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Bishops urge church to get serious about Hispanic ministry
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ENS@ecunet.org
Date
Wed, 23 May 2001 15:46:30 -0400 (EDT)
2001-131
Bishops urge church to get serious about Hispanic ministry
By James Solheim
(ENS) A group of six bishops committed to the church's mission among
Hispanic peoples in this country emerged from an Easter Monday meeting in Atlanta
and issued a "wake up call" to the mission possibilities.
Calling attention to the rapid growth in America's Hispanic population--with
a total official figure now of 35 million--the bishops pointed to the decision at
the Denver General Convention to double the church's membership by 2020 as a
tremendous challenge.
Hispanic ministry is growing in many dioceses, "but we are not satisfied
because it has not grown" at the same rate as the growth in population, they
said, admitting that the ministry among Hispanics was "dormant" in the 1980s.
Only recently have church leaders "awakened to this missionary reality," a
missionary opportunity "given to us by God."
The statement continued, "We cannot ignore any longer the presence of the
Hispanic people in our midst. As a church with the obligation to carry on the
Divine Commission, we cannot present defensive excuses of language… to avoid
being involved in this mission and ministry."
The statement contended that there are several factors which make ministry
with Hispanics special--language, culture, immigration and poverty.
Option for the poor
It is important, the statement argued, to "preach the gospel to first-
generation immigrants in their own language, and recognize the importance of the
cultural background. An even larger challenge, however, is the church's
relationship with the poor.
Invoking a statement by the Roman Catholic Conference of the Latin American
bishops in Puebla, Mexico in 1979, the statement said that "a preferential option
for the poor" has been accepted over the years as a "sincere commitment for the
underprivileged. We Episcopalians must be blind if we do not see the predilection
that God shows for the poor." It concluded that the Episcopal Church couldn't
remain faithful to Scripture and "ignore the presence of the poor in our midst."
The bishops said that they are convinced that "this is a blessed and
providential moment for our church," that a renewed commitment to Hispanic
ministry will help the church flourish and to achieve the challenge to double the
church's membership. They urged the presiding bishop to convoke a national
missionary conference to deal with the issues.
The statement strongly urged the parishes to stop "resting in their
traditions and customs of years past" and consider the possibilities of
"expanding the kingdom of God with new blood, with new faces, with new people who
are different from them. We need to adopt a missionary attitude."
Missionary church
The bishops expressed their hope for the future but added that "we must
abandon our status quo to become a dynamic force impelled by the passion of the
gospel…we must become a church in a state of mission…a missionary church."
The statement was signed by Bishops Leo Alard of Texas; Onell Soto of
Alabama; Wilfrido Ramos-Orench of Connecticut; Victor Scantlebury of Chicago;
William Skilton of South Carolina; and John Said of Southeast Florida.
The idea for the Atlanta meeting emerged at a recent House of Bishops
meeting, according to Soto. He said that the early response is "very positive,"
and that he and his colleagues are "very hopeful" about the future of Hispanic
mission.
"Hispanic mission is not really new," Soto added, "but actually a
continuation of our work for over a century in Latin America. Now it is time for
us to get serious about that mission here in this country."
The Rev. Daniel Caballero, head of the Hispanic Ministry Office at the
Episcopal Church Center in New York, said that he hoped other bishops would
respond to the challenges implicit in the statement. "We need to build a sense of
unity and belonging to overcome some of the isolation in Hispanic ministry," he
said. For him, the statement represents "the possibility of an exciting new
beginning for the whole church." He shares the hopefulness expressed by Soto,
adding that "God has given the Episcopal Church a tremendous gift and it is time
for us to respond."
--Jim Solheim is director of Episcopal News Service.
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