Profile for Leaders (replacing the Ministerial Leadership Information/MLI form). The committee shared feedback, including additional questions for the profile and thoughts concerning the interview process. 

Healthy Boundaries Training – Due to difficulty accessing healthy boundaries training, the proposal to use Mosaic policy documents as a basis for a training course was met favorably. Mosaic policy documents were shared, and necessary revisions were discussed. Staff will continue to revise these documents and present them to the committee at the next meeting. 

Allegations of Misconduct – Mosaic will partner with GRACE (netgrace.org) to process misconduct claims and investigations and to work at developing new policies and procedures. 


Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ministerial committee

When Generations Pray Together

January 1, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Jim McCarthy

It is beautiful when younger and older people come together for prayer. Mosaic Conference-Related Ministry (CRM) Indian Creek Foundation’s (Souderton, PA) December Prayer Brunch brought together more than 50 pastors, staff, residents, and friends for a morning of worship, storytelling, and purposeful prayer. Held on December 5 at CRM Living Branches Souderton Mennonite Homes, leaders from both organizations, Ed Brubaker, CEO of Living Branches, and Dr. Tim Barksdale, the new CEO of Indian Creek Foundation, joined the group, offering encouragement and gratitude for the prayerful support. 

The brunch reflected the diversity and creativity of the community. Attendees were treated to poetry and rap performed by Indian Creek employees, drumming and vocals by Makinto of CRM Amahoro International (Bombo, Uganda), and thoughtful reflections from historian John L. Ruth on faith, science, and life. A shared meal and time of conversation created space for meaningful connections across generations and roles. 

Young and old leaders gather for prayer for Indian Creek Foundation.

These monthly Prayer Brunches are part of a renewed emphasis on communal prayer at Indian Creek Foundation, an emphasis that reaches back to the organization’s earliest days. Founded more than 50 years ago out of local Mennonite congregations, Indian Creek was built on the conviction that spiritual care mattered as much as housing, vocation, and daily support. Helping individuals with intellectual disabilities find belonging and community was central to the mission from the beginning. 

That foundation continues to shape Indian Creek’s values today. Mennonite principles of compassion, mutual respect, and a Philosophy of Care grounded in relationships remain central to the organization’s work. Indian Creek relies on area churches and people of faith for volunteer involvement, financial support, and especially prayer. 

In September, I sensed it was time to intentionally elevate that prayer support. Retired Executive Director Joe Landis (Salford Mennonite [Harleysville, PA]) helped launch a new series of monthly Prayer Brunches designed to bring together pastors, Indian Creek staff and residents, and community members in a welcoming, church-based setting. 

From left, Makinto, John L. Ruth, and Joe Landis at the Dec. 5. prayer gathering.

The first brunch, held in September at Salford Mennonite, was a small gathering but laid the groundwork for what was to come. In October, the group grew and took on new depth as staff members and guests were invited to share their stories. 

Among them was Carol Menser, who has received support from Indian Creek in various ways since its incorporation in 1975. Menser attended the brunch with friends and shared her story of perseverance and growth, a testimony to what is possible when individuals receive consistent, compassionate support. October’s gathering also introduced Dr. Tim Barksdale to local pastors, creating space for informal connection and relationship-building. 

By November, attendance had grown to around 50 people, including additional staff members and Indian Creek residents. The atmosphere was one of encouragement and gratitude, as participants prayed together and put faces to names. 

“The Prayer Brunch was amazing,” shared Susan Guida, Director of Nursing at Indian Creek. “It was nice to socially engage with everyone in such a meaningful and purposeful way.” 

While faith-based activities have always been part of Indian Creek’s programming, their scale and visibility have shifted over the years. The monthly Prayer Brunches represent a new expression of a long-held tradition that keeps Indian Creek present in the prayers of local congregations while also building new relationships.  

“I sincerely thank Dr. Jim McCarty and Joe Landis, Founder of Indian Creek Foundation and Peaceful Living, for their vision and leadership in organizing this unifying and powerful Prayer Breakfast,” shared Tim Barksdale, CEO of Indian Creek Foundation. “Their commitment to creating deeply meaningful opportunities for individuals supported by Indian Creek Foundation to not only attend local churches, but to stand as ambassadors, offer prayers for this community, and voice their own needs. This ministry reflects the power of inclusion and mutual faith, and it strengthens the entire community.” 

