Our Ministry in Venezuela

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

New Book - Concordia Theological Library: Hermeneutics

Biblioteca teológica Concordia: Hermenéutica (Concordia Theological Library: Hermeneutics)
Regular Price: $11.99

Product Details
Format: Paperback
Author(s): Dr. Rodolfo Blank
Age(s): Adult
Item Number: 16-6193WEB
Number Of Pages: 132
Availability: In Stock
Quantity:





Product Description
Algunos métodos modernos de interpretación bíblica han causado confusión en el ámbito académico. El Dr. Rodolfo Blank presenta en este libro los elementos claves para una interpretación cristocéntrica de la palabra de Dios.

Some modern methods of Bible interpretation have caused confusion in the academic field. In this book, Dr. Rodolfo Blank presents the key elements for a sound and Christ-centered interpretation of God’s Word.

Order from the CPH Store

Sunday, April 02, 2006

45th Anniversary of Ordination

On the 12th of March after the Sunday morning service at La Paz Lutheran Church in Petare, the congregation held a little fiesta to give thanks to the Lord for enabling us to celebrate the 45th anniversary of my ordination. Many things have taken place since that ordination took place in the Church of Saint Michael and All Angels in Cambridge England in 1961. On the Feast of the Epiphany in January 1963 I was installed as a missionary pastor to serve with the Lutheran Church of Venezuela. The call to Venezuela has involved us in a ministry of church planting and theological education – 6 years in Maturín, 19 years in Ciudad Guayana, 6 years in Valencia, 6 years in Caracas with some time away for graduate studies and a guest professorship in Saint Louis. We thank and praise the Lord for giving us the health and strength to carry out this ministry.
Ramona & Rudy – with cross given by congregation – 45 years of ministry

Upcoming Schedule

During Holy Week we plan to be in the Ciudad Guayana area holding classes and teaching intensive courses with students from the four Lutheran congregations in the area. We plan to leave on April 5th and return on the 17th. On the weekend of April 21st we should be in Barquisimeto in the western part of the country for a workshop on Luther’s Catechism. In Ciudad Guayana we are currently teaching courses on the Book of Jeremiah, New Testament Introduction, the Life of Saint Paul and Homiletics.
Group of students in Fuente de Vida Lutheran Church, Puerto Ordaz

Prayer List

For those who are supporting the mission of the Lutheran Church in Venezuela with their prayers, we would like to submit the following items for inclusion on their prayer lists:

  1. For Pastor Humberto Mota of Principe de Paz Lutheran Church in Sierra Caroní whose father passed away this week after being in a coma for several months.
  2. For Nancy Franco, the wife of Pastor Alcides Franco in San Felix, as she recovers from a major operation.
  3. For the recovery of the property of El Mesías congregation in Caracas that still remains in the hands of illegal squatters that forced their way into the building and took it over.
  4. For the six students enrolled in the accelerated pastoral training program. They are Jhonatan Franco, Raimundo Brito, Alexis Herrera, Edgar Coronado, Miguelángel Pérez and Kleiver Arcaya. They are currently taking courses with me on the Life of Luther, Teaching the Small Catechism and Introduction to the New Testament. At the same time they are taking other courses with Pastors Ted Krey and Waldemar Cifuentes.
  5. For peace and serenity in Venezuela as it gears up for another presidential election, scheduled to take place this coming December.

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Another Book

This week (February 27th) Concordia Publishing House will send to the presses a new book that I have written on Holy Scripture. The book is part of a new series on Lutheran Doctrine in Spanish that CPH is bringing out. This will be my third title published by CPH. A fourth book on the Psalms is in the works. Pray that I would find the time and the wisdom to finish this project before the end of the year.

Thanksgiving

We rejoice with pastor Francisco Cabarcas and his wife Dagnys on the birth of a healthy daughter via caesarean section on
February 14th. Pastor Francisco who formerly served La Paz Lutheran congregation in Petare is now chaplain of Cristo Rey Lutheran School in Maturín capital of the State of Monagas in Eastern Venezuela. Due to the oil boom in the petroleum camps both to the north and south of Maturín the city continues to expand, drawing people from all parts of Venezuela to seek employment in the oil fields. When I began by ministry in Maturín in 1963 the city had less than 50,000 inhabitants and not even one supermarket. Then Maturín was home to the only two high schools in the entire state. Today, Cristo Rey Lutheran Church and School share Christ with the inhabitants of a modern city with bustling shopping malls, universities and the offices of PDVSA, the giant national oil company. Cristo Rey Lutheran School where pastor Cabarcas serves as chaplains as gained a deserved reputation as one of the best grade and high schools in Maturín. As the school with its 300 students continues to expand, pastor Francisco and his wife have an important ministry to carry out as they share Christ with the students and their representatives.

