I live in Pueblo, CO. There’s a deli called Southwest Deli owned and run by Mennonite folks. The store is immaculate, the food is delicious and the workers are the most sincerely kind people ever.
I once told a Menno how much I enjoyed their "peace witness." The Menno corrected me that "You should attend our business meetings. We are any thing but 'peaceful' when we get together for business."
👍certainly agree…having a Mennonite mother, I can say she looked over my dad’s shoulder when he did finances and didn’t demur her opinions. They were never poor and are able to live comfortably on what they saved and invested.
The Amish are more properly called Amish Mennonites--but most people find that too much of a mouthful. The Amish are a very conservative subset of the Mennonite movement.
@@bigscarysteve but there are some old order Mennonites which are more conservative than their Amish counterparts, depending on the community of course
The Amish and Mennonites are both relatively the same. They constantly bash you over the head about how you should be in the world and not of the world and how any violence should be met by turning the other cheek. Just weaklings hiding behind scripture to justify their cowardice and unwillingness to defend the faith.
Supplements testosterone for Men estrogen for women get them at GNC the police do them the military does them sports players do them Red Bull monster energy drinks granola bars Gatorade you need them to pass Boot camp you can get them at the base store college is Free on the military
my family is mennonite and im glad you touched on the differences between conservative/old order mennos and more mainline ones. another difference is acceptance of converts. many, but not all conservative mennonites have a “ethno-religion” type belief, whereas almost all mainline mennos accept converts and even are mostly made of converts from southeast asia and Africa
This is essentially a 2 minute version of the same lessons I was taught when attempting to become baptized and join the Mennonite Brethren Church in Dinuba, California. Excellent stuff.
@@JamesDeanStudiesLanguage I grew up and went to community college where I met many gay people. They weren't the monsters I was taught to fear, and that made me reevaluate everything else the church had taught me.
@@DavidJamesHenryThanks for sharing David. I attend a Mennonite Church and I have never heard of them refer to Gay people as monsters or in a negative way. They would say that to act upon homosexual impulses is sin, same as adultery. But the person isn’t a monster for engaging in sin. We all sin, and we all have our own sins to overcome in order to crucify the flesh and follow Christ. Would you consider that teaching too harsh?
Just to save you some time: the premillennial position has to do with an interpretation of Revelation 20.1-10. If you believe that the thousand years described in that passage is a literal period that will occur once Jesus bodily returns in our future, then you hold to the premillennial position. (Jesus arrives "before" the millennium begins, hence the prefix pre-.) The competing interpretations are the postmillennial and amillennial positions. If you take a postmillennial approach, you'll understand the thousand years to refer to a period of progress brought about by the influence of Christianity on the world, and you will expect Jesus to arrive near the end of that utopian period. If you take an amillennial approach, then you take the thousand years to be a figurative representation of the current church age.
As a person with Mennonite parents, they told me that in the church they went to as kids they were taught that the reason women had long hair was so that they could wear a "duek" ( head covering ). And there is a lot more where that came from. And dont tell a Mennonite anything you dont want other people to know, word will spread like wildfire..
That was who prayed for me in the store...they were very kind...i was like how did you know i needed prayer❤ (they stopped and asked me if i needed a prayer and i said yes, and they did so)
You should try to find some Old Order Amishmen and ask them what they think about the Mennonites. That should be interesting, but I don't know whether they would be willing to appear on camera or not.
I'm not an Anabaptist, but I would reject the idea that a believer's baptism is a "re-baptism," since I don't believe the ceremony performed on me and others as an infant was a legitimate, scriptural baptism.
That is the anabaptist view, anabaptists believe infant baptism is invalid. The name "anabaptist" was a term the Catholics and protestants used to call them and after time the name stuck.
Sounds similar to the principles that the LDS church leaders wanted to establish in the mid-1800s in southeast Nevada. They desired that men and women who settled these communities to dress plainly, in simple clothing; live communally with much of their property shared and used by all; and to eat together in a communal building. It didn't work out well, though. Those communities pretty much fell apart. There's an excellent book called, The Muddy River, about the early LDS settlements and their trials and tribulations in the miserably hot desert, and when forced to leave by the government of Nevada. I'm not LDS myself, but find the settlement of the state of Utah interesting.