Each gathering includes a devotional offered by a local pastor, followed by focused prayer. The vision for these gatherings is that individuals from Indian Creek will attend as ambassadors, representing their own needs for prayer and their concerns. We are looking for local church support and hosts as we seek God’s direction and purpose for our work. 

Indian Creek Foundation invites pastors, congregations, and community members to join this ongoing rhythm of prayer. The next Prayer Brunch will be held Friday, January 9, 2026, from 9:30–11 a.m. at Souderton Mennonite Homes (207 W. Summit Street, Souderton, PA). Margaret Zook, Director of Collaborative Ministries for Mosaic Mennonite Conference, will be the guest speaker. Please RSVP by January 5. To attend, host a future brunch, or learn more about ministry opportunities, contact Jim McCarty at jmccarty@indcreek.org.  


Jim McCarthy

Dr. Jim McCarty serves as Coordinator of Faith Services for Indian Creek Foundation. He is an ordained elder and graduate of Asbury Theological Seminary.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Indian Creek Foundation, Jim McCarthy, Peaceful Living, Souderton Mennonite Homes

Anabaptism at 501: Rooted, resilient, ready for what’s next

January 1, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Josh Meyer

Editor’s Note: Originally published on Dec. 22, 2025, in Anabaptist World and reprinted with permission.  

We’ve celebrated 500 years. That’s no small thing. But anniversaries are never just about what’s behind us. They’re also about what’s ahead. 

Anabaptism at 501 and beyond must be more than a historic label. It must be a living, breathing way of following Jesus. 

So, what do I think the future holds for our tradition? What do I hope it holds? 

I see both danger and promise. I’ll name three tensions I believe the church must navigate with wisdom and courage, plus three hopes I pray will take deeper root. 

Tension No. 1: Nostalgia vs. imagination

There is a temptation in anniversary years to romanticize the past. We tell the stories of Michael Sattler and the Schleitheim Confession, and rightly so. But we sometimes forget that those stories were forged in risk, innovation and improvisation. 

Anabaptists didn’t start out with a clear road map. They started with conviction, community and costly trust in Jesus. We honor them not by copying their methods but by joining their spirit, rooted and responsive, unafraid to follow Jesus into new terrain. 

In a rapidly changing world, nostalgia will not sustain us. Imagination will. What will church look like when it’s no longer centered around buildings, bulletins or Sunday mornings? What will discipleship look like in a digital, disembodied age? 

The Anabaptism that flourishes in the next 500 years will not depend on how well we preserve our traditions but on how faithfully we follow Jesus, even when it means letting go of the ways we’ve always done things. 

Tension No. 2: Isolation vs. interdependence 

Historically, we’ve drawn boundaries to preserve faithfulness. And there’s wisdom in that. But in a global church increasingly connected and postdenominational, we risk becoming siloed, even self-righteous, if we define ourselves only by what we are not. 

Our tradition has deep gifts — peace witness, mutual aid, community discernment, nonconformity, simplicity — but they are meant to bless the broader body of Christ, not stay locked in our theological cupboards. 

I believe the future of Anabaptism will be ecumenical and intercultural, or it will shrink into irrelevance. I’m seeing this already in younger leaders who are less concerned about denominational lines and more focused on lived discipleship. They want to learn from a Benedictine monk and a Mennonite farmer. They want to plant churches that look like the Kingdom, not like 1980s White rural America. 

That means partnerships, mutual learning and a posture of humility. It also means cross-cultural leadership, translation of our core convictions into new languages and trust that the Spirit is not only behind us but ahead of us. 

Tension No. 3: Burnout vs. hope 

I’ve seen it in my peers — pastors weary from polarization, exhausted from culture wars, unsure how to lead congregations that span five generations and 10 worldviews. Some are quitting; others are staying, but struggling. 

The future of Anabaptism cannot rest on hero pastors or perfect programs. It must be carried by a community of hope, one where leadership is shared, where vulnerability is honored and where the Spirit breathes new life. 

