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- |Citation = Hoekema, Alle. Early 19th Century Baptist Influences on Dutch Mennonite Missionary Endeavors |Link = [[Media:Vol. 14 Hoekema, Alle. Early 19th Century Baptist Influences on Dutch Mennonite Missionary Endeavors.pdf]]346 bytes (38 words) - 13:08, 15 July 2010
- [[Category:United States Sources]] [[Category:Canada Sources]]2 KB (250 words) - 18:53, 24 March 2016
- ...Mission: Perspectives of Global Mennonite Brethren on Mission in the 21st Century. Comp. Victor Wiens. Winnipeg, MB, Goessel, KS: Kindred Productions, 2015. ...of the oldest MB churches as the missions efforts started in the late 19th century. Abraham Friesen and his wife were the first MB missionaries in India. They22 KB (3,468 words) - 14:38, 13 December 2016
- [[Category:United States Sources]] [[Category:Canada Sources]]21 KB (3,520 words) - 18:50, 24 March 2016
- [[Category:Prussia Sources]] [[Category:Poland Sources]]33 KB (6,117 words) - 18:46, 24 March 2016
- ...uthorities following the submission of his confession. We know that on the 19th of April he was again brought before the court to observe the swearing in o [[Category:Netherlands Sources]]29 KB (4,762 words) - 18:22, 24 March 2016
- ...it was virtually ignored until its priority was reestablished in the 19th Century. Early Anabaptists virtually ignored Mark, as did most other Christian trad ...tivated by theological concerns, and thus considered them less reliable as sources of historical facts. Today Mark’s Gospel is still widely considered to be22 KB (3,546 words) - 19:37, 4 August 2023
- ...led as one of the ministers of the Hoorn Frisian congregation. In the 17th century Hoorn had an unusual number of Mennonite branches; in 1747 the Frisians an In the early 19th century, when Prussia organized its Rhine Province (see Rhineland) and sought infor147 KB (23,366 words) - 18:42, 24 March 2016