Do you have a video about the Amish church? I watched a testimony from a family who left the Amish church to later become SDA. They formed the West Salem Mission Anabaptist Seventh Day Adventist Church in West Salem OH.
@@sylviadailey9126 Thank you. I saw it. I wish he spent a bit more time on the origin. Some say out of protestants but some say from John the baptist. But he was beheaded and did not start a church.
As a Mennonite who is between mainline and conservative (have family ties in the conservative but my parents left) this video was pretty well done for a quick over view
The Mennonite Church is a mainline church today (as mainline as Presybyterians are). Most Mennonites are very modern and live like anyone else. Some confuse Mennonites with Old Mennonites who are similar to the Amish (who are also Mennonite). Those are offshoots of the Mennonite Church who broke away centuries ago. I am Mennonite myself - the everyday mainline kind. I'd say the only similarity between mainline Mennonites and Old Mennonites or Amish is pacifism and adult baptism. Nothing else can be compared at all.
I'm so used to seeing dress codes in these I totally forgot mennonites are famously amish-adjacent until I saw a comment & didn't notice anything weird about them
How can Protestants, who claim to follow Scripture, be so unscriptural? It is an extraordinary paradox. Didn't Our Lord Himself tell us not to be slavish followers of any particular person, Menno Simons or anyone else (there is quite a list, beginning with the original Reformer himself), the meaning of "Call no man father"? Didn't St Paul amplify this is his Letter to the church at Corinth when he talked about this person sowing, that person watering, but God Himself being the one who makes the plants grow? Talk about "straining at gnats and swallowing camels"!
@collinsa8909 Immersion huh? This ELCA Lutheran knows better. Sprinkllng is acceptable. You focus too much on the process instead of the meaning of the act. In the ELCA, we follow that at age 14 with confirmation labeled as "Affirmation of Baptism".
Would have been nice to mention specifically that their are now more non-caucasian Mennonites than Caucasian. This video focuses mainly on the Caucasian groups, as there are no conservative or old order Mennonites amongst non-caucasian congregations. But good nonetheless to get aan overview of beliefs.
Watching this made me realize 2 minutes is not enough time to unpack "Mennonites" which also made me realize that when I watch the other 2 minute videos I can't let that be my only understanding of them. Other denominations obviously have more depth to them than a 2 minute video can share.
@@bigscarysteve The Eastern churches will say, "We are both Catholic and Orthodox." And the RCC will say the same thing. The RCC will also say that it is "Roman." And the Eastern churches will say that they too are "Roman."
@@michaels4255 I've never heard an Eastern church call itself "Roman," but the rest of what you say is formally true--but you're misunderstanding the original comment in this thread. Cristian is saying that all other denominations came from the Roman Catholic church, thus implying that all other denominations are apostate. The Eastern Orthodox Church does not claim to be formerly Roman Catholic. It claims that the Roman Catholics apostatized from _them._ When the EO church says it's "catholic," it means that it encompasses all true Christian believers, not that it came from the RCC. Not only does the EO call itself catholic and orthodox, but it also claims to be apostolic. I hope you don't think that by doing so, it's claiming that it came from Oneness Pentecostals!
There is a Mennonite church near me. It's on a major road in the suburbs of a major city. I'm not sure why they consider themselves Mennonite. Looking at pictures online, there seems to be nothing plain about them. They are even gay affirming and part of a lgbt affirming Mennonite organization.