This is a time for reimagining how we care for leaders and communities. It’s time to embrace spiritual formation not as an optional add-on but as the heart of our life together: sabbath rhythms and shared meals, spaces to grieve and to question, opportunities to learn and to practice our faith, invitations to play and to pray together. These are not distractions from the mission. They are the mission. 

A burned-out church will not bear good news. But a hopeful church — even a small one — can. 

Hope No. 1: A church that looks like the neighborhood 

My prayer is that Anabaptist congregations would look more and more like the communities they’re rooted in. Not just demographically, but in language, practice and relational depth. 

That will mean letting go of uniformity. It will mean embracing bilingual worship, lay-led expressions of church and a willingness to be uncomfortable. It will mean investing in leaders who weren’t formed in our systems. It may mean giving up control. 

But it will also mean that our churches feel less like enclaves and more like households of hospitality — sacred spaces where immigrants, refugees, seekers and skeptics find belonging and where Jesus is encountered in shared life, not just shared doctrine. 

Hope No. 2: An economy of enough 

We need a renewal of economic imagination. In a world addicted to accumulation and defined by scarcity, the early Anabaptists embodied a radical form of mutual aid. 

I see glimpses of this today: churches paying off medical debt, co-housing experiments, alternative retirement models, congregational sharing funds and people using donor-advised funds for joyful, intentional generosity. 

What if we became known not just for rejecting violence but for rejecting greed? What if we lived “enoughness” in such compelling ways that our neighbors began asking questions? 

We cannot preach peace while bowing to capitalism. We cannot talk about community while ignoring inequality. Anabaptism must remain a spiritual movement and embrace its potential as an economic movement as well — rooted in justice, generosity and joyful resistance. 

Hope No. 3: A church awake to the presence of Christ 

Finally, I hope we stay awake. Awake to the presence of the Risen Christ among us: in scripture, in creation, in the breaking of bread and the breaking of bodies. 

I hope we keep listening for the Spirit: in silence, in song, in shared discernment.  

I hope we recover a sacramental imagination: for communion and baptism, yes, but also for compost bins and conflict transformation, for parenting and protest, for financial planning and footwashing. 

Anabaptism at its best has always been about lived faith and embodied discipleship. Not just right belief, but right practice. Not just Sunday worship, but Monday courage. 

That is what the world needs now. And that, I believe, is what Christ is calling us toward: a church rooted in love, resilient in hope and ready for whatever comes next. 


Josh Meyer

Joshua Meyer is a Leadership Minister with Mosaic Mennonite Conference. He also serves as a Financial Consultant with Everence and as an adjunct professor at Eastern University.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To contact Josh Meyer, please email jmeyer@mosaicmennonites.org.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Anabaptism, Josh Meyer

The Cost of Awareness

December 18, 2025 by Cindy Angela

by Charlene Smalls

The certainty of children being safe at school has been taken away. Racism has our souls weighed down in either struggle or pride. 

As a pastor, I am tasked with being a witness to both faith and the world. To lead effectively, I must stay informed. 

Last night, as I put in the daily effort to stay informed, what do I witness? The shadow of a school shooting. The horror of a recent attack on the Jewish community. The persistent, crushing racism like nothing I’ve encountered in my 65 years. 

Watching the news last night, the sheer weight of it all was too heavy. I cried out to God, asking the question that is a primal scream of the soul: Why must our differences—color, culture, creed—fuel this profound hatred? 

This is a cry from a weary heart, not a call for blame. May our collective awareness of this suffering stir us, at last, to a compassion as boundless as the love we preach. Let us pray: 

O God of boundless love and endless compassion, 

We lift up the aching weight of tonight. We pray for the victims of senseless violence, for students, for families, and for the Jewish community who bear the relentless pain of hate. 

Grant us the courage to confront the deep roots of racism and prejudice—the roots we see thriving in the news, and the roots we encounter even in the most sacred of spaces. 

Sustain the weary hearts that carry multiplied burdens. Strengthen our resolve to move beyond mere awareness into transformative action. May we, your people, reflect a compassion stronger than any hatred, and a unity that overcomes every division. 

In the spirit of hope, Jesus, we pray. Amen. 

Reposted with permission from Facebook on December 15, 2025.  


