Manny's Blog


Bebo a 78 year old church planter working hard! PDF Print E-mail
Cuba

I just got back from Cuba—and I’m inspired all over again seeing firsthand the faith and work of our church-planters!

They’re making heroic efforts to get the Word out and bring the harvest in while there is time to gather it. I can’t wait to tell you about two of these faithful workers in particular. Their lives prove that God still works today as He did in biblical times.

The first is Bebo, who is 78 years old, who started with us five years ago. He was a military hero of the Communist revolution and of the Battle of Playa Giron, with a chest full of medals. But Bebo realized his medals were all symbols of achievement for man’s wars, with nothing of eternal value. He wanted to do something to build toward heaven so he would have something to show for his journey through life.


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From Construction worker to Church Planter of 90 churches! PDF Print E-mail
Romania

I celebrate what God is doing through your support of our ministry! Let me share one exciting story with you by introducing you to Alin Bogdan.

He’s a blond, blue-eyed Romanian (not at all like the Nicolae Carpathia of the Left Behind series!). He has a great Christian heritage. Alin and his family migrated from Romania to Spain more than a decade ago, driven out by the depressed economy in their country. Alin’s father, Adam, was a pastor in Romania, but in light of the massive migration of his region, he came to Spain where he started a small construction company.

Adam and his three sons began to work as hard as their culture taught them. In Spain, Romanians are known for being very hard workers. Amazingly, within a few short years, the hard work had moved them high into the Spanish middle class!

But there was restlessness about the Bogdans’ newfound comforts. They kept an ear out for the events back in their homeland. It was more than being homesick. It was a burden. And it wasn’t just Adam either; the sons also shared the shepherd’s burden for the people back home. They knew that many had not been able to leave and were having to make life work in adverse circumstances. The Bogdans felt that they needed to do something for their people.

One of the sons decided to go back to Romania to study, to prepare, to try to make a difference. Alin decided to train for the ministry. He heard of our seminary in Madrid, and he saw it as God’s provision for him to be trained and to make himself available for the Lord’s use.

Adam and the remaining son, Ben, kept running the construction business to fund the training for the other two.

In Madrid, Alin quickly distinguished himself as a jovial yet very serious student of God’s Word. When I met him, I was stunned by his thunderous, prophetic style of preaching. From his very first preaching exercise, we felt he had to deliver the same message in chapel! Then it became a regular practice. We all recognized that God had given Alin a very special gift.

When summer came, Alin participated in our summer country-Gospel festivals. He was amazed by the resources that American churches brought to put on the festivals and to evangelize thousands of people. He knew instantly that the festival approach had an explosive potential for Romania.

Alin began to earnestly request that we go to Romania also. He pleaded with me that we put it on the calendar. He knew that not only would thousands attend the festival, but that thousands would be saved.

The future was bright with hope for the Bogdan family. Business was booming, and the sons were making wonderful strides to become leaders who would make a difference for their people in Romania.

Then tragedy struck.

Alin’s older brother—in the city of Timisoara, in western Romania—was murdered.

There was shock, disbelief, anger. WHY? What purpose did this serve? There was some bitterness in the family. The details of the crime became more and more evident. The culprits became known. Revenge became a possibility.

At first, the family contemplated vengeance, but then they remembered God’s Word: “Vengeance is Mine. I will repay.”

It took a full cycle of grief to overcome the pain and the trauma of the crime. But through this torturous process, God’s heart and mind became strangely deeper and more passionate for the Bogdans. Somehow, they came to feel the deepening effect of pain that Job most have felt. Their walk with the Lord, and their commitment to make heaven the clear objective of their lives, intensified.

Alin graduated from our Madrid seminary, and he began preaching to congregations of Romanian refugees in Spain. But the shepherd’s burden for his homeland grew heavier. Alin had to press his case on to us. Would we consider the plight of Romania?

We felt that with so many “good things” on our plate, we did not need any new ventures. But Alin would not give up—and two years of pleas finally persuaded us to “at least go take a look!”


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Jose Luis: A student almost kicked out of school PDF Print E-mail

Thank you for being part of that with your prayers and your support! Thinking back on the many wonderful young people who have come through the program and are now in fruitful ministries increases my joy at this time of year.

Let me tell you about one of those students, Jose Luis from Galicia.

I’ll confess to you, I sometimes wondered if this young man would ever escape his troubled past.  He used to roam the streets searching for car radios or stereos to steal to support his daily cocaine habit.  He had several serious brushes with the law including the time he tried to kill a member of the “Guardia Civil”, each time narrowly escaping a prison sentence.

Jose Luis eventually tried to turn his life around with God’s help, entering seminary with us. But training was checkered with conflicts, revealing a continuing struggle with his very stormy past.

There were occasions when one more word out of his mouth would have landed him back on the street.  Once, in the middle of the night (about 3:00 a.m.), I got a call from a roommate of Jose Luis’s complaining of a fistfight in the student housing.  Fortunately for Jose Luis, our investigation revealed that the caller, a student from Tunisia, was actually the instigator, and he was dismissed; Jose Luis narrowly escaped trouble once again. After much work and turmoil, Jose Luis finally reached his goal when he graduated.

And thank God he did!

Today, Jose Luis is married, the proud father of two beautiful children, and the senior pastor of a leading church in a city called Ciudad Real.  What’s more, he has a daily radio program, which proclaims the Gospel to the entire region.  Jose Luis is a respectable citizen and a highly effective ambassador for Christ!

Was it worth the traumatic episodes in his training, the sleepless nights, the investment in his education?  It most certainly was!  Jose Luis is living proof of God’s power to transform even the most troubled life . . . and a powerful reminder of how every student is absolutely worth the investment!


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Crisis on the Side of the Road in North Africa PDF Print E-mail

I would like to share a very powerful story to help you see what God sees in other places in our world, particularly in North Africa.

As I was driving out of North Africa recently on my way to Spain, I was reminded of the first story when I passed a familiar area. It was the same area where I had a very dramatic encounter a few years back … an area inhabited almost only by Muslims.

On that particular day several years ago, I had been driving through the rain with one of our students when we saw a young family by the side of the road. The father was trying to hitch a ride while his wife was squatting down in the mud, trying to shelter their two young daughters under her arms. (I later learned the girls were five and six years old.)


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