Ministry battles paganism in Ecuador
brian | 28.05.2008 02:43 | Social Struggles | World
As this article shows, some christian groups are seeking to undermine the social revolutions in latin america.
Ministry battles paganism in Ecuador
Posted: 27 May, 2008
E3 Partners developed the EvangeCube as a tool for evangelism, which it follows up with church planting.
< ―E3 Partners is sending three times as many short-term mission teams to Ecuador as it sent last year, in the face of rising paganism and socialism in Latin America. Twelve teams will travel to nine different locations between May and October of this year, and three of them will serve in medical missions.
E3 plans to focus its ministry in Ecuador on empowering church-planting mission trips led by Ecuadorians, as well as on providing leadership support, research, and ministry tools.
Latin America’s rising “Pink Tide” of socialism and paganism has given e3 Partners’ operations there a sense of urgency in recent years. Ecuador, like Bolivia and Venezuela, has acquired a socialist leader. President Rafael Correa took office in January 2007 and wants to rewrite the constitution to help the poor, reports BBC News, but critics say he is only trying to consolidate his power.
Many suspect that the “doctors” and “teachers” Cuba is sending to Ecuador and other nations are advocates of Santeria, an Afro-Cuban form of paganism. Bolivian president Evo Morales, who is also socialist, wants to spread his country’s tribal animism. Under these circumstances, syncretism and socialistic animism could easily spread through the continent, especially in the Andes Mountains.
Syncretism already abounds in Ecuador. Although 90% of Ecuadorians call themselves Roman Catholic, most of them combine Catholic beliefs with indigenous beliefs. Sometimes their veneration of Catholic saints resembles the traditional local worship of pagan deities.
While the Ecuadorian church still needs financial and material support from e3, e3 reports that the church is strong and well-equipped for ministry. It is doing all it can to spread the Gospel in Ecuador while the doors are still open.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/11261
Posted: 27 May, 2008
E3 Partners developed the EvangeCube as a tool for evangelism, which it follows up with church planting.
< ―E3 Partners is sending three times as many short-term mission teams to Ecuador as it sent last year, in the face of rising paganism and socialism in Latin America. Twelve teams will travel to nine different locations between May and October of this year, and three of them will serve in medical missions.
E3 plans to focus its ministry in Ecuador on empowering church-planting mission trips led by Ecuadorians, as well as on providing leadership support, research, and ministry tools.
Latin America’s rising “Pink Tide” of socialism and paganism has given e3 Partners’ operations there a sense of urgency in recent years. Ecuador, like Bolivia and Venezuela, has acquired a socialist leader. President Rafael Correa took office in January 2007 and wants to rewrite the constitution to help the poor, reports BBC News, but critics say he is only trying to consolidate his power.
Many suspect that the “doctors” and “teachers” Cuba is sending to Ecuador and other nations are advocates of Santeria, an Afro-Cuban form of paganism. Bolivian president Evo Morales, who is also socialist, wants to spread his country’s tribal animism. Under these circumstances, syncretism and socialistic animism could easily spread through the continent, especially in the Andes Mountains.
Syncretism already abounds in Ecuador. Although 90% of Ecuadorians call themselves Roman Catholic, most of them combine Catholic beliefs with indigenous beliefs. Sometimes their veneration of Catholic saints resembles the traditional local worship of pagan deities.
While the Ecuadorian church still needs financial and material support from e3, e3 reports that the church is strong and well-equipped for ministry. It is doing all it can to spread the Gospel in Ecuador while the doors are still open.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/11261
brian
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