Jesus and His apostles tell us how to be saved by providing specific commandments for salvation in the New Testament Scriptures. They are presented here with example Scripture references. Once we become Christians by obeying Jesus’ commandments for salvation below, we should practice our faith by doing good works. Though good works alone do not save, we practice them BECAUSE we are Christians. “For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also” (James 2:26 KJV). --HEAR THE GOSPEL (First Corinthians 15:1-4)
--BELIEVE THE GOSPEL (John 3:16) --REPENT OF YOUR SINS, FORMER RELIGIOUS WAYS, BELIEFS, AND PRACTICES (Acts 3:19) --CONFESS BEFORE MANKIND THAT JESUS IS THE SON OF GOD (Matthew 10:32-33) --BE BAPTIZED FOR REMISSION OF SINS (Acts 2:38; Matthew 28:19; Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; Galatians 3:27; First Peter 3:21). Scriptural baptism by total-body immersion in water, from the Greek “baptizo,” meaning to submerge or immerse, emulates Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection (Romans 6:3-5). False teachers claim that we can be saved without baptism. The Scriptures here teach that baptism is absolutely required for remission of sins and hence salvation. Don’t be obtuse. READ THE SCRIPTURES FOR YOURSELF. --LIVE A CHRISTIAN LIFE BY OBEYING AND SERVING CHRIST (Matthew 25:31-46; Revelation 2:10). The Thief on the Cross. Many people claim that we can be saved like the thief on the cross, saved by faith alone in Jesus without being baptized by immersion in water, just as the thief had faith but most likely had not been baptized. The difference is that while Jesus was on earth, He had the power to forgive sins (Matthew 9:1-8) as well as to forgive and save the thief on the cross (Luke 23:43). All that was before the New Covenant was established. Since we are not thieves on crosses today and with the New Covenant now in effect, we are subject to all of Jesus’ commandments and cannot be saved in the same manner as the thief. Thus, we must be baptized by full immersion in water for remission of sins as one of Jesus’ requirements for salvation. Ephesians 2:8-9 states that we are saved by grace through faith, not works. That is, Jesus saves us through His grace as a gift to those who have faith enough to obey His commandments, WHICH ARE NOT PERSONAL WORKS. Yet denominations abuse the passage in claiming salvation by faith alone in Jesus without being baptized. You want to invite Jesus into your heart? Fine, but DO NOT stop there. Jesus says, “If ye love me, keep my commandments” (John 14:15 KJV), just like those above. “Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you” (John 15:14 KJV). “And why call ye me, Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say? (Luke 6:46 KJV). THEREFORE, If YOU TRULY BELIEVE IN JESUS AND YOU REALLY WANT TO BE SAVED, THEN DO WHAT JESUS TELLS YOU TO DO. IT’S. JUST. THAT. SIMPLE.
Several years ago my wife and I (From CA) visited some friends, who just happened to live deep in Mennnonite country....but are vowed atheists. As we drove in and around the area, we had to constantly swerve to dodge and avoid thier horse drawn buggies, and, more than once, had to slam on the brakes....although I did get lucky twice and managed 'only clipping' two, once knocking one clear off the road and upside down! They refused medical attention, saying they were accustomed to it....and would heal up in only a couple of months or so, praise Jehovah and if HE were willing!
I live in Pueblo, CO. There’s a deli called Southwest Deli owned and run by Mennonite folks. The store is immaculate, the food is delicious and the workers are the most sincerely kind people ever.
I once told a Menno how much I enjoyed their "peace witness." The Menno corrected me that "You should attend our business meetings. We are any thing but 'peaceful' when we get together for business."
I'd say that's true of the business meetings of any denomination.
:0
@@bigscarystevei guess my church is lucky 😂
👍certainly agree…having a Mennonite mother, I can say she looked over my dad’s shoulder when he did finances and didn’t demur her opinions. They were never poor and are able to live comfortably on what they saved and invested.
Mennonites always struck me as more relaxed and sociable Amish, although that's probably from a lack of deeper interaction with either.
The Amish are more properly called Amish Mennonites--but most people find that too much of a mouthful. The Amish are a very conservative subset of the Mennonite movement.
@@bigscarysteve but there are some old order Mennonites which are more conservative than their Amish counterparts, depending on the community of course
The Amish and Mennonites are both relatively the same. They constantly bash you over the head about how you should be in the world and not of the world and how any violence should be met by turning the other cheek. Just weaklings hiding behind scripture to justify their cowardice and unwillingness to defend the faith.
Its a cult
Supplements testosterone for Men estrogen for women get them at GNC the police do them the military does them sports players do them Red Bull monster energy drinks granola bars Gatorade you need them to pass Boot camp you can get them at the base store college is Free on the military
We are all created in the image of God. I have Mennonite neighbors, and they are very good people.
my family is mennonite and im glad you touched on the differences between conservative/old order mennos and more mainline ones. another difference is acceptance of converts. many, but not all conservative mennonites have a “ethno-religion” type belief, whereas almost all mainline mennos accept converts and even are mostly made of converts from southeast asia and Africa
What do you think vitamins are for what do you think vegetables are for talk to your pharmacist
One difference among Mennonites is the size and quality of their fritters. But they have this in common: all fritters are delicious.