La Paz Lutheran Congregation in Petare that has remained vacant since pastor Francisco accepted the call to Maturín last year continues to hold its own in spite of the pastoral vacancy. Students enrolled in our Juan de Frias Theological Institute have taken over many of the pastoral functions of the congregation. I also try to help by preaching there once or twice a month. Rosie Gilbert our deaconess intern spends one day a week serving in La Paz’s preschool program. The congregation located in one of the poorest and most dangerous neighborhoods in the metropolitan area of Caracas does not have the financial resources to call a married pastor with family. At present it can only offer to help one of our unmarried students.

New Year, New Projects, New Challenges

In this our first Newsletter in 2006 we want to bring our supporters, friends and prayer partners up to date on our ministry and the ministry of the Lutheran Church in Venezuela. We still continue to travel to different parts of the country teaching intensive courses to students enrolled in the ministerial training program of our Venezuelan Church. Travel has been made more difficult due to the partial collapse of the main bridge on the super highway connecting Venezuela’s international airport down on the Caribbean coast with the city of Caracas, 3000 feet above sea level. Heavy rains helped put the bridge out of commission and to washout hundreds of homes.

This has made getting from Caracas to its airport a hazardous adventure – traveling over winding back roads or going down the old La Guaira road that snakes through some of the most crime infested slums in the Caracas Metropolitan Area. Consequently, missionaries and national workers have been forced to make long bus journeys rather than fly.

Many people forced to evacuate their homes due to landslides in La Guaira and in the neighborhoods bordering on the old la Guaira road have been left homeless. In order to find a place to stay many have been invading vacant or partially vacant buildings in the central area of Caracas – taking them over and claiming squatter’s rights. Buildings are being invaded not only by the homeless but by groups of professional squatters who make a living by taking over properties and then reselling them at a profit. To make things worse a group of invaders has taken over the building belong to El Mesías Lutheran Church in the Altagracia neighborhood near downtown Caracas. The invaders claim to belong to one of the many revolutionary organizations that have sprung up like mushrooms after a summer rain. You will remember that El Mesías is the congregation was the church formerly served by the deposed president of the ILV. Pray that our church’s lawyers will be able to recover the property.

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Paradise Lutheran Church

Paradise Lutheran Church: In our October Newsletter we mentioned that Pastor Waldemar Cifuentes of Our Savior Lutheran Church in Caracas had accepted a call to a new Lutheran congregation in the state of Lara. A number of our correspondents have written us requesting more information about this development and the coming into being of this congregation. In what follows we will try to give a short account of what is really a very complicated story.

A number of years ago a person that could be described as a maverick psychologist who once belonged to a Lutheran congregation affiliated with the Lutheran World Federation began holding a series of conferences entitled “The Art of Living”. The people who participated in this course were mainly middle and upper middle class professionals living in or near the town of Cabudare which is really a large suburb of the city of Barquisimeto. While teaching the course the psychologist identified himself as a doctor of Lutheran Theology (which of course he was not) and offered to help them start a Lutheran congregation geared to their spiritual and social needs. The congregation grew to include about 80 members, some of them quite well to do. One family decided to set aside apart a large property they held for the use of the congregation. At their own expense they built a very nice chapel, a two-story parsonage, a guest house for retreats and theological conferences plus a huge grassy area the Sunday School children to play.

