Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wenger anticipated being given the position but was rejected because its bishops were uncomfortable with college education. [1] On 3 April 1937, Wenger married Ruth Derstine Detweiler (19 December 1906, Sellersville, Pennsylvania - 19 February 1992, Goshen, Indiana). They had four children: Daniel, John, Mary, and Elizabeth.
John Christian Wenger; Y. Sanford Calvin Yoder This page was last edited on 28 December 2019, at 22:34 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
John Weaver Wenger (1778–1851) was the founder of the Pentecostal Church of the Brethren, popularly known as the Wengerites. Wenger was born in Bethel Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, USA. In 1799, Wenger married Anna Long. They had nine children. She died in 1819. After this he married Sarah Hahn.
They fostered and adopted two children, and later heard about Snowflakes on the evangelical podcast “Ask Pastor John." They adopted three embryos, and two became their twin boys, born in October.
Don S. Wenger (1911–1986), Major General in the United States Air Force; Éric Wenger, computer programmer; Étienne Wenger (born 1952), educational theorist and practitioner from Switzerland; Fridolin Wenger (died 1931, Swiss footballer; J. C. Wenger (John Christian Wenger 1910–1995), American Mennonite theologian and professor
John Legend and Chrissy Teigen's busy household is filled with love, laughter and adorable children. The couple, who have been married since 2013, frequently gush about being parents and their ...
John Legend is the ultimate girl dad.. On Wednesday, Sept. 4, the musician, 45, shared a hilarious Instagram Reel, joking about the perks of creating his new children's album with his daughters in ...
Tisa Joy Wenger [1] was born in 1969 [2] to Christine and Harold Wenger, [3] Mennonite missionaries who operated throughout Africa. [4] She got her BA (1991) in English at Eastern Mennonite University, [5] where she also made national headlines for introducing Virginia state legislator J. Samuel Glasscock at the college's Amnesty International-funded anti-death penalty forum. [6]