| Close Up:
Hispanic/Latino ministries grow with population trends
June 7, 2006
A UMNS Close Up Report
By Allison Scahill*
When the Rev. José and Josefina Gonzalez started a United Methodist congregation in Buffalo, N.Y., more than 25 years ago, their beginnings were humble.
?Before it was an organized church, it was a mission ?? José Gonzalez said. ?It started as a mission in my home, in my living room. After five years, we moved into a building, then we organized the church. It has been an organized church for 23 years.?
Under the leadership of the Rev. Alberto Lanzot, Primera Iglesia Buffalo has
about 100 members and is still growing. Gonzalez, a retired teacher, is helping
expand Hispanic ministries in a similar way at Dunkirk (N.Y.) United Methodist
Church, where he is assisting the Rev. Clifford Cliver.
Hispanic ministries didn?t receive much encouragement during the Buffalo
church?s early days, Gonzalez said.
?At that time, in 1978, there wasn?t much support,? he said. ?The support
came after the church was formalized. Now, the support comes from individual
churches more openly. The community around us has been wonderful. They?ve really
been a blessing.?
United Methodist churches are increasingly opening their hearts, minds and
doors to Hispanic/Latino ministries. The Latino population in the United States
is growing faster than any other demographic group, and that trend has been
mirrored in the growth of ministries in United Methodist annual conferences.
The Hispanic/Latino growth rate for 2004 was 3.6 percent, compared with the
overall population growth of 1 percent, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
For the year ended July 1, 2005, Hispanic/Latinos accounted for 49 percent ?
or 1.3 million people ? of the U.S. population growth of 2.8 million, the Census
Bureau reported.
The Hispanic/Latino population is also younger than the U.S. population in
general. The Census Bureau said the Hispanic/Latino population in 2005 had a
median age of 27.2 years, compared to the general median of 36.2 years. About
one-third of the Hispanic/Latino population was under 18, compared with
one-fourth of the total population.
The Rev. Frank Ramos, director of Hispanic/Latino ministry for the Western
North Carolina Conference, said he sees efforts both to bring Hispanics into the
church and to push them away.
?I have seen how the Hispanic/Latino population has been rejected by the
people who are commanded to make disciples and show love to your neighbor,? he
said.
In 2004, Hispanic/Latinos accounted for more than 40 million of the overall
U.S. population. Out of that, about 50,000 are members of the United Methodist
Church, which has more than 8 million members in the United States alone.
Ramos has a theory about the low numbers of Hispanics in the church.
?I think the mistake was sending Hispanic leaders, pastors and lay to do
miracles out there alone,? he explained. ?We must understand that the Hispanic
ministry is a ministry of the United Methodist Church ? it is not a separate
entity.
?We feel alone and sometimes even rejected from our brothers and sisters who
are supposed to be embracing the Hispanic ministry as their own.?
The denomination?s National Plan for Hispanic/Latino Ministries was developed
in part to answer that need. Established in 1993, it is an effort by the church
to focus on and strengthen Hispanic/Latino ministry.
Bishop Minerva Carcaño from the Desert Southwest Conference, is president of
the National Plan. She said she has seen Anglos become more accepting through
the years.
?I see more intentionality than I did when I first started in ministry in
1976,? she said. ?In 1976, the assumption was that the Rio Grande Conference
would be the body that was doing Hispanic work. There were certainly people in
California, Florida and New York that were also doing Hispanic work, but it was
primarily left to Hispanics themselves.?
Supporting ministries
Carcaño said she has seen many positive changes and strategies work for
Hispanic ministry.
?What is working (in Desert Southwest are) those congregations and
fellowships that are reaching out to the poor in their own language, in their
own culture,? she said. ?That is what?s working. There are very successful
models all over the country.?
The Kansas East Conference is trying to expand ministries to the growing
population of Hispanics in Kansas, said Gary Beach, director of connectional
ministries.
?We (were) granted $50,000 by the (United Methodist Board of Global
Ministries) to help us kick off our Hispanic ministries in addition to what
we?ve already done,? he said.
Beach said Kansas East is implementing a curriculum called Pentecost Journey,
offered by the National Plan, in 11 communities. ?It targets non-Hispanic
congregations to learn about Hispanic people and break through the stereotypes,?
he said. ?It encourages us to read about and get to know our new neighbors.
?As long as the Hispanic population keeps growing, this will be an ongoing
project,? he said. ?From 1990 to 2000, the Hispanic population in the Kansas
East Conference doubled, and it is estimated to double again by the year 2010.?
