The Mennonite's Bible
No doubt many people wonder why the Mennonite religion doesn't have its own Bible with the words "Mennonite Version" or "to be used by all Mennonites". They just don't. For the same reason faithful members of other Protestant churches, e.g., Baptists, Methodists, and Pentecostals don't mingle; so also the different branches (and sub-divisions of each branch) of Mennonites stay away from each other's beliefs. The word Mennonite is like using the word Protestant to describe all the churches that are not Catholic. You would think that since they are all anti-Catholic, they should all use the same Bible, right. But they don't. Mennonites have gone the way of their Protestant brothers the Adventists, Lutherans, Nazarenes, etc. and use whichever Bible translation is approved by their leader or by their general assembly. If you didn't agree, then maybe it's time to join another church or start your own. As easy as that. True, the Mennonite church was born out of the Anabaptist movement in Europe several centuries ago, but that's the only thing that ties them together. As even more diverse Mennonite churches are created, a universal Mennonite-only Bible is farther away than ever.