Alan F. Kreider’s fire for Anabaptism burns on

​From 1974–2000

​From 1974–2000

​Alan Kreider

BERLIN, Ohio (Mennonite Mission Network) – Former mission worker, scholar and speaker, Alan Kreider, was known for his mentoring spirit that ignited contemporary Anabaptism in the United Kingdom and beyond.  

Alan Fetter Kreider was born Nov. 8, 1941, to Carl and Evelyn (Burkholder) Kreider. He died at age 75 on Monday, Mar. 8, 2017, at his home in Goshen, Indiana.

A graduate of the 1962 Goshen College class, Kreider returned to teach history there after earning his PhD in English history at Harvard University.

Alan Kreider married Eleanor Graber Nase on June 19, 1965, and the couple moved to London, where Alan did research for his PhD. During this time, they lived in the London Mennonite Centre, run by workers of Mennonite Board of Missions, a predecessor agency of Mennonite Mission Network.

In 1968, the Kreiders returned to Goshen for four years before venturing again to London for more research. Instead of returning to live at the London Mennonite Centre, the couple decided to reside in St. Albans, outside of the small Mennonite community. The friendships they formed gave a new perspective and appreciation for English life.

A call to ministry

The Kreiders began to discern a call to mission work after being approached by Wilbert Shenk, the overseas director for Mennonite Board of Missions. In 1974, the Kreiders shifted their focus from academics to mission work as they agreed to serve at the London Mennonite Centre. For the next 16 years Alan and Eleanor gave leadership of the Centre together.

They were among the first Mennonites in the UK in 400 years. Two influential books for their ministry were: John Howard Yoder’s Politics of Jesus and the More with Less cookbook. While the former helped explain Anabaptist theology, the latter provided concrete ways to live that out.

Over the next years, Kreider learned to "lean on the Lord" as he called it, and rely on God’s strength. Kreider was a rigorous scholar in history, but had little formal training in mission or theology. As Kreider continually followed God outside of his academic comfort zone, he proved to be a lifelong scholar, and learned mission and theology through self-study and practice.    

The Kreiders founded the London Mennonite Fellowship, which met at the London Mennonite Centre. Kreider quickly became a primary preacher. In 1975, Kreider was ordained for ministry, but humbly resisted the title, citing that "one implication of the priesthood of all believers was the abolition of the laity."

With increasing measure, Alan (and later, together with Eleanor) was invited to speak publically. As the Falklands War of 1982 began, debates on war, peace, and Christian discipleship were especially relevant. And the uniqueness of an Anabaptist voice gave Kreider the opportunity to debate the arms race with Sir Neil Cameron, the former Chief of the Defense Staff and Marshal of the Royal Air Force.

In both public speech and private conversations, the Kreiders focused on the radical good news, and its social, political and economic effects. This new emphasis on living out faith built ecumenical bridges and opened hearts to Anabaptism—in an increasingly post-Christian context.

The Mennonite Centre became a space for hospitality, worship, and a springboard for Anabaptist thought and practice. During their time there, the London Mennonite Centre developed into a community house that lived, ate and worshiped together. The small, but growing Anabaptist community occasionally worshiped at entrances to military bases. This was both a public witness and alternative way of living out faith. With an increasing spotlight on Anabaptist living, Kreider developed an Anabaptist resource center with a library and weekend workshops to discuss alternative ways to follow Jesus. A Radical Reformation study group also formed, gathering a number of local theologians to discuss Anabaptist thought and practice.

All of these things led to the development of the Anabaptist Network, founded with Kreiders’ guidance. This was further confirmation of Alan and Eleanor’s call to mission work.

In the early 1990s, the Kreiders’ influence continued to spread through the United Kingdom. A book co-authored by Alan Kreider and Stuart Murray Williams, called Coming Home (2000), shared stories of 60 contemporary Christians—all influenced by Kreiders’ Anabaptist teaching and modeling.

"What has happened in the last 30 years or so is that the Anabaptist voice has begun to sing again," said Stuart Murray Williams, a subsequent leader in the Anabaptist Network. "For us, Anabaptism is about mission. It is about engaging a post-Christian culture in prophetic issues. … It is a movement of renewal."

