Education
Perhaps I am getting too nostalgic in my old age and I begin to pay more attention to dates, anniversaries, funerals and the like. But several events have caused me to reflect recently. Forgive me if I sound a bit melodramatic, but it feels to me like the passing away of Bro. Rudy Sanchez signals the end of an era. At the same time our youth and singles CONGRESO celebrates its 45th anniversary. This is a whole generation! I am humbled by the reminder that I was called to ministry at the 1982 Congreso (27 years ago) and that I was licensed to the ministry shortly after High School graduation in 1984 (25 years ago). Interestingly, the same month and year I was licensed to the ministry at the age of 19, my friend Frank Palos began his ministry at the BGCT. As the longest tenured Hispanic employee of the BGCT, he has recently been recognized for his 25 years of service. These events bring, for me at least, to the forefront several topics of discussion regarding the legacy or legacies that we have been left and that are passing on.
One of those topics for me is that of mentoring. Who has mentored us? Who have we mentored? How significant has this been? How important should it remain as we pass the baton to the next generation?
Another topic is how outward-focused were our churches and events a generation ago? How was the evangelistic fervor evident 25 to 45 years ago? (It seems to me that it was a primary focus of our work but I may be mistaken) How have we grown in that? Have we become more outward-focused than a generation ago or has the opposite happened?
What about youth? How important was youth ministry in our Hispanic churches in those years? How were these youth integrated in the overall fabric of our churches and Baptist work in general? How many of our current pastors and leaders were produced by the youth ministries of that era? Was this effective? If so, in which ways?
What about cross-cultural ministry? How were the leaders of our Hispanic Baptist work in Texas of a generation ago innovative and effective in cross-cultural ministry or not? How far have we come in this respect?
Lastly, how were our leaders of a generation ago visionary in respect to cross-vocational domain networking? In other words, how were they able to see the impact that their youth could make for the kingdom, not only through being pastors and missionaries but also doctors, lawyers, teachers, counselors, social workers, etc. etc. I understand that one of the early purposes of Congreso was to encourage our youth and singles to pursue higher education and to be encouraged in their quest for professional careers so that we could multiply the leadership base of the church’s next generation? Where are we today in this respect?
I would like to invite our writers to post on any of these topics or other related topics in the next few weeks. The posts may be reflections, memoirs, or suggestions.
Julio Guarneri
Getsemani, Fort Worth
The Pew Hispanic Center is a great resource on Hispanic issues. UPI had a a story (back in August, which is eons ago in internet time) on Pew’s findings regarding Hispanic student trends (h/t brenda):
A study says the number of Hispanic students in U.S. public schools doubled from 1990 to 2006 to about 10 million children.
The Pew Hispanic Center in Washington said Tuesday that the growth spurt accounted for 60 percent of the overall growth rate in public schools enrollment and the trend was likely to continue for the foreseeable future.
“In 2050, there will be more school-age Hispanic children than school-age non-Hispanic white children,” Pew said in a written statement.
Now we just need to help them graduate.
PS: The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life is another favorite for research, news and discussion.