Reidenbach Old Order Mennonites


Reidenbach Old Order Mennonites, also called Thirty Fivers, comprise about 10 Old Order Mennonites churches, who emerged from a split of the Groffdale Old Order Mennonite Conference in 1946 and subsequent splits. The people who formed the Reidenbach Mennonites Church were more conservative than the members of the Groffdale Conference. The original name of the new church in 1946 was "Reidenbach Mennonite Church".

History

During World War II around the year 1942 there was a conflict among the Groffdale Conference Mennonites about the question if members of the Conference should send their male youth to government-run Civilian Public Service camps or if the young males should rather go to jail. A minority group of 35 church members who opted against Civilian Public Service camps on May 30, 1946 formed the "Reidenbach Mennonite Church". The later history is characterized by a long series of splits, the major one being a division in 1977 about the use of bottled gas, which left the 158 members in two groups, one of 90 members, the John J. Martin group, who forbade bottled gas, and one of 68 members, the Amos Martin group, who allowed it. The John J. Martin group later saw several further splits.

Splits

The table below lists all splits of more than one family until the middle of the year 1996:
Name of the groupMembership
in July 1996
Date of split
Parent group
Amos Martin Reidenbach12630 May 1946Groffdale Conference
Peter O. Nolt Reidenbach31Early 1956Amos Martin
John J. Martin Reidenbach4817 Nov. 1977Amos Martin
Kleine Reidenbach Gemeinde3721 June 1981John Martin
Henry M. Hoover Reidenbach2419 Oct. 1985John Martin
Aaron Z. Martin Reidenbach2822 Feb. 1987John Martin
Rufus Z. Martin Reidenbach1910 Dec. 1987Kleine Reidenbach G.

Since 1996 some more splits happened and new splinter groups were started, mostly one family units by now.
For example, the Aaron Z. Martin group had a split shortly after they had built a meeting house on Wenzel Road, forming the Wayne H. Martin group. This group moved down to Kentucky and from a nucleus of around ten families it has now over 25 families. This group years later embraced alone standing 35er families in Lancaster County to join them. Rufus Hoover & wife for example joined them. Another example is its deacon Ivan W. Hoover. He was formerly bishop of the Kleine Reidenbach Gemeinde, was taken in as laymen among the Aaron Z. Martin group, and again voted for an office and cast for deacon. In the split he went with the Wayne H. Martin side and moved down also.
Other groups dissolved: This is valid for the whole of Kleine Reidenbach Gemeinde. It has been dissolved in the early 2000s after the last two families, neighbors on opposite street sides, separated from each other. The meeting house is not anymore used and not cared for well, its sheds are storing room for wood. Probably in some years it will be torn down and again a field area. Its location is Snyder Drive, New Holland, Pa.
The last families, Leon H. Hoover and its neighbor David Z. Hoover formed one-family-units. These families were the remnants after many splits forming new small churches out of the Kleine Reidenbach Gemeinde. After all these splits from and in the Kleine Reidenbach Gemeinde there are just two groups left over with more than one family. These are the Rufus Z. Martin group and the "Amos W. Hoover group". The last group is very much reserved to speak to outsiders.
Also the Henry M. Hoover group dissolved, resulting from an internal movement joining the Gorrie Mennonites. Henry M. Hoover, its leader, finally joined with some families the Orthodox Mennonites of Gorrie, Huron County, Ontario, while staying in Kentucky. This had a complete impact on his lifestyle, even outlook: growing full beards, getting outhouses...This had also a positive effect on their growth and for their youth who could find more company beside the closest first cousins. The term Gorrie Fivers was quoted for this group. Over 22 couples can be counted now to this group, which have a direct 35er background and are mixed marriages between 35ers and Gorrie people of before.
Some of Henry's group did not join, especially the Harvey Z. Martin side and united with the Aaron Z. Martin group in Lancaster, which resulted in a new split at that time forming the Wayne H. Martin group. This is the current second line stemming from Henry M. Hoover.
And finally the last of his group's families and single persons joined either the Amos Martin branch started in Kentucky at that time or the Groffdale Conference Mennonites and became "Städtler".
This dissolution was a voluntarian movement. Its main leader decided to join a bigger Old Order Mennonite group, some followed, others joined other Reidenbach Mennonites groups or even the Wenger Mennonites or disunited again with another Mennonite group.
The John Martin group split in 2007, which is described in a book from one side. Nowadays one side is called the "strict 35er" or Daniel Hoover group. The other side is the Paul F. Martin group. Daniel Hoover's group moved down to Kentucky after 2010 and built an own meeting house, while the Paul F. Martin branch still uses the Old Reidenbach meeting house. Both groups have 15-20 families by now.
The Daniel M. Hoover group lost some families shortly after they moved down. These persons joined a separate Amish group of Vevay, Switzerland Co., Indiana which had just 15 families itself. This splinter group of 35ers became Amish, while still having a separate identity. The term "Amish Fivers" would classify them well.
Beside these new or dissolved groups, many single family units exist, some holding church service in kitchens or living rooms, some just read from the Bible. On their children's side there is a weak, but growing tendency to leave, but still most hold to their parents and stay single because their parents separated from other families. By now there are some groups whose children reach now the late 40s and never married, had no chance, because their parents separated some decades ago and stayed alone for so many years. They followed them.
One should quote also that there was a remarkable growth in two groups. The Amos Martin group has now at least four settlements and over 85 families. It is the most liberal Reidenbacher church. Certain single families or children of the conservative side even attend their church services, some children joined and intermarried again into their parents´ or grandparents´ mother group. And as above mentioned the Kentucky group around Wayne H. Martin, grew up to thirty families by now.