Charlene Smalls

Charlene Smalls is co-pastor of Ripple in Allentown, PA.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Charlene Smalls, Ripple

Sitting with ICE Detainees: Proclaiming that God Knows Their Suffering

December 18, 2025 by Cindy Angela

by Mark D. Baker

I sat in a circle of inmates in the county jail. That is not unusual. I have led a jail Bible study weekly for over fifteen years. Recently, however, I started doing a second study in Spanish. It is in the pod of federal prisoners in the Cumberland County Jail (Maine). Most of the men gathered around me were ICE detainees. I could have repeated the study I had just done in another pod, but these men’s situations and concerns were so different. I had prayed that morning for an idea that would connect with and comfort them. 

We began reading Hebrews 4:14-16. After making a comment that priests in the Old Testament served as the people’s representatives before God, I underscored that in Jesus, the Son of God, we have a priest who as a human has suffered as we have. I said, “Let’s list some ways Jesus suffered.”  

Aware that some of the men sitting beside me had fled violence in Venezuela and Central America, I began with the observation that as a boy Jesus’s family had lived as refugees in another country—fleeing the threat of violence. Different men stated other things Jesus suffered: hunger, betrayal, false charges, seeing others suffer. Without getting into details of why I think “construction worker” is a better translation of “tektōn” than “carpenter,” I simply stated that Jesus was a construction worker and I asked them what difficult working situations he may have suffered. I listed a few other things he suffered: shame of being from a town with a poor reputation, living under an oppressive political power, and persecution by a judgmental religious system. 

I then told them of my experience seeing the remains of Caiaphas the High Priest’s house in Jerusalem—including walking through the basement that had served as a jail. I showed them a picture I took outside Caiaphas’ house, and said, “While we stood beside this old pathway, our guide said, ‘These steps are from the first century. This is the path from the Kidron Valley.’ I immediately thought, ‘Jesus walked on these stones.’ Then, standing there looking down the steps I imagined guards leading Jesus up this lane after his arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane.” I looked at the men and said, “God in the flesh, as a human, has, like you, been seized by guards, taken to jail, stood before a judge.” God knows what you have experienced. 

Caption: Caiaphas steps. Photo by Mark Baker.

Spanish has two different words for “know.” Saber is to know information. Conocer is to know through experience. I saber about China, but I conocer Honduras—I lived there. Looking in their eyes I said, God does not just sabe about your suffering, Dios conoce what you have experienced. 

I invited them to name ways they were suffering—just stating a word or saying more if they desired. Then, as we entered into a time of prayer, I suggested they imagine Jesus at God the Father’s right hand—and pray with the full confidence that God conoce their situation. After a time of silent prayer, I prayed for them, said amen and proclaimed to them: “God is with you and God conoce what you are experiencing.” 

Each week now I leave in sadness. From what I read in the news I can offer these men little hope that they will be released. In fact I fear they will face worse conditions at an ICE detention facility before they are deported. Yet, as I did this past week, I proclaim to them from Romans 8 what I do know is true for them and us—nothing can separate us from the love of God. 


Mark D. Baker

Mark Baker is Professor Emeritus of Mission and Theology, Fresno Pacific Biblical Seminary (formerly Mennonite Brethren Biblical Seminary). He now lives in Portland, Maine. He previously was a missionary in Honduras for ten years. He has written a number of books in English and Spanish, including, Centered-Set Church: Discipleship and Community Without Judgmentalism and Ministering in Honor-Shame Cultures: Biblical Foundations and Practical Essentials.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Mark Baker, Mark D. Baker

Reflections on Hospitality Ministry in Calais, France

December 11, 2025 by Cindy Angela

Editor’s Note: Mennonite Mission Network has issued an urgent call for winter volunteers at the St. Maria Skobtsova House in Calais, France. Learn more about this hospitality ministry from Mosaic Partner in Ministry Peaceful Borders, and from a former volunteer who is part of a Mosaic congregation. 

Building Community in a Calais, France Suburb 

By Simon Jones 

Surrounded by a high wall and secure gate is a liminal place between hardship and home that offers the hope of respite and refuge. Up to fourteen women and children at any one time live there. 

The well-appointed house is filled with the carefree laughter of preschoolers, its kitchen alive with the smells of cooking, as women, starved of the opportunity to provide for themselves and their families, now cook and gossip and share food with everyone in the house. 

