BURRTON, Kan. — When Aoife Rose Compton was born Nov. 18 to Rachelle and Martin Compton, she was the last child to become part of Burrton Mennonite Church. After 108 years of ministry, the church will hold its final worship service Jan. 4.
The baby girl appeared at the end of a steady stream of funerals — 14 deaths in the last five years, with 10 of those in the past two years. But Burrton Mennonite is no stranger to the cycle of life and death that has woven through its faith family for 11 decades.
Rachelle Compton, 42, cherishes how the congregation nurtured her as a child and her children today.
“Even though our kids are the only ones here and sometimes wish there were more children in the congregation, they loved having 15 sets of grandparents,” Compton said. “It’s been hard on them with so many people passing away, including Merle Schrag, who was just like an uncle to them.”
Schrag was one of Compton’s youth sponsors when she grew up in the youth group. Compton is the youngest of seven children belonging to former pastor Jim Gundy and his wife, Marjorie. They are still part of the 79-member church, which has about 25 people attend on Sundays.
“He taught us how to water ski, and we had a picnic at the lake that was a big highlight of the year,” she said. “We also put on a big concert on Christmas Eve, during which the church was always packed. By the time I was growing up, the youth group was tapering down, but some of my older brothers and sisters were part of a large youth group that had 12 baptisms in one year.”
More baptisms than funerals were standard for many decades at Burrton Mennonite. Its peak worship attendance was 125 in the 1950s and ’60s, Jim Gundy said. He was pastor from 1973 to 2004, followed by Jim Dunn.
Seventeen pastors — beginning with H.P. Krehbiel, who was also the founder of Mennonite Weekly Review — served the congregation. Western District Conference, then a part of the General Conference Mennonite Church, established it in the early 1900s for families that had settled in the Burrton area in the late 1800s. Its first meetinghouse was built in 1910, and the present-day building was constructed in 1958.
In his 31 years of ministry, Gundy said the congregation was involved in projects for Mennonite Central Committee, including running the meat counter each year at the Kansas relief sale and assembling hundreds of school and hygiene kits. The church was deeply committed to Mennonite Disaster Service.
Lifetime member Ron Dick, congregational chair, whose grandparents were charter members, said it was a tearful day when members voted to close.
“We had to face the fact that we were not showing the growth in numbers needed to keep alive the church’s original mission, reaching out to the community and sharing the Word of God,” he said.
See also: “Unexpected call led to lifelong pastoral ministry“
Have a comment on this story? Write to the editors. Include your full name, city and state. Selected comments will be edited for publication in print or online.