| United Methodist delegation explores challenges in Cuba
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green Worshippers dance jubilantly during a service at Mayorkin Methodist Church outside Havana.
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| Worshippers
dance jubilantly during a service at Mayorkin Methodist Church outside
Havana. A nine-member delegation sponsored by the United Methodist
Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns visited the
Methodist Church in Cuba Oct. 7-12 to provide a witness to the
importance of relationships to the church and its people in Cuba. A UMNS
photo by Linda Green. Photo #06-1217. Accompanies UMNS story #632.
10/24/06 |
Oct. 24, 2006
By Linda Green*
HAVANA (UMNS) — U.S.
policy has made it difficult for the United Methodist Church and other
faith groups to work with their Cuban counterparts in mission and
ministry.
A delegation
representing the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns received a special license from the Office of
Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Treasury Department to visit Cuba
Oct. 7-12. The group went to develop relationships with the Cuban
Methodist Church and to provide a witness to the importance of
relationships — both Methodist and ecumenical — to the life of the
church in Cuba and its people.
The nine-member
delegation "went to Cuba to dramatize the importance of ecumenical
relationships and the way in which our churches can play a significant
role for change in the country," said the Rev. Larry Pickens, the
agency's top executive. "It is a critical time, particularly in relation
to the reality of our need to be connected to the Methodist Church of
Cuba."
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green This Methodist church in Havana is one of many house churches in Cuba.
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| This
Methodist church in Havana is one of many house churches in Cuba.
Today, there are 121 sanctuaries, more than 700 mission churches and
17,000 members in the Methodist Church in Cuba. A nine-member delegation
sponsored by the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns visited Cuba Oct. 7-12 to provide a witness to
the importance of relationships to the Cuban Methodist Church and its
people. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo #06-1218. Accompanies UMNS
story #632. 10/24/06 |
That church and the country's entire religious climate have undergone
significant changes, he said, and the United Methodist Church is making
"inroads into its relationships with churches in Latin America and the
Caribbean."
The delegation went to
learn about the history of Methodism in Cuba, discover the challenges
facing the church there, and explore possibilities for shared mission
and ministry.
Delegation members met
with representatives of the Cuban Council of Churches, the World Council
of Churches, the Cuban government and the U.S. Interest Section in
Havana, and they explored ecumenical and peace relationships. The group
also visited the country's medical school and a school for the mentally
challenged.
Political impact
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green From
left: The Rev. Olu Harding of Burlington, N.Y., Dalila Cruz of Dallas,
Texas, and the Rev. Larry Pickens are members of a United Methodist
delegation that visited the Methodist Church in Cuba.
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| A
United Methodist delegation to Cuba included (from left) the Rev. Olu
Harding of Burlington, N.Y., Dalila Cruz of Dallas, and the Rev. Larry
Pickens, chief executive of the United Methodist Commission on Christian
Unity and Interreligious Concerns. The agency-sponsored delegation
visited Cuba Oct. 7-12 to provide a witness to the importance of
relationships with the Cuban Methodist Church and its people. A UMNS
photo by Linda Green. Photo #06-1220. Accompanies UMNS story #632.
10/24/06 |
Although Cuba is primarily Roman Catholic, the Methodist Church there is
growing. Of the country's 11 million inhabitants, 17,000 are members of
the Methodist Church of Cuba, and more than 70 percent of those members
are 30 years old or younger.
Part of the
commission's mandate is to advocate for the establishment and
strengthening of relationships with other living faith communities and
to further dialogue with people of other faiths, cultures and
ideologies.
"We have a concern
about the Christian Cuban community, and part of our mandate is to have
conversations all over the world," said Dalila Cruz, a delegation member
from Dallas. "We wanted to see how we could be helpful in developing
better relations between our two countries and in engaging in
communications between the churches in the United States and the church
in Cuba."
The lack of
communication between the U.S government and the Cuban people is
disheartening, she said. Democracy "is used as a club" by the U.S.
government instead of "being able to reach out and work with and help
the people," she said. The group also was disconcerted by the absence of
freedoms in Cuba that are taken for granted in the United States, she
said.
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green Cuban
Methodist Bishop Ricardo Pereira addresses a United Methodist
delegation during a worship service at Central Methodist Church in
Havana.
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| Cuban
Methodist Bishop Ricardo Pereira speaks at a worship service at Central
Methodist Church in Havana in honor of the nine-member delegation from
the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious
Concerns. The group visited the Methodist Church in Cuba Oct. 7-12 to
provide a witness to the importance of relationships to the church and
its people. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo #06-1221. Accompanies
UMNS story #632. 10/24/06 |
The United Methodist Church has consistently voted for an end to the
U.S. government sanctions against Cuba. In a 2004 resolution, the
denomination's General Conference petitioned President Bush and Congress
to lift the economic embargo against Cuba and to seek negotiations for
resuming normal diplomatic relations.
Last April, the United
Methodist Board of Global Ministries and leaders of the Methodist Church
in Cuba signed a statement of solidarity and cooperation that healed a
short-term breach in relationships. The agreement, reflecting a "spirit
of reconciliation and unity," recognized the long history of
collaboration between the Cuban Methodists and the mission board and
expressed regret for a "rupture" last year. At issue were
misunderstandings over a decision by Global Ministries' directors to
close out several designated funds that related to ministries in Cuba.