Kansas East also has been working to provide additional worship services for
Hispanics. The efforts have paid off as the conference?s Hispanic/Latino
congregations have grown. Those include La Esperanza, a new church start in
Emporia; Puente de Fe faith community in Topeka; and Mision Nueva Vida, a new
church start in Kansas City. Misión Unidos en Cristo, a mission fellowship, will
start in Olathe in August, and a Hispanic mission fellowship is meeting at St.
Mark?s United Methodist Church in Overland Park, Kansas City.
Alice Kunka, co-director of Hispanic/Latino Ministries for the North Carolina
Conference, said the Hispanic population in North Carolina is a fairly new one.
?In the conference, we have a strong focus on developing leadership for
Hispanic/Latino ministries,? she said. ?Unlike other parts of the country where
Latinos have lived for decades, the population of Hispanics and Latinos in North
Carolina is a relatively recent phenomenon. In fact, North Carolina?s
Hispanic/Latino population quadrupled over the last decade.?
Kunka said North Carolina has worked to recruit Hispanics to the church.
?In 1997, the North Carolina Conference established a task force for Hispanic
ministries, which has nurtured the development of more than 15 Hispanic/Latino
ministries across the conference,? she said. ?To intentionally develop leaders
for ministry, our conference initiated the Academy of Leadership and Spiritual
Formation for Hispanic Ministry (or Academia de Liderazo y Formacion Espiritual).?
Vision from the Lord
In the Western North Carolina Conference, Asheboro?s Mision Metodista Unida
Adonai (Adonai United Methodist Church) is an example of how fast Hispanic
ministries are growing. Established five years ago with eight people, Adonai has
grown to more than 200 members, and it is ready to expand further.
The Sunday school hour finds two classes sharing a converted trailer and the
youth class meeting in the church kitchen. During worship, the tiny nursery is
filled to capacity with infants. A fund-raising campaign to build a new
sanctuary and classroom building is under way, and a building plan is in place
to more than double Adonai?s space.
?This is possible because of the support we have from the district and the
local churches,? said the Rev. Ana Morrison, pastor. ?The Lord has given us a
vision, and I can see his hand in all of this. Now we need to make this vision
come true.?
Morrison is often the first choice when local police, hospital, education and
health officials need someone to translate or straighten out a situation with
the large Hispanic population. Randolph County, where Asheboro is the county
seat, has among the largest concentration of Latino immigrants in North
Carolina.
In 2004, the church opened a Latino Community Center in the unused parsonage
of a nearby Anglo church, Calvary United Methodist Church. The center offers
weekly classes in a number of different areas, plus counseling and food and
clothes pantries.
?We?re just doing the basics of what Wesley taught us,? Morrison says,
?working for justice issues, serving the children, and holding regular prayer
meetings. That?s what the United Methodist Church is all about ? to be the
children of God.?
Challenges
The Rev. Jose Palos, former coordinator of the National Plan, said many
challenges lie ahead before the church is completely diversified.
Carcaño said racism is still a prominent obstacle. ?We have our logo of ?Open
Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors,? but we struggle mightily with our racism,? she
said. ?And we struggle mightily with our socio-economic level.?
Developing leaders is critical. ?I think we need to start earlier in terms of
leadership development,? Carcaño said. ?Train children and young people, college
students ? to think in terms of being leaders of a church that is inclusive.?
Ramos said it is important for local churches to be involved with Hispanic
leaders in doing ministry to the Hispanic population.
?To do ministry in the Hispanic community, we must send lay missionaries or
pastors to spend the necessary time with the people, first winning their trust,
second making disciples and third, teaching them about the Methodist Church,? he
said. ?We must tell the real story.?
Time is also an important factor in overcoming challenges.
?This is not a 100-yard dash,? Palos said. ?It?s more like a marathon that
you need to work out your resources. So you look at a longer shot so that
there?s some persistence so the result can be there. Otherwise, if you think
about it in the short term, and some people have thought of it that way, then
they?re disappointed.?
*Scahill is a recent graduate of Baker University in Baldwin City, Kan., and
worked as an intern for United Methodist Communications in 2005. Information on
Adonai United Methodist Church was contributed by correspondent Neill Caldwell
in High Point, N.C., with additional reporting by Amanda Bachus, director of
Spanish-language resources at United Methodist Communications.
News media contact: Tim Tanton, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or
newsdesk@umcom.org
Related Articles
Hispanic/Latino plan coordinates ministries across church
Church must continue reaching to Hispanics, commission told
Nations Population One-Third Minority
Population changes mean continued need for Hispanic plan
Close Up: Growing Hispanic/Latino presence changes church
New ministries serve as models for reaching Hispanic/Latinos
Merger builds bridge between two cultures
Resources
National Plan for Hispanic/Latino Ministries
U.S. Census Bureau: Hispanic Population
General Board of Global Ministries
General Council on Finance and Administration
General Commission on Religion and Race
|