Beth-El Mennonite Church History Founded in 1956

Bethel YUMA

Beth-El Mennonite Church began with a Sunday morning worship service at the Colorado Springs YMCA on October 7, 1956, formed by a group from First Mennonite Church who believed that “the witness of the church should expand within our city.” The fellowship organized around the purpose of “Gospel witness, Christian service, and true discipleship.”

Yuma Street building
In 1959 the church purchased land from a turkey farm on Knob Hill at the corner of Yuma and Uintah. The new building was dedicated on July 7, 1963.

In 1982, with sadness at the loss of half the members and with hope for a new beginning, Beth-El blessed a group to begin Mountain Community Mennonite Church in Palmer Lake.

In the late 1990’s the church outgrew the Yuma Street building and purchased ten acres at Union and Garden Ranch Drive. This land in the middle of the city was a popular walking location, particularly the four-acre hillside. While the property had been zoned for high-density apartment housing, many believed it would become open space. After a period of challenging conversations and negotiations, the city approved a building plan and the new church at Ranch Drive was dedicated in October 2006.

Since that time Beth-El has become an important part of the neighborhood, hosting a community garden, homeless families for the Family Promise program, Service Adventure—a household of young adults living and serving together for ten months each year, numerous 12-step groups, neighborhood homeowner meetings, restorative justice symposiums, as well as Spanish and Swahili speaking congregations.

During the first two-thirds of its history, Beth-El membership was largely people who grew up in the Mennonite faith tradition and migrated to Colorado for a variety of reasons. Today more than half of the active attendees come from other faith traditions.

Beth-El History by Decade