Mennonite Churches
 American Denominations > Denominational Family Trees > Mennonite Family
Search Denominations:

Defenseless Mennonite Brethren in Christ of North America
Description not available.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 2000

  • Churches: 12
  • Members: 1,626

Hutterian Brethren
Description not available.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 2000

  • Clergy: 600
  • Churches: 444
  • Members: 43,000

Fellowship of Evangelical Bible Churches
The Fellowship of Evangelical Bible Churches can be traced to work organized in 1889 by Isaac Peters and Aaron Walls. Going through a variety of name changes, prior to 1987, the group was known as the Evangelical Mennonite Brethren Conference.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 2003

  • Clergy: 47
  • Churches: 16
  • Members: 2,020

Evangelical Mennonite Brethren Conference
Description not available.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 1985

  • Churches: 14
  • Members: 2,094

General Conference Mennonite Church
The General Conference Mennonite Church was founded in 1860 through the union of more liberal and innovative Mennonite congregations under the leadership of John H. Oberholtzer.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 1999

  • Clergy: 541
  • Churches: 295
  • Members: 35,759

Conservative Mennonite Conference
The Conservative Mennonite Conference was founded in 1910 as an association of liberal Amish Mennonite congregations.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Data not available.

Conservative Amish Mennonite Church
Description not available.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 1957

  • Clergy: 115
  • Churches: 67
  • Members: 5,585

Old Order Amish Mennonite Church
The Old Order Amish Mennonite Church was founded in Switzerland in the seventeenth century by Mennonites under the leadership of Jacob Amman. Amish first came to America in the eighteenth century and have become known for the horse and buggy culture they perpetuate.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 1993

  • Clergy: 3,617
  • Churches: 898
  • Members: 80,820

Beachy Amish Mennonite Churches
The Beachy Amish Mennonite Churches started when Bishop Moses Beachy refused to pronounce the ban against some former Old Order Amish members.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 2003

  • Clergy: 565
  • Churches: 185
  • Members: 10,773

Reformed Mennonite Church
The Reformed Mennonite Church, a very conservative Mennonite body known for its use of shunning (or avoidance) of deviating members, was founded in 1812 by John Herr and former members of the Mennonite Church.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 2003

  • Churches: 10
  • Members: 263

Church of God in Christ, Mennonite (Holdeman)
The Church of God in Christ, Mennonite, was founded in 1859 by John Holdeman, a former member of the Mennonite Church.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 2003

  • Clergy: 501
  • Churches: 118
  • Members: 13,307

Old Order (Wisler) Mennonite Church
The Old Order (Wisler) Mennonites, one of several factions of the Old Order Mennonites, was founded in 1870 by Jacob Wisler.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 1980

  • Churches: 38
  • Members: 9,731

Mennonite Church
The Mennonite Church grew out of the 16th century Swiss Brethren and was named for Menno Simons, one of their Dutch leaders.

Most Recent Membership Data:
Year 2002

  • Churches: 964
  • Members: 112,688