The Amish have suffered church splits over the width of the brims on the men's hats.
This is essentially a 2 minute version of the same lessons I was taught when attempting to become baptized and join the Mennonite Brethren Church in Dinuba, California.
Excellent stuff.
Did they not let you join?
@@greenghost6691 they let me join. I left years later
@@DavidJamesHenryWhy did you leave?
@@JamesDeanStudiesLanguage I grew up and went to community college where I met many gay people. They weren't the monsters I was taught to fear, and that made me reevaluate everything else the church had taught me.
@@DavidJamesHenryThanks for sharing David. I attend a Mennonite Church and I have never heard of them refer to Gay people as monsters or in a negative way. They would say that to act upon homosexual impulses is sin, same as adultery. But the person isn’t a monster for engaging in sin. We all sin, and we all have our own sins to overcome in order to crucify the flesh and follow Christ.
Would you consider that teaching too harsh?
Do you have a glossary of terms available? Some of these terms (like premillennial) I'm not familiar with.
That's a great idea. Although I don't know of any glossary, I learnt a lot of words just in Google. Hopefully someone has a dictionary.
Just to save you some time: the premillennial position has to do with an interpretation of Revelation 20.1-10. If you believe that the thousand years described in that passage is a literal period that will occur once Jesus bodily returns in our future, then you hold to the premillennial position. (Jesus arrives "before" the millennium begins, hence the prefix pre-.)
The competing interpretations are the postmillennial and amillennial positions. If you take a postmillennial approach, you'll understand the thousand years to refer to a period of progress brought about by the influence of Christianity on the world, and you will expect Jesus to arrive near the end of that utopian period. If you take an amillennial approach, then you take the thousand years to be a figurative representation of the current church age.
There is a Podcast explaining terms. It is called "Simply Put"
I live in Witmarsum, Friesland in the Netherlands, the birthplace of Menno Simons. That's what brought me to this upload.
As a person with Mennonite parents, they told me that in the church they went to as kids they were taught that the reason women had long hair was so that they could wear a "duek" ( head covering ). And there is a lot more where that came from. And dont tell a Mennonite anything you dont want other people to know, word will spread like wildfire..
I’d love to see a video on the various evangelical missionary / brethren in Christ churches came from the same anabaptist movement.
That was who prayed for me in the store...they were very kind...i was like how did you know i needed prayer❤ (they stopped and asked me if i needed a prayer and i said yes, and they did so)
You should try to find some Old Order Amishmen and ask them what they think about the Mennonites. That should be interesting, but I don't know whether they would be willing to appear on camera or not.
I would bet not.
I'm not an Anabaptist, but I would reject the idea that a believer's baptism is a "re-baptism," since I don't believe the ceremony performed on me and others as an infant was a legitimate, scriptural baptism.
That is the anabaptist view, anabaptists believe infant baptism is invalid. The name "anabaptist" was a term the Catholics and protestants used to call them and after time the name stuck.
Awesome page!!! Thanks for your work ☺️☺️☺️
Thank you, Joshua🌹🌹🌹🌹
I live around many Mennonites. I know nothing about their culture but their families are so adorable. They usually have lots of kids too
1:25 Those girls' dresses look colorful to me (but yes, old fashioned.
That's partly because that picture is from about 20-40 years ago but even most Mennonites would still dress "old fashioned:
great video man.
Didn't know what all this rich history of other people, it's fascinating to me
As usual very very interesting. RS. Canada
Would love an in depth video on the Amish if you haven't already, and I'm sure I'm not alone in that.
Great information but two minutes is too fast lol, can't digest. Can we do 4 minutes?
Sounds similar to the principles that the LDS church leaders wanted to establish in the mid-1800s in southeast Nevada. They desired that men and women who settled these communities to dress plainly, in simple clothing; live communally with much of their property shared and used by all; and to eat together in a communal building. It didn't work out well, though. Those communities pretty much fell apart. There's an excellent book called, The Muddy River, about the early LDS settlements and their trials and tribulations in the miserably hot desert, and when forced to leave by the government of Nevada. I'm not LDS myself, but find the settlement of the state of Utah interesting.
What Church theology today mirror the most with The early church?
The Bible and having a personal 1 on 1 relationship with Jesus Christ.