The new congregation took the name “Iglesia Luterana la Esperanza” which in English means Hope Lutheran Church; Although the members actually received very little instruction in Lutheran doctrine they very proudly identified themselves as Lutherans and invited friends, neighbors and relatives to worship with them. The unity of the new group would prove to be short-lived. The psychologist turned pastor decided to bring his newly formed congregation into the new Lutheran Synod formed by a small group of pastors who resigned from the Lutheran Church of Venezuela in 2004. As this new Synod is Episcopal in nature with all authority and power residing in the bishop, the members of Hope Lutheran Church were asked to turn over all of the assets of the group to the bishop and to submit to his authority. This, the majority of the members was unwilling to do. The owners of the properties that had been set aside for the use of the congregation were asked to sign all of the land and buildings over to the bishop. After conducting an investigation of their own, the members of the congregation discovered that the founding pastor had deposited the funds of the congregation, over 100,000 US dollars, in his own personal bank account. To make things worse, the pastor left his wife and began living together with a married woman who was also a member of the group.

This turn of events was too much for the majority of the members. They decided to break off from the founder of the group and those still faithful to him and form a new independent congregation. The name chosen by the members of this new congregation was “Iglesia Luterana el Paraíso” which in English reads Paradise Lutheran Church. Wishing to affiliate with other Lutherans in Venezuela, the leaders of the group began searching the WEB and came up with the address and phone number of El Salvador Lutheran Congregation in Caracas, the oldest congregation in the Lutheran Church of Venezuela. After establishing contact with the pastor of El Salvador, a delegation came from Cabudare to meet with pastor Waldemar Cifuentes and other members of his staff. This led to monthly visits on the part of pastor Cifuentes and his deacons to Paradise Lutheran Church. Pastor Cifuentes decided to spend two weeks of his vacation time in Cabudare instructing the members of the congregation more thoroughly in Lutheran doctrine and helping the groups to write a constitution and elect its own leaders. In October Ramona and I together with pastor Adrian Ventura, the president of the Lutheran Church of Venezuela and his wife visited Paradise Lutheran Church. Pastor Ventura and pastor Cifuentes conducted the liturgy while I was invited to preach. For this special occasion there were about 150 people present for the service. We have appended several photos to this newsletter to share the occasion with our readers.

One thing that helped pastor Cifuentes establish good relations with the members of the new congregation was the fact that a number of families belonging to the new group originally came from Temuco, the same city in the Republic of Chile in which pastor Cifuentes and his wife Elsa were born and raised. Meeting together, the members of Paradise Lutheran Church decided to extend a call to pastor Cifuentes that he accepted. He plans to move to Cabudare in January to take up his new pastoral responsibilities there. Since pastor Cifuentes and his wife are in the upper sixties, his main responsibility will be and helping to train the local leaders of the group to take over the pastoral leadership of the congregation.

The new congregation has applied for membership in our Lutheran Church of Venezuela and we pray that this application will be well received and that the enthusiasm and the evangelistic drive of the members of Paradise Lutheran Church will constitute a positive contribution to our national church. Some of the members of our national church are still rather wary, having been stung in the past, by other groups and individuals who wanted to become part of the national church organization and then caused serious headaches. But that is another story and the subject for other newsletters. For now we would like you keep pastor Waldemar, his wife and Paradise Lutheran Church in your prayers. We would also ask you to pray for ordained deacon, Alfonso Prada, as he takes over most of the pastoral responsibilities in El Salvador Lutheran Church in Caracas together with is parochial school and high school.

Change of Pace

Change of Pace: The coming of Christmas and New Year means that our teaching activities have been put on hold for a number of weeks and that we have a little bit for time for other projects such as catching up on our correspondence and spending more time on writing new course material. Actually with our accelerated program for six theological students in Maracay and Caracas plus the teaching of regular courses in Caracas, Maturin, Puerto Ordaz, San Felix and Sierra Caroní this current semester is the one that has had us involved in more travel around the country and in more class time spent with students in our Theological Education by Extension that I can remember. At the end of the semester the 31st of January we will be evaluating the accelerated program that has had our six students taking and average of five courses each. We ask to remember our students in your prayers. They are Gregori Mirelis, Alexis Herrera, Jhonatán Franco, Kleiver Luzardo, Raimundo Brito and Miguelángel Pérez.

Friday, October 14, 2005

New Semester Begins

The Fall Semester of our Juan de Frías, Theological Training Program started off with a flurry of new courses and activities the second week of September that has kept us in constant movement since we returned to Caracas last month. We are spending one week a month in Ciudad Guayana teaching five different courses for our students in the four Lutheran Congregations in Estado Bolivar. Another weekend every month is spent in teaching courses Maturín in Estado Monagas and the rest of our time is dedicated to classes with theological students in Caracas and in Maracay, 110 kilometers to the west of Caracas.