An 'exciting' church
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green Dancers perform during a worship service at the Central Methodist Church in Havana.
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| Dancers
perform during a worship service at the Central Methodist Church in
Havana in honor of the nine-member United Methodist Commission on
Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns delegation visiting Cuba.
The group visited Cuban Methodist churches Oct. 7-12 to provide a
witness to the importance of relationships with the Methodist Church and
its people. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo #06-1222. Accompanies
UMNS story #632. 10/24/06 |
Delegation members said they appreciated witnessing the spirit of the
Methodist Church in Cuba through the local congregations. "For those who
say the church is dead, people need to come here to see that the church
is very much alive," Cruz said. "It brings a new spirit, it brings
hope, and it certainly brings joy to our hearts. As we worshipped
together, it was refreshing."
Cruz described Cuba as
"ripe" to be a model for the world in terms of evangelism. The church
has committed pastors and energetic leaders.
Alissa Bertsch, the
United Methodist campus minister at the University of California-Los
Angeles, said she is often told by young people that church is
irrelevant and boring. She was pleased that young people in Cuba don't
have that idea.
"The church here is
exciting," she said. "People want to be there. Even if the church
building does not have walls, they were going to gather no matter what.
This is something that our (U.S.) churches can have."
The clergy members in
the delegation preached in Methodist churches in and around Havana on
Oct. 9 and they shared their own faith stories with the congregations.
"I found this to be an overwhelming experience as I come to understand
the Methodist Church in Cuba," Pickens said.
After the revolution
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green Men lead oxen down a street in Havana.
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| Men
lead oxen down a street in Havana. A nine-member delegation sponsored
by the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious
Concerns visited Methodist churches in Cuba Oct. 7-12 to provide a
witness to the importance of relationships to the Cuban Methodist Church
and its people in Cuba. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo #06-1223.
Accompanies UMNS story #632. 10/24/06 |
Born in 1883, the Cuban Methodist Church was a mission of the Florida
Annual (regional) Conference. In 1959, it was the largest Protestant
denomination, but membership plunged following the country's 1959
revolution, which brought a communist government into power.
Led by Fidel Castro,
the government nationalized all church educational institutions, except
seminaries, and ordered that atheism be taught in schools.
The United States has
continuously tightened the economic reins in an effort to bring down the
Castro government. In 1992, ships that traded with Cuba were barred
from using U.S. ports, and the United States limited humanitarian aid to
that country.
As a result of the
Cuban government's stance toward the churches and its worsening
relations with the U.S. government, many missionaries left the island.
By 1962, all Methodist missionaries had departed, along with many church
members.
In 1963, the United
States imposed regulations for churches financially supporting the work
of their counterparts in Cuba. Since the early 1990s, United Methodist
Volunteer in Mission groups have become an avenue for local churches and
annual conferences to provide support for the Methodist Church in Cuba —
support that has included the restoration and repair of church
buildings and parsonages.
The Methodist Church of
Cuba became independent in 1967 and launched outreach programs to Latin
America with an evangelistic thrust that included literacy programs,
development and health care.
According to literature
and leaders of the Methodist Church in Cuba, the denomination
"rekindled" its fire in the 1980s and developed a characteristic of
"total dependence on God, even regarding the most insignificant issue."
More than 90 percent of the current membership entered the sanctuaries
during the last 19 years.
Today, the Cuban
Methodist Church has 121 sanctuaries and more than 700 mission churches,
a pastoral staff of 210 and a membership of 17,000. Some 30,000 people
have a relationship with the church and its different ministries.
Hope for the future
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green Bishop
Ricardo Pereira (left) and Bishop Gaspar J. Domingos share a light
moment during a United Methodist delegation’s visit to Cuba.
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| Cuban
Methodist Bishop Ricardo Pereira (left) and United Methodist Bishop
Gaspar J. Domingos of West Angola share a light moment during a United
Methodist delegation’s visit to Cuba. The nine-member delegation
sponsored by the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns visited Methodist churches in Cuba Oct. 7-12 to
provide a witness to the importance of relationships to the Cuban
Methodist Church and its people. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo
#06-1219. Accompanies UMNS story #632. 10/24/06 |
The delegation observed the need for church buildings for the
congregations because worshippers assemble in homes, backyards and
makeshift structures. They crowd these structures because the Cuban
government does not permit the Methodist Church to build new churches
but instead forces them to focus on maintaining existing structures.
Bishop Gaspar J.
Domingos of West Angola said he was delighted to be a member of a
delegation investigating the ecumenical work in Cuba. He found "great
progress" and openness in the work of the Methodist Church in Cuba.
"I hope that our visit
here would strengthen the ties of friendship with the church and
institutions we visited," he said, "and that the ecumenical work can
progress even more."
Pickens said the
delegation's visit brought hope for the future, particularly in talking
about life in the country after Castro. "It is going to be the church
that will play a significant role shaping that future."
*Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns
Methodist Church in Cuba
United Methodist Board of Global Ministries
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