This is La Maison St. Maria Skobtsova (MSH), opened a decade ago to provide a place of safety and rest for displaced people from across North Africa and the Middle East. Over that time, it has been home to Eritrean men, volunteers working across the city, and now to women and their children. It has occupied two sites, moving to this present one in the summer of 2025. 

For the last three years, the house has been overseen by Mennonite Mission Network workers, Joseph and Rachel Givens, who moved to Calais with their two boys in 2022. They work with a group of volunteers overseen by a management committee, to ensure the smooth running of the house and to accompany the guests throughout their stay. 

Gathered around the kitchen table. Photo by Joyce Hunsberger.

Volunteers come from across the world, though mainly Europe; they serve for a few weeks to three months or more. Some come only once, but others come for a term, return home and come back once they have refreshed their bodies and bank balances. Volunteers share the running of the house and the serving of the guests. The work is joyous and demanding–from cleaning bathrooms to accompanying guests to medical appointments, playing with children, shopping for supplies, and most importantly, joining the daily prayers of the house community. MSH exists to be a prayerful presence among the displaced in Calais. 

Life in the house is rich and complex. One of the volunteers, a retired French nun, says, everyone in the house is always on the point of leaving. Leaving is a constant that everyone lives with. She adds that “the community is a dynamic place, full of life, hope and energy, full of young people keen to make something of their lives.” These people make the community what it is. 

The house is full of difference—different countries and continents, different life experiences, different religious understandings and denominations. It works because Givens and the volunteers help these different people to get along, form community, and support one another. 

You can get more information about the house from me at simon@peacefulborders.org.

A Month of Hospitality in Calais 

by Joyce Hunsberger

The Mennonite Mission Network SOOP assignment in Calais, France, offers the chance to be a caring presence in the Maria Skobtsova House. Named for a Russian Orthodox saint who cared for refugees, migrants, the unhoused, and Jews in Paris during the second world war, the house is a refuge for women and children who have fled their home countries and hope to cross the English Channel to seek asylum in England. Smugglers charge high fees for dangerous crossings in overcrowded inflatable boats; drownings occur each month. One guest I met had already tried to cross six times. 

I spent a month living with 13 guests from Iraq, Iran, Eritrea, Libya, and Sudan. Volunteers came from across Europe, and together with guests we shared daily chores. Since my stay in 2024, the community has moved to a beautifully renovated building with more space, including a large new kitchen. The days follow a gentle rhythm of Taizé songs and prayers, plus occasional outings to the beach, a café, or the canal. Arabic was the most common language in the house, though I enjoyed speaking French in town and even used some German with an Eritrean family who had lived their for a time. Google Translate helped us bridge the rest. 

The author at work in the kitchen. Photo courtesy of Joyce Hunsberger.

The main “qualification” for being here is simply to treat residents as siblings, children of the same Father. It is not hard to do! Guests are grateful for a safe home. I offered English lessons, and they participated eagerly. Each evening the whole household shared dinner; Berbere (a favorite Eritrean spice) and fresh injera (a spongy sourdough bread) filled the kitchen daily. Donations of French bread were always on hand, along with Cheerios for breakfast. 

Other organizations support refugees in Calais, and the house collaborates closely with them. The men live in a camp outside town, which authorities dismantle every 48 hours, though the men return the next day. One day we chopped wood for them to use for cooking and warmth. 

Though the experience was challenging, volunteers were well supported. Whatever gifts you bring are enough. I came home changed, and from Pennsylvania I still whisper prayers for the house in Calais, a place filled with courage, welcome, and hope. 


Simon Jones

Simon Jones is a writer, activist, theologian, and Baptist minister. He co-founded Peaceful Borders in 2016 to support community formation in the Calais Jungle. He also co-founded the safe house in Calais in 2016. He is the author of 10 books on New Testament themes and ecclesiology.

Joyce Hunsberger

Raised in New England, Joyce Hunsberger moved to PA to teach French. Her two daughters were raised at Perkasie (PA) Mennonite, where she continues to be an active member. She has been happily living at Souderton Mennonite Homes for the past seven years.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Mennonite Mission Network, Peaceful Borders, Perkasie, Simon Jones

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