Spanish
Language Challenge

At the start of 2016, the Conference Committee on
Hispanic/Latino Ministries gave a challenge to all the local churches in the
Michigan Area to plan and run a Who is Our Neighbor? Spanish Language Study at
their church. The study is a six-week
study for learning Spanish as Church Hospitality. So far, six churches are
participating in the challenge. The goal is for at least 10 churches to
participate.

These are the churches that have accepted the challenge:
St. Paul UMC: Ludington
Hartford UMC
Marysville UMC
Trinity UMC-Grand Rapids
St. Johns First UMC
Christ UMC- Traverse City
Centro
Familiar Cristiano United Methodist Church
In 2016, we will say good-bye to El Buen Pastor United
Methodist Church, which has been the only Hispanic/Latino Church in the Detroit
Conference for the past 30+ years. While it is hard to say good-bye to this
church, the grief is limited in the joy that a new church has started at the
same location. The Conference Committee on Hispanic/Latino Ministries supported
the start of a New Hispanic/Latino Church in Detroit, Michigan. The church
started on February 1, 2016, which is located at the former El Buen Pastor
United Methodist Church in Detroit. Services are on Saturday nights and during
the week there is a food pantry, immigration legal services, Bible Studies,
Craft classes, and guitar lessons as well as special meals. The church is also
planning on having a children and youth program this summer.
The Superintendent, Rev. Dr. Charles Boayue, making the announcement of the of the approval of the new church on February 6, 2015.
St.
Johns First United Methodist Church


St. Johns First United Methodist Church has a
Neighbor’s Ministry that is a ministry with the Latino dairy farm workers in
the area. The ministry provides English as a Second Language Classes,
translation, transportation, and other community services. The church also has
a monthly Spanish Language service and a yearly Cinco de Mayo Celebration that
the community members help plan and organize.
The church was in the Conference newsletter recently
because of what they did this year for Ash Wednesday. They did what they
describe as a Reserve Drive-Through imposition of ashes. Instead of people
coming to the church to get ashes, the church went out to community to give
ashes at the local dairy farms. According to the article, “Ellen, (Rev. Ellen
Zienert is the pastor of the church), and four members of the congregation
indeed drove out into the Clinton County countryside traveling a circuit of 75
miles. On the course of their six and half hour journey, they visited ten farms
and shared ashes with 26 people (ten more than attended the worship service in
the church that same evening).” During the visits to the farms, there was a
short liturgy in Spanish that the members of the congregations had learned
beforehand, everyone present said the Lord’s Prayer together, and one of the
visiting members job was to bless everyone at the end saying Dios te bendiga,
God Bless You. The church plans on doing
going out again next year, and possibility having two teams, instead of one, so
they can serve 20 sites. At the end of the article, Rev. Ellen Zienert shares
advice for other churches with Hispanic/Latino neighbors, she says, “Don’t be
afraid! Just look around you with different eyes.”
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