Koinonia Farm, Inc.

  • Community
  • 0 followers

About the Community

  • Established
  • Rural

What we do

Koinonia Farm was founded in 1942 by Clarence and Florence Jordan and Martin and Mabel England as a “demonstration plot for the Kingdom of God.” This meant creating a community of believers who shared their lives and resources, modeled after the first communities described in the Acts of the Apostles. Soon, other families joined, and visitors were invited “to serve a period of apprenticeship in developing community life based on the teachings and principles of Jesus.”

At Koinonia, we shared not only faith and resources but also labor. Farming for our livelihood, we worked in harmony with the land, striving “to conserve the soil, God’s holy earth,” as Clarence Jordan said. Koinonia was a house church, but we were also active members of local congregations. From the beginning, Koinonians emphasized the brotherhood and sisterhood of all people. We treated Black and white workers equally, paying fair wages and ensuring that everyone, regardless of race, sat together for meals and prayer. Our commitment to racial equality, pacifism, and economic sharing sparked violent opposition in the 1950s. The Ku Klux Klan and others tried to drive us out using bullets, bombs, and intimidation. In response, we held fast to prayer, nonviolent resistance, and our commitment to living out the Gospel.

As a result of the boycott that followed, no one in Sumter County would buy from or sell to us, making farming impossible. To survive, we started a mail-order business, which eventually grew into today’s online store and remains our primary source of income, sustaining our life and work.

When the violence ended and the boycotts eased, one of the most well-known projects Koinonia pursued was building affordable homes for and with our neighbors. Clarence Jordan also devoted himself to translating the New Testament from the original Greek into South Georgia vernacular. In his writing shack nestled in the pecan orchards, he penned the Cotton Patch Version and prepared for nationwide speaking engagements. In that same shack, Clarence passed away suddenly in 1969 while preparing a talk he was to give at Mercer University.
 
Koinonia continued the work of its founders. The housing initiative, known as Koinonia Partnership Housing, eventually separated and became the renowned Habitat for Humanity when two Koinonia members, Millard and Linda Fuller, expanded the ministry globally with the community’s support. When the Fullers left Habitat in 2005, they founded The Fuller Center for Housing and held its first board meeting at Koinonia, honoring the farm as its birthplace. Koinonia has also helped launch other organizations dedicated to social justice, including Jubilee Partners, a community that welcomes refugees.

Today, our focus is to Feed the Hungry, both physically and spiritually. We farm on a small scale, producing pecans, grapes, blueberries, and vegetables. Our hospitality ministry continues to renew and transform countless visitors, while our internship program welcomes people of all ages and backgrounds to explore community and discipleship. We continue to work for social justice, responding to the needs and challenges of our time in whatever way we can with the people and resources we have at any given time. Come and see!

Our Vision

We are called to live together in intentional community, sharing a life of prayer, work, study, service, and fellowship. We seek to embody peacemaking, sustainability, and radical sharing. While welcoming people of all backgrounds and faiths, we strive to demonstrate the way of Jesus as an alternative to materialism, militarism, and racism.

Our Mission

We are called to live together in intentional community, sharing a life of prayer, work, study, service, and fellowship. We seek to embody peacemaking, sustainability, and radical sharing. While welcoming people of all backgrounds and faiths, we strive to demonstrate the way of Jesus as an alternative to materialism, militarism, and racism.

  • Community type
  • Spiritual Retreat Centers
  • Activities
  • Services Business
  • 20 Total members
  • Open to new members
  • Open to visitors
  • Open to volunteers
Total
20

How to join

Membership at Koinonia Farm is a years-long process that begins with a visit.

Basic expectations or agreements for members

Go online to koinoniafarm.org and click on the visit tab.

Primary decision-making authority

  • Small Leadership Group

A few people (not elected by the broader community) make the major decisions.

Governance structure

  • Collaborative/Horizontal

Power and responsibility are shared relatively equally among members.

Economic model

  • Partial Income-Sharing

Members contribute a percentage of income to community funds.

Economic scenarios for this community

  • Members need to pay fees, dues, or similar to live there on a per month or per year basis
  • There is a labor obligation

Additional economic information

Monthly fees/dues: Yes (amount not specified)
Labor required: Yes
Members with pre-existing debt: Yes

Shared resources and amenities that are accessible to everyone in the community

Common House, Garden(s), Greenhouse(s), Vehicle Share, Library, Workshop, Outbuilding(s), Large Scale Kitchen, Tractor & Farm Equipment, Fire pit, Swingsets & play areas, Internet

Frequency of communal meals

  • 2-5 times per week

Substance use culture

  • Substance use occurs primarily at celebrations or ceremonies

Property status

  • Privately owned

Setting

  • Rural

Countryside locations with significant distance from urban centers.

