As a new year starts, we often resolve to do things better. Here are five resolutions to try to do some good for yourself and the planet.
On January 3, 2013, it will be exactly fifty years since I had a dramatic conversion experience in which I committed myself to follow Jesus in The Way. I was sixteen; now I am sixty-six.
It’s over, but is it? Another Christmas has come and gone, but I wonder how many ghosts of Christmases past will haunt our Christmas celebrations in the years ahead?
Vinegar is an ancient product that has been used for many diverse purposes such as making pickles and salad dressings, cleaning counters and setting dyes.
New Year’s is typically a time when individuals make resolutions. These resolutions are often about personal improvement, related to health, wealth or family.
In Karla Braun’s most recent editorial in the MB Herald, the publication of the Canadian Mennonite Brethren Conference, she writes about her experiences in a small-town high school.
If cranberries are on your Christmas menu this year, you are doing diners around the table a big favour.
As a child Christmas was always filled with great wonderment and anticipation. The meeting with Santa Claus at the mall was a nervous experience as it seemed this person was the lone decision maker in whether or not I was going to receive any presents Christmas morning.
Mennonite Heritage Village was incorporated in 1964 as the culmination of several years of dreaming, planning and preparation by the Manitoba Mennonite Historical Society.
As I watched the line up of cars waiting at the drive thru for Tim Horton’s this morning while I walked our dog in Penner Park, I couldn’t help but wonder why Canadians like to spend so much time burning gas and going nowhere?