Laverne Rutschman
Obituary
Laverne Rutschman, 98, retired
Mennonite mission worker and theology professor, died Wednesday
(March 21, 2018). He was born on March 31, 1919, in Newton, and was
brought up on a farm three miles southeast of Elbing. He attended the
Elbing Elementary School and Whitewater High School, graduating in
1936.
On May 31, 1937, two brothers, Orrin
and Pete, lost their lives in an automobile accident while en route
to sing for a college commencement service in Tennessee. Because of
this loss, he felt the call of God to prepare for Christian service,
an effort to continue their work. The following year found him in
Biola (The Bible Institute of Los Angeles), from which he graduated
in 1941. During that summer, he traveled across the United States and
Canada with a Biola male quartet. This was followed by one year at
Bethel College.
While at Wheaton College from 1942 to
1944, he discovered something of the richness of his Anabaptist
heritage and decided to work with the Mennonite Church. Upon
graduating from Wheaton with a B.A. in anthropology in January of
1944, he spent a term at the University of Chicago, a year at Central
Baptist Theological Seminary in Kansas City and two years at Bethany
Seminary in Chicago (with which the Mennonites were then affiliated),
graduating with an M.R.E. in 1946 and a B.D. in 1947.
He married Harriet Fischbach, whom he
learned to know in Wheaton, in 1946. They worked in the Comins
Mennonite Church in Michigan for one year before beginning their
lifework under the Board of Missions (Commission on Overseas
Mission). Their first assignment took them to Colombia, where they
joined the recently established Mennonite Mission in 1948 after
several months of language study in Medellin in the Presbyterian
School of Language and Orientation. In Colombia, they worked with
children whose parents suffered from Hanson's disease and also
engaged in church planting from 1948 to 1955. During this time, they
had five children: David, Robert, Thomas, Ruth and Richard (twins).
As a result of the visit of Walter and
Martha Dyck in 1955, who represented the Mission Board, they agreed
to work with the Mennonite Theological Seminary that was to be
established in Montevideo, Uruguay. Here, Laverne taught theology and
Old Testament and served as dean. After the first term of four years,
he enrolled in the Southern California School of Theology in
Claremont to pursue studies toward a doctorate, which was conferred
in 1962 after returning to the Uruguayan assignment. During the last
year of their stay in California, he was part-time interim pastor of
the First Mennonite Church of Upland.
In January of 1969, the family of seven
purchased a 1930 Model A Ford in Argentina, which they drove to the
States, arriving in Newton in early March after a trip that lasted
nearly 10 weeks. The following five years were spent as teachers in
Freeman, South Dakota, at the college and academy. In the fall of
1974, with the children now gone from home, they returned to South
America to work with the Mennonite churches in Bolivia in the area of
Santa Cruz. They also taught in the Baptist Seminary in Cochabamba,
spending two weeks of each month there and two in Santa Cruz during
the academic year.
An invitation to join the faculty of
the Latin American Biblical Seminary in 1977 received the approval of
the Commission on Overseas Mission that saw this as an opportunity to
relate to the wider Christian community in Latin America as
Anabaptists. Students were attracted to the seminary from many parts
of Latin America, as well as from Europe, North America and Africa,
because of its emphasis on Latin American themes. Laverne taught Old
Testament and Hebrew there and also worked as registrar. He taught
occasional courses in the local Mennonite theological training
program as well.
In 1983, they returned to Colombia in
fulfillment of a promise made upon leaving in 1955. During the two
years in Bogotá, Laverne was invited to work with the Presbyterian
seminary, in which several Mennonites were enrolled, to engage in
Bible teaching. Harriet taught piano to students and children of the
church. They also worked with the local churches.
The final two years in Latin America,
1986 and 1987, found them in the Biblical Seminary in Costa Rica
again. During these two years, as well as during the previous
assignment, Laverne taught many courses under the Mennonite Semilla
program in Central American countries and in Panama. He also worked
with the Costa Rica seminary study-at-a-distance program in Latin
America and published study manuals for both ministries.
After retirement in the fall of 1987,
Laverne spent a great deal of time translating different types of
documents, including news releases, bulletins and correspondence for
the General Conference, the Western District and the South Central
Conference, as well as other entities. Harriet and Laverne became
charter members of the Shalom Mennonite Church in Newton, and enjoyed
riding their tandem bicycle daily for many years.
They were happy to express their
gratitude to God for the many years that were given to them to work
in the church as witnesses to the saving and liberating power of the
gospel of Christ, and also thankful for a loyal family with five
children and their spouses, for the fellowship of the Shalom
Mennonite Church and for many faithful friends and family living in
many parts of the world.
He will be greatly missed by his
children and their spouses, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
His children and spouses are David Rutschman and Marj Byler, Robert
Rutschman and Elise Renault, Tom and Disa Rutschman, Ruth Rutschman
Holliday and Robert Holliday and Richard Rutschman and Peg Dublin.
Their grandchildren are David Rutschman-Byler and Devon Miller, Mark
Rutschman-Byler and Sarah Tashker, Alyssa and Scott Hardy, Magali
Rutschman, Joel and Margareta Rutschman, Daniel Rutschman and Ida
Kjellholm, Miriam and Olov Rutschman, Elisabeth and Josh Armfield,
Hanna and William Rutschman, Heather and Joel Tower, Heidi Holliday
and Matthew McKitrick, Cari Holliday and Daniel Montoya, Luke and
Ligia Bigelow, Jesse Rutschman and Anna Barnes, Elijah Rutschman, Lou
Bigelow and Sarah Welborn, and Micah Rutschman. He has 19
great-grandchildren.
Laverne was preceded in death by his
wife of 60 years, Harriet (Fischbach); his parents, Elise (Zuercher)
and David Henry Rutschman; his siblings and their spouses: Evelyn
(Fred Langenegger), Waldo (Vera Stuart), Orrin (Helen Evelyn
Peterson), Henry (Frances Stuart), Pete and Jeannette (Frank Isaac);
and one granddaughter, Christy Rutschman.
A graveside service will be held at
9:30 a.m. Saturday (March 31, 2018) at the Swiss Mennonite Church
Cemetery near Whitewater, followed by a memorial service at 11 a.m.
at the Shalom Mennonite Church in Newton.
In lieu of flowers, gifts may be made
to the Mennonite Central Committee or Shalom Mennonite Church.