Customs and belief

The belief of the Reidenbach Mennonites almost does not differ from other Old Order Mennonites. Their Ordnung does not allow cars, rubber wheels on buggies, tractors for fieldwork, TV, radio, telephones and electricity from public lines. Pennsylvania German is the language used at home and with other Old Orders, children go to parochial schools and dress is a very conservative form of plain dress. Their Ordnung is more conservative than that of mainstream horse and buggy Old Order Mennonites but less conservative than the Ordnung of the "Pikers".
But the Ordnung of the Amos Martin group is somewhat relaxed nowadays for business men in regard of cell phone usage. Also in clothes styles there is a growing difference, while the Daniel Hoover group looks rather like Pikers with unicolor shirts and some families emphasize getting more simple in lifestyle, the Amos Martin people, especially among the young are influenced by Cowboy fashion trends. Even in head coverings differences are now more visible. Formerly it was quoted the Wenger Mennonites were covering ears completely, Reidenbach Mennonites just covered half of the ear. This cannot be said anymore for the conservatives of the John Martin groups, the Daniel M. Hoover group, its coverings are even of heavier material and are white as linen
While the mother group of all Reidenbach Mennonites the Groffdale Conference Mennonites is quoted as liberal, 35ers have such a tendency in life areas not expected, like having rather racing bikes then normal types.
Even their Ordnung is changing and adapting to outside pressure, while new inventions are discussed if allowable. The Daniel m. Hoover group, its most conservative branch, allows solar panels of a certain size, and reloads thereby small batteries in their sheds, while many of them still use old-style outhouses. Henry M. Hoover's group had for example flushing water toilets allowed.

Marriage and disease

There are basically four family names among the Reidenbachs: Martin, Hoover, Reiff and Nolt, because there was only a small founder group. First cousin marriages are avoided among Old Order Mennonites, if it is possible, but in the first years of the Reidenbachs the small size of the group led to a high percentage of such marriages, as young members could not find partners inside the church who were less close related and marrying outside the church was no option because of the Ordnung of the church. From 1947 to 1965 83.3 percent of all marriages were first cousin marriages. The fast natural growth of the group improved the situation and from 1965 to 1977 only 5.9 percent of all marriages were first cousin marriages. The split in 1977 aggravated the situation again and the old problem arose anew. Therefore, the Reidenbachs are in all likelihood the most inbred group of Anabaptists. First cousin marriage are in many of the current conservative branches, but still also among the Amos Martin group happening, among the conservatives at least one group has some couples which are double cousins to each other. And there is already a single couple, whose grandparents were first cousins, their parents double cousins and they are also double cousins to each other.
In most instances in all of these new formed groups with more than one family the rate of first cousin marriages increases fast over 30%. There is hardly any other choice.
But even with this high degree of inbreeding, some families of the same condition genetically are affected hard, while others have just healthy children. Genetics call it clustering and ask why some are so much affected, others not at all.
There are two genetic diseases among them: Hirschsprung's disease and Maple syrup urine disease.
By this time many other diseases might have been found among them, but these are still widely known as typically.

Membership

In 1994 there were about 300 adult members divided into 10 subgroups. In 2008/9 membership was about 375 in 10 subgroups.
In 2015 the membership of all branches was 371
in 18 congregations and the total population was 740.
Here cited "current numbers" of 2015 are hardly showing real memberships at that time and are much too low and the congregation numbers too high.
As the Reidenbach Mennonites have a comparable high degree of growth like the Wenger Mennonites, their numbers are also doubling between every twenty and thirty years.
There is a low loss of numbers to the world and even due to problems finding some marriage partners among some groups, the membership numbers must be much higher than 371 after 21 years.
Just taking some numbers known for consideration: