November 27, 2008 Publishing Good News since 1884 Volume 125 Number 42
 

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Don’t forget to talk to God, Hispanic leaders told

 

 Members of the Hispanic State Fellowship read Scripture
with keynote speaker Javier Sotolongo at the 2008 meeting of
the Hispanic State Fellowship.

FBC photo by Lauren Urtel

Members of the Hispanic State Fellowship read Scripture with keynote speaker Javier Sotolongo at the 2008 meeting of the Hispanic State Fellowship.

 Keynote speaker Javier Sotolongo, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Estrella de Belén in Hialeah, encouraged
pastors to focus on their personal relationship with Christ.

FBC photo by Lauren Urtel

Keynote speaker Javier Sotolongo, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Estrella de Belén in Hialeah, encouraged pastors to focus on their personal relationship with Christ.

MIAMI (FBC)—Nearly 400 of Florida’s Hispanic church leaders were urged to “never forget their fellowship with the Lord” at the annual meeting of the Hispanic State Fellowship held May 16 at Iglesia Bautista Estrella de Belén in Miami.

Under the theme “Para Que El Mundo Crea,” (“In order that the world believes”), keynote speaker Javier Sotolongo encouraged pastors to focus on their personal relationship with Christ.

“Never forget your fellowship with the Lord, that is the most important thing to reach the world,” said Sotolongo, pastor of the 900-member host church.

 Frank Moreno,
director of the
Florida Baptist
Convention’s
Language
Division,
addresses the
Hispanic State
Fellowship
May 16 in Miami.

FBC photo by Lauren Urtel

Frank Moreno, director of the Florida Baptist Convention’s Language Division, addresses the Hispanic State Fellowship May 16 in Miami.

Noting that many Hispanic churches face economic problems, “we have discovered that when we focus on our problems we don’t grow,” said Sotolongo in Spanish, interpreted into English. “Even with people giving less and people moving, that cannot stop us from doing missions. In the middle of crisis, the secret is to keep sowing and keep growing.”

Sotolongo advised pastors to avoid the tendency of the church of Ephesus.

“At a quick look, the church of Ephesus was doing well – they were of sound doctrine and active in service but at a serious look, this set off the alarm,” said Sotolongo. “They had lost the fire of affection, and true worship and service had disappeared.”

“We can have it all right, even have the right doctrine, but how about our first love? You must never forget that your first love is Jesus Christ.”

 During the youth
session, Luis Egipciaco, minister of youth at Iglesia Bautista Northside in Hialeah, shared the dangers of the Internet and
how to combat them.

FBC photo by Lauren Urtel

During the youth session, Luis Egipciaco, minister of youth at Iglesia Bautista Northside in Hialeah, shared the dangers of the Internet and how to combat them.

The fellowship’s time together is part of cultivating that relationship, said Sotolongo. “It is important because we get to know each other and have fellowship. We get to see what someone is doing in another part of the state.”

The fellowship provides inspiration to and promotes the development of Florida’s Hispanic leaders and churches.

“I praise God for the great quality of our Hispanic pastors and leaders and for the vision they have to reach the lost to Christ,” said Frank Moreno, director of the Florida Baptist Convention’s Language Division.

 Salvador Negrín addresses pastors in a special session about cultivating relationships.

FBC photo by Lauren Urtel

Salvador Negrín addresses pastors in a special session about cultivating relationships.

“The state fellowships are an integral part of the Florida Baptist Convention,” said Moreno. The Hispanic State Fellowship as well as other language fellowships that exist in the Florida Baptist Convention were created after the Language Division was formed 15 years ago.

“The creation of these state fellowships has been a blessing to the language work in our state,” Moreno added. “Our language division staff regularly meets with the leadership of the state fellowships and together we develop the annual program of each fellowship tailored according to the existing needs.”

Breakout sessions offered during the annual meeting were in the areas of technology, challenges faced by youth and cultivating relationships. Led by state pastors, leaders asked questions and discussed their own challenges.

 A special missions presentation the partnership between
Hispanic churches in Florida and Kentucky was given by volunteer coordinator José Molliner.

FBC photo by Lauren Urtel

A special missions presentation the partnership between Hispanic churches in Florida and Kentucky was given by volunteer coordinator José Molliner.

A special missions presentation by volunteer coordinator José Molliner discussed the partnership between Hispanic churches in Florida and Kentucky.

Many of the state’s Hispanic churches participate in that partnership by sending people to one or two mission trips per year. They also assist with resources to church planting projects or any other major needs that an existing church may have.

 Ariel Ortiz, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Ebenezer de Lake Worth, led a breakout session on technology.

FBC photo by Lauren Urtel

Ariel Ortiz, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Ebenezer de Lake Worth, led a breakout session on technology.

The partnership, established in November 2006, is a three-year agreement between the Florida Baptist Convention and the Kentucky Baptist Convention and is the only one in the Southern Baptist Convention.

During the first year of implementation, five churches responded and 35 people participated. The projects resulted in 135 professions of faith and 41 recommitments.

“We have an opportunity without precedent to impact thousands of people,” said Molliner. “We are building a missionary bridge between Florida and Kentucky. We have to be courageous and respond”

Additionally, the fellowship’s mission work in Costa Rica has resulted in 137 salvations and 341 recommitments.

New mission opportunities were approved during the business session of the meeting. For 2008, the Hispanic churches undertook six projects, including one to the Dominican Republic.