Ricardo Granado the current director of our Theological Education by Extension Institute has been pushing for an accelerated program for six of our theological students. Seeing the need for filling the vacancies that exist in our Lutheran congregations in Caracas and Western Venezuela, Ricardo has been anxious to get the accelerated program off the ground as soon as possible. The accelerated program was launched on October 2nd in a special service in La Fortaleza Lutheran Congregation in Maracay. Currently we have the students enrolled in the accelerated program housed in quarters of the still unfinished church building project in Maracay. Twice this past week they have had to put up with very heavy rains that have worked their way through leaks in the roof and soaked their bedding. Pastor Ted Krey will be responsible for half of their course work and I for the other half. We would like to ask our readers to keep all of our theological students in Venezuela in your prayers – that despite the less than adequate housing facilities and financial difficulties, they might be guided in their studies and in their dedication to the Lord and his Church.

Pastoral Vacancies in Caracas

The need to prepare pastoral candidates is becoming particularly acute in Caracas, the capital of Venezuela and home to over five million people. Today, October 9th, pastor Francisco Cabarcas preached his last sermon as pastor of La Paz Lutheran Church located in Petare the huge half million people slum that covers the hills in the Western part of the Caracas metropolitan area. Pastor Francisco, well loved by all his members and by the children in the congregation’s pre-school has accepted a call to serve as the school chaplain of Cristo Rey Lutheran School in Maturín, 510 kilometers to the East of Caracas where his expectant wife, Dagnis, works as secretary. This morning pastor Francisco preached to a full church – giving thanks to the Lord for giving him the opportunity to serve among God’s people in Petare. The children of the Sunday School prepared a little program to show their appreciation to pastor Francisco and the ladies prepared a lunch for all present. Until the congregation is able to find a new pastor, the pastoral duties of La Paz congregation will be shared by a number of people who have participated in the Juan de Frías program of theological education in Caracas.

With pastor Francisco leaving for Maturín, the only remaining ordained pastor in Caracas will be pastor Waldemar Cifuentes of El Salvador Congregation in the neighborhood of Colinas de Bello Monte. However, pastor Cifuentes has announced that he is accepting a call to a new Lutheran congregation in Estado Lara in Western Venezuela. This will leave the three plus Lutheran Congregations in Caracas without an ordained pastor. The three congregations in question are (1) El Salvador, (2) La Santa Trinidad and (3) La Paz. A fourth congregation, El Mesías exists in sort of limbo, since its members have not decided whether the wish to continue as part of the Lutheran Church in Venezuela or whether to join the church body of the former president of the ILV, deposed last year because of serious administrative irregularities.

New Improved WEB SITE

If you haven’t checked our WEB SITE lately, do take the time to check it out. You will note that the page contains and information in both English and Spanish. In the English section we have posted most of the newsletters sent out during the past three years plus some documents on liberation theology. We will also be posting mission sermons used during the past years, since a number of people have asked for access to them. In the Spanish part of the WEB SITE we are adding more materials to help Spanish speaking pastors and theological students in their studies – including course materials, articles and books that can be downloaded, and in the future, sermons in Spanish. It is our hope that we can use the Internet to help prepare church workers and theological students throughout the Spanish-speaking world. We know of many people who wish to study theology but live in areas where there is no accessible program of theological education in their region.
http://homepage.mac.com/rtblank/venezuela

Special Needs

For Bernardo the blind musician who played and sang during Pastor Francisco’s farewell service this morning – we have a request for a copy of the book of Genesis and the Book of Acts in Braille. If any of our readers know where we can get these items we would be most appreciative. Bernardo knows English so he can read either Spanish or English Braille.

News of Past Workers

For those who have served as missionaries and volunteers in the past we wish to include in our newsletters news about people in and out of Venezuela with which they may have worked. Not too long ago we were informed that Luis Aparismo who served as pastor of a number of ILV congregations in Monagas passed away last year. From the information we received Luis suffered an attack of appendicitis and died of a ruptured appendix in a taxi that was taking him from San Antonio de Maturín to the hospital in Maturín. During the 1960’s Luis served as pastor of El Calvario Lutheran Congregation in La Pica de Maturin and El Pastor Lutheran Congregation in la Morrocoya.