Self-produced energy

  • Up to 33%

Energy sources used

  • Photovoltaic Solar

Self-produced food

  • Up to 33%
  • Land area size
    575 acres

Reviews

Location

  • Georgia, United States

Promoted Needs and Offers

Need
Need
Need
  • Communities with Openings
10 months ago

Seeking Couples Interested in Long Term Deep Connection & Farming (open to singles)

Description Our  sloped and terraced community farm has far more potential than we have time and energy to use to the fullest. We have been in community for 15 years now, but feeling pulled to the deeper nourishment we find in long-term residents over shorter-term interns.  We seek one to two couples (or super aligned singles) who are interested in conscious connection, intimate conversation, personal growth and healing, regenerative agriculture, and serious about a building a life in community.  Although we hold space and flexibility for shifts in needs, we desire humans who plan to stay for all or part of a season (1-3 months at a minimum), after which we would explore longer-term alignment and relationships.  We MAY also be open to folks wanting to live off-site, as long as we prioritize ample time to explore how we work together before we get too deep. Current Use Heart 2 Heart Farms is a small, forested, 10 acre Permaculture farm nestled in the fertile hills of the Willamette Valley. Between the quaint towns of Newberg and Sherwood, this oasis is in the middle of wine country, just 30 minutes south of Portland, has been an intentional community and teaching facility for over 15 years, hosting a myriad of community outreach, up-cycling, homesteading, and prepping workshops.  Although we have recently slowed substantially, residents should be prepared for both a busy environment, and shared, informal, mixed-use spaces. We are almost completely self-sufficient, producing large varieties of heirloom fruits and vegetables, and we breed, butcher, and sometimes sell heritage chickens, turkeys, rabbits, pigs, goats, sheep, and cattle. We tan hides, carve bone, save seed, occasionally blow glass, throw pottery, create alternative/green energy, dig root cellars, and build constantly. We have three large un/under-utilized areas available: The front hill is a terraced and amended south-facing slope that has LOTS of room and potential. We also have a poultry pasture is 2 acres of partially wooded Douglas Fir, an additional 4 acres of wooded mixed use browsing space and native habitat that’s virtually unused at the moment, two large greenhouses (including one set up aquaponically), and lots of space to expand the orchard and rotational grazing system. Additionally, we have a 20’x40′ healing center and sacred space we use for yoga, massage, reiki, ceremony (including traditional Lakota sweat lodge and grief/trauma work), and make available to local practitioners to offer their services to the community. If you are wanting to connect deeply, work hard, learn and expand your experience base, and participate in a small but established intentional community, shoot us a note and let’s explore. Owner’s Short Term Vision for the Property Our short-term goal is to find/train a few young/new farmers to assist with land stewardship and increase productivity of the existing space to spread out the work/responsibility and assist in overall streamlining and cleanup of the existing farm/operations. Owner’s Long Term Vision for the Property Our long-term vision is to continue to use this space as a teaching and educational facility, expanding the diversity and frequency of events we can host and services we can offer. Over the next few years, we hope to find an a couple interested in learning/independently managing most of the farm production, which will allow us to dig deeper into the training and certification we make available, to include natural building, basic and advanced Permaculture technique and application, beekeeping, horticulture, animal husbandry, food preservation, fermentation, plant identification/natural foraging, and primitive skills. Available Water / Irrigation Extensive rainwater collection on site, as well as a high-flow/capacity well. Soil Type / Quality Sandy loam with great organic matter, good clay content, and established vermiculture and mycorrhizal network. Buildings and Structures Available for Farm Use We have multiple barns and greenhouse space for use, or lease, depending on the particulars of use/situation. Farm Equipment Available for Use We have a skid steer on site, as well as rototiller, chipper, 26′ truck, and pickup trucks for use. Hand tools are also available, depending on the arrangement. Any Restrictions That Could Limit Agricultural Production Creating and supporting natural borders, food forests, and wildlife habitat (and incorporating these into a holistic/natural pest management strategy) is a very high priority to us, so intensive mono-crop/large machine harvesting and/or crops needing spraying/chemicals are not likely a fit on this site. County: Washington Total Acreage: 10 Acreage Available to Landseeker: 5 Current Farming Practices: Organic, Not Certified, Biodynamic, Dry Farming, Season Extension Farming Practices Allowed: Certified Organic, Organic, Not Certified, Biodynamic, Dry Farming, Season Extension Agriculture Types Suitable: Beans, Bees, Berries, Dairy, Fiber Animals, Flowers, Goats, Herbs, Hogs, Mushrooms, Nursery Stock, Nuts, Orchard/Fruit, Pasture, Poultry, Rabbits, Sheep, Vegetables, Vineyard, Other
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