In addition to speaking in the United Kingdom, Alan and Eleanor were invited to speak at the 1997 Mennonite World Conference Assembly in India. Their joint sermon, much like their shared ministry, inspired people around the world to seek greater shalom both locally and globally. 

"Alan was distinguished by a deep and abiding passion for God’s mission that was marked by a sincere thoughtfulness, a profound ecumenicity of spirit, and a gentle and kindly hospitality in his engagement with others," said Stanley W. Green, executive director for Mennonite Mission Network. "His love for God and commitment to God’s purposes in the world, together with the largeness of his sensitivities, ensured that a large circle of friends all around the world experienced a great sense of loss upon the news of Alan’s home-going. He will be missed and long remembered."

More in-depth information about the Kreiders’ ministry can be found in the book, Forming Christian Habits in Post-Christendom: The Legacy of Alan and Eleanor Kreider, by James R. Krabill and Stuart Murray (Harrisonburg, Va.: Herald Press; and Elkhart, Ind.: Institute of Mennonite Studies, 2011).

Lifelong scholar

Kreider was raised in a family that deeply valued academics. "It was never clear whether Alan was a ‘missional historian’ or a ‘historian-missiologist’ … and that was part of his inspiring genius. Alan held so many important themes together and did so with a mesmerizing mixture of scholarly integrity and passionate faith," said James Krabill, a senior mission advocate at Mennonite Mission Network. Throughout Kreider’s time in England as a mission worker, he taught  courses on theology and history at the University of Manchester, and Regent’s Park College, Oxford.  Alan and Eleanor together taught and preached at conferences and colleges throughout the UK and in Europe.

In 2000, after concluding a quarter-century of mission work in the UK, Alan and Eleanor Kreider settled in Elkhart, Indiana, and became traveling mission educators for Mission Network until 2004. During this time, he was a guest lecturer around the globe in France, Australia, Japan, Indonesia, New Zealand and Israel. Kreider also taught occasional courses at what is now Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary as an adjunct professor in church history and evangelism. In 2004, he joined AMBS’s teaching faculty as half-time professor of church history and mission. 

"As a professor, his stories made lectures come alive," said Joanna Shenk, a student of Kreider. "Not only was he passionate about the stories of the early church, he was convinced that we could continue to embody their radical love and community. He was the best kind of historian in the sense that he saw how history could teach and inspire us today. The stories were not dead; rather, they were the soil that held fast our roots as followers of Jesus." 

An avid learner and lecturer, Kreider was also author of numerous books.

For more information on Kreider’s academic life, read AMBS professor emeritus remembered for joy, hospitality and winsome faith from Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary.

Equipping the next generation of Anabaptists

"[The Kreiders’] intellectual rigor, lively faith, love for people, and willingness to be available for conversation had a big impact," said Tim Foley, Mennonite Mission Network’s Europe director, who was also introduced to Anabaptism through the Kreiders. "Alan and Ellie (Eleanor) were friends and mentors to countless people."

As a mentor, Joanna Shenk appreciated Kreider’s compassionate listening. "While in seminary, I was doing the work of becoming an adult and asking a lot of difficult questions about my upbringing," she said. "I was wrestling with what I wanted to hold on to and what I wanted to let go. I was wrestling with what was true for me as a follower of Jesus. He walked with me through this intense and confusing time. He honored my questions and did not seek to give answers. He helped me reflect on the gifts I had been given by my family, while also seeing the importance of telling my own story."

Like many of Kreider’s mentees, Shenk went on to pastor and inspire others to live in a radically Anabaptist way.

Alan is survived by his wife, Eleanor, and son, Andrew (Katie Bast Kreider), of Elkhart; two siblings, Rebecca (Weldon) Pries of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Thomas Kreider of Goshen, Indiana; and three grandchildren, Joseph, Daniel and Eleanor Rose Kreider. His brother, Stephen, died in 2014. 

Funeral services will be held Tuesday, May 16, at 1 p.m. at Prairie Street Mennonite Church (1316 Prairie Street, Elkhart, Indiana). Refreshments and storytelling will follow the worship service.

Also see Stanley Green’s words published by The Mennonite, Remembering Alan Kreider: Three reflections.