Do you have a video about the Amish church? I watched a testimony from a family who left the Amish church to later become SDA. They formed the West Salem Mission Anabaptist Seventh Day Adventist Church in West Salem OH.
Do you have a video about the vocabulary you commonly use? I have no idea what (non)millennial or eschatology is?
There's always Wiktionary and Wikipedia for you to consult--or even a real dictionary or encyclopedia!
Is that Megan Fox on the thumbnail?
Yuppers
How similar are the Mennonites with the Amish?
do Orthodoxy
He'll get to it eventually.
Why not do one for baptist?
I'm sure he'll get around to it.
There is Babtist video that has been recently uploaded to the channel. Check it out!
@@sylviadailey9126 Thank you. I saw it. I wish he spent a bit more time on the origin. Some say out of protestants but some say from John the baptist. But he was beheaded and did not start a church.
As a Mennonite who is between mainline and conservative (have family ties in the conservative but my parents left) this video was pretty well done for a quick over view
The Mennonite Church is a mainline church today (as mainline as Presybyterians are). Most Mennonites are very modern and live like anyone else. Some confuse Mennonites with Old Mennonites who are similar to the Amish (who are also Mennonite). Those are offshoots of the Mennonite Church who broke away centuries ago. I am Mennonite myself - the everyday mainline kind. I'd say the only similarity between mainline Mennonites and Old Mennonites or Amish is pacifism and adult baptism. Nothing else can be compared at all.
I'm so used to seeing dress codes in these I totally forgot mennonites are famously amish-adjacent until I saw a comment & didn't notice anything weird about them
How can Protestants, who claim to follow Scripture, be so unscriptural? It is an extraordinary paradox. Didn't Our Lord Himself tell us not to be slavish followers of any particular person, Menno Simons or anyone else (there is quite a list, beginning with the original Reformer himself), the meaning of "Call no man father"? Didn't St Paul amplify this is his Letter to the church at Corinth when he talked about this person sowing, that person watering, but God Himself being the one who makes the plants grow? Talk about "straining at gnats and swallowing camels"!
they are vey close to the Seventh day adventist
Idk about yall but I'm speed running this dudes entire playlist lol
@collinsa8909 Immersion huh? This ELCA Lutheran knows better. Sprinkllng is acceptable. You focus too much on the process instead of the meaning of the act. In the ELCA, we follow that at age 14 with confirmation labeled as "Affirmation of Baptism".
❤ I appreciate your energy. This is too much too fast
Mennonite Church USA is not a Mennonite church. They are using that name under false pretenses.
I bet it’s comfy to be one of these people
Would have been nice to mention specifically that their are now more non-caucasian Mennonites than Caucasian. This video focuses mainly on the Caucasian groups, as there are no conservative or old order Mennonites amongst non-caucasian congregations.
But good nonetheless to get aan overview of beliefs.
Watching this made me realize 2 minutes is not enough time to unpack "Mennonites" which also made me realize that when I watch the other 2 minute videos I can't let that be my only understanding of them. Other denominations obviously have more depth to them than a 2 minute video can share.
That's why the description uses the words "briefly" and "short overview"
Observation: Every denomination starts with "former Catholic", interesting...
Not the Eastern churches.
@@bigscarysteve The Eastern churches will say, "We are both Catholic and Orthodox." And the RCC will say the same thing. The RCC will also say that it is "Roman." And the Eastern churches will say that they too are "Roman."
@@bigscarysteve good thing, they had to survive under various emperors/state governments
Agree. 'former catholic" is that good or bad? Weird, and yet the Catholics remains the largest Christian group
@@michaels4255 I've never heard an Eastern church call itself "Roman," but the rest of what you say is formally true--but you're misunderstanding the original comment in this thread. Cristian is saying that all other denominations came from the Roman Catholic church, thus implying that all other denominations are apostate. The Eastern Orthodox Church does not claim to be formerly Roman Catholic. It claims that the Roman Catholics apostatized from _them._ When the EO church says it's "catholic," it means that it encompasses all true Christian believers, not that it came from the RCC. Not only does the EO call itself catholic and orthodox, but it also claims to be apostolic. I hope you don't think that by doing so, it's claiming that it came from Oneness Pentecostals!
There is a Mennonite church near me. It's on a major road in the suburbs of a major city. I'm not sure why they consider themselves Mennonite. Looking at pictures online, there seems to be nothing plain about them. They are even gay affirming and part of a lgbt affirming Mennonite organization.
