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The
Persecuted Church
Snapshots of Persecution from
Spain
By Chris Mills, IMB missionary to Spain
When we arrived in Valencia in 1993, we attended
a wedding at a 100-year-old Baptist church there. What was
so special about this wedding was that, in the church’s
century-long history, this was the first legally recognized
wedding ever performed there.
Justo (pronounced WHO-stoe), was a waiter
in a café. God permitted me to lead Justo to Christ
after dinner one Saturday evening at our house. The next
day, Sunday, he shared with his manager that he needed to
adjust his work schedule so he could go to church on Sunday
mornings. When his manager refused, he resigned. Not to
worry, Justo was well-connected. He started work right away
at another place, but was let go because the manager heard
him witnessing to a client. He was spiritually young and
zealous at the time.
We met a couple from the Russian republic
of Georgia. They had left because of the civil war; but
they ended up in Chechnya. They escaped again when the Russians
invaded. The wife was pregnant and wounded by shrapnel when
the family arrived in Spain. When she eventually gave birth,
she found that the nurse, a nun, had placed a card with
the letter “S” on it by her bed. She asked the
nurse what that meant. “Soltera (single),” was
the reply. “Why, I’m a married woman!”
she protested, but to no avail. The nurse/nun did not consider
a wedding performed by a non-Catholic clergy to be valid.
Their daughter was born with the stigma that she was illegitimate.
When our little mission point in Tres Cantos
held a VBS in the plaza next to our store-front church building,
a neighbor filed a formal complaint with the local police
department for cultic activities. He wanted us to post a
sign any time we would have a public event that would be
something like a warning label on a cigarette pack. Fortunately,
we had a member who was a police officer. He was able to
handle the matter for us.
Another church member worked for the
Spanish Civil Guard (think state police). His job was to
investigate cults. As a result, he got to know all the different
evangelical groups around the Madrid Community (a community
is like a county) because his superiors assigned him to
check them out. Angel took some grief because they wanted
him to give the evangelicals a hard time and even testify
against them. Instead, he was able to exonerate many ministries.
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