Are these Amish people?
Come to Abbotsford BC. You”ll see lots of Mennonites.
Not anymore...
As a former God In Christ Mennonite, fitting into the world was rough, like what even the hell is F*R*I*E*N*D*S?😅
Have you seen parody song titled "Amish Paradise" ?
Jesus and His apostles tell us how to be saved by providing specific commandments for salvation in the New Testament Scriptures. They are presented here with example Scripture references. Once we become Christians by obeying Jesus’ commandments for salvation below, we should practice our faith by doing good works. Though good works alone do not save, we practice them BECAUSE we are Christians. “For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also” (James 2:26 KJV).
--HEAR THE GOSPEL (First Corinthians 15:1-4)
--BELIEVE THE GOSPEL (John 3:16)
--REPENT OF YOUR SINS, FORMER RELIGIOUS WAYS, BELIEFS, AND PRACTICES (Acts 3:19)
--CONFESS BEFORE MANKIND THAT JESUS IS THE SON OF GOD (Matthew 10:32-33)
--BE BAPTIZED FOR REMISSION OF SINS (Acts 2:38; Matthew 28:19; Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; Galatians 3:27; First Peter 3:21). Scriptural baptism by total-body immersion in water, from the Greek “baptizo,” meaning to submerge or immerse, emulates Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection (Romans 6:3-5). False teachers claim that we can be saved without baptism. The Scriptures here teach that baptism is absolutely required for remission of sins and hence salvation. Don’t be obtuse. READ THE SCRIPTURES FOR YOURSELF.
--LIVE A CHRISTIAN LIFE BY OBEYING AND SERVING CHRIST (Matthew 25:31-46; Revelation 2:10).
The Thief on the Cross. Many people claim that we can be saved like the thief on the cross, saved by faith alone in Jesus without being baptized by immersion in water, just as the thief had faith but most likely had not been baptized. The difference is that while Jesus was on earth, He had the power to forgive sins (Matthew 9:1-8) as well as to forgive and save the thief on the cross (Luke 23:43). All that was before the New Covenant was established. Since we are not thieves on crosses today and with the New Covenant now in effect, we are subject to all of Jesus’ commandments and cannot be saved in the same manner as the thief. Thus, we must be baptized by full immersion in water for remission of sins as one of Jesus’ requirements for salvation.
Ephesians 2:8-9 states that we are saved by grace through faith, not works. That is, Jesus saves us through His grace as a gift to those who have faith enough to obey His commandments, WHICH ARE NOT PERSONAL WORKS. Yet denominations abuse the passage in claiming salvation by faith alone in Jesus without being baptized. You want to invite Jesus into your heart? Fine, but DO NOT stop there. Jesus says, “If ye love me, keep my commandments” (John 14:15 KJV), just like those above. “Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you” (John 15:14 KJV). “And why call ye me, Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say? (Luke 6:46 KJV).
THEREFORE, If YOU TRULY BELIEVE IN JESUS AND YOU REALLY WANT TO BE SAVED, THEN DO WHAT JESUS TELLS YOU TO DO. IT’S. JUST. THAT. SIMPLE.
More separation 🤭
Nice people, creepy vibe
They got all right except the baptism by pouring. It should b by immersion
Cultish and Terrifying
These "facts" aren't 100% true. My grandfather was a Mennonite. He fought in WWII and died in Iwo Jima. Some other facts are off as well.
These guys sound much like the church of christ
They weren't so unattractive when they were still an ethnic group.
Can you let me get over my anxiety attack first
Several years ago my wife and I (From CA) visited some friends, who just happened to live deep in Mennnonite country....but are vowed atheists. As we drove in and around the area, we had to constantly swerve to dodge and avoid thier horse drawn buggies, and, more than once, had to slam on the brakes....although I did get lucky twice and managed 'only clipping' two, once knocking one clear off the road and upside down! They refused medical attention, saying they were accustomed to it....and would heal up in only a couple of months or so, praise Jehovah and if HE were willing!
1st!
0.0
Second!
I recommend watching (through the red gate) documentary it's about what happened to them in Russia 🪆 in the 1930s -1940s
Especially a ginger that is some kind of religious fanatic
This is disgusting