Difference between revisions of "Spain"

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[[File:Spain_map.gif|300px|thumb|right|''Spain. World factbook, 2006  
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__FORCETOC__
 
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__TOC__
'']]       [[File:Spain1.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Source: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Location_Spain_EU_Europe_world.png Wikipedia Commons] Wikipedia Commons
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[[File:Spain_map.gif|329px|thumb|left|''Spain. World factbook, 2006 '']]
 
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[[File:Spain1.jpg|273px|thumb|right|''Source: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Location_Spain_EU_Europe_world.png Wikipedia Commons]'']]
'']]   [[File:Spain2.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Source: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Location_Spain_EU_Europe_world.png Wikipedia Commons] Wikipedia Commons
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== 1990 Article ==
 
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Spain is located in southwestern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula. It has an area of 195,364 sq. mi. (504,030 km2) and in 2008 had an estimated population of 46,157,822.
'']]    <h3>1990 Article</h3> Spain is located in southwestern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula. It has an area of 195,364 sq mi (504,030 km2) and in 2008 had an estimated population of 46,157,822.
 
  
 
Before 1976 the sporadic presence of Spanish Mennonite Christians was due to contacts by emigrated Spaniards with Mennonite congregations in Switzerland, France, [[Belgium|Belgium]], and [[Germany|Germany]]. Once these few Christians returned to Spain, they either associated with the existing Protestant congregations, especially [[Baptists |Baptists]] and Plymouth Brethren, or they remained anonymous.
 
Before 1976 the sporadic presence of Spanish Mennonite Christians was due to contacts by emigrated Spaniards with Mennonite congregations in Switzerland, France, [[Belgium|Belgium]], and [[Germany|Germany]]. Once these few Christians returned to Spain, they either associated with the existing Protestant congregations, especially [[Baptists |Baptists]] and Plymouth Brethren, or they remained anonymous.
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After the death of the dictator Francisco Franco in 1975, many mission boards began to see that Spain had open doors for them. In 1976 the [[Mennonite Brethren Church|Mennonite Brethren]] Board of Missions and Services and the [[Mennonite Board of Missions (Mennonite Church)|Mennonite Board of Missions]] ([[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church]]) sent missionaries to Spain. The Mennonite Board of Missions (MBM) initiated work in Barcelona as an intentional community while the Mennonite Brethren began forming a church in Madrid.
 
After the death of the dictator Francisco Franco in 1975, many mission boards began to see that Spain had open doors for them. In 1976 the [[Mennonite Brethren Church|Mennonite Brethren]] Board of Missions and Services and the [[Mennonite Board of Missions (Mennonite Church)|Mennonite Board of Missions]] ([[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church]]) sent missionaries to Spain. The Mennonite Board of Missions (MBM) initiated work in Barcelona as an intentional community while the Mennonite Brethren began forming a church in Madrid.
  
Ten years later, the Mennonite presence in Barcelona had developed a congregation and a senior citizens home. In<strong> </strong>Madrid the Mennonite Brethren had one congregation with three meeting places. After 1981 the work of the [[Comunidad Cristiana, Spain|Christian Community]] in Quintaladueña, Burgos, helped by MBM, was consolidated with a congregation and a ministry working with prisoners and drug addicts.
+
Ten years later, the Mennonite presence in Barcelona had developed a congregation and a senior citizens' home. In Madrid the Mennonite Brethren had one congregation with three meeting places. After 1981 the work of the [[Comunidad Cristiana, Spain|Christian Community]] in Quintaladueña, Burgos, helped by MBM, was consolidated with a congregation and a ministry working with prisoners and drug addicts.
  
 
There also were some groups who identified in a general way with the Anabaptist testimony. This was the case of the congregations in Fuenlabrada and in Vallecas, Madrid. In general terms, after ten years of Mennonite testimony in Spain a combined membership of 120 persons could be estimated.
 
There also were some groups who identified in a general way with the Anabaptist testimony. This was the case of the congregations in Fuenlabrada and in Vallecas, Madrid. In general terms, after ten years of Mennonite testimony in Spain a combined membership of 120 persons could be estimated.
  
<h3>2010 Update</h3> Between 2000 and 2009 the following Anabaptist group was active in Spain:
+
== 2020 Update ==
 +
The first documented activity of Mennonites in Spain occurred during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) when Mennonite Relief Committee sent several volunteers from the United States to participate in a program to feed child war refugees. The victory by the fascists' faction of National-Catholic ideology effectively terminated Mennonite involvement in Spain at the end of the war.
  
<div align="center"> <table class="vertical listing">  <tr> <th>Denomination</th> <th>Congregations
+
During the 1970s, it became possible to send missionaries to Spain. After consulting with leaders of the Spanish Protestant churches, Mennonite missionaries decided to cooperate with them instead of establishing yet another denomination in the country. The first missionaries, John and Bonnie Driver, were well received for the freshness of their biblical message with Anabaptist emphases that many young Evangelicals found especially exciting. The Drivers remained in Spain for 10-15 years before returning to South America.
  
in 2000</th> <th>Membership
+
Meanwhile, the first Mennonite Church had come into being in Barcelona. The group that initiated it arrived from [[Brussels (Belgium)|Brussels]], [[Belgium]], where they had migrated years before and where they had been worshiping with a Mennonite congregation at an American mission. José Luis Suárez gave leadership to this group and was their pastor for many years until his retirement.
  
in 2000</th> <th>Congregations
+
Also during the 1970s there was an interesting development occurred in Burgos. A movement of conversions took place among teenagers within the Catholic Church. With a strong component of music and the arts, plus communal life in shared households, this movement shook the whole city. John Driver was among the many people they invited to speak in Burgos, and his approach to the teaching of Jesus caught the imagination of these young Christians. When three “elders” of the movement made a trip to the United States to visit radical Christian communities, they met Dionisio and Connie Byler of [[Argentina]]. They invited the Bylers to come to Burgos to continue the teaching ministry they had received from Driver. The Bylers remained in Burgos after 1981 with the support of Mennonite Mission Network. In the mid-1990s, the group that started out as Catholic adopted a Mennonite identity.
  
in 2003</th> <th>Membership
+
North American [[Brethren in Christ Church|Brethren in Christ]] (BIC) missionaries Bruce and Merly Bundy arrived in Madrid in the 1990s, inaugurating another era of Anabaptist influence in the country. Through their efforts and the efforts of others, the BIC in 2016 had two churches in the Madrid area. Juan and Lucy Ferreira from Venezuela began a BIC work in Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, which related to the BIC churches of Madrid.
  
in 2003</th> <th>Congregations
+
Another effort developed early in the 21st century when Organización Cristiana Amor Viviente, a [[Mennonite World Conference]] member church in [[Honduras]], sent Antonio and Irma Montes to Spain to lead a mission effort. The fruits of their work included two churches in Catalonia and a small group in Madrid.
  
in 2006</th> <th>Membership
+
Since the 1980s these different groups in Spain--widely dispersed in cities that are far from each other--made a point of getting to know each other and of cultivating jointly an Anabaptist or Mennonite identity. Since 1992, this relationship has been rooted in Encuentros Menonitas Españoles (EME – Spanish Mennonite Get-Togethers), which were held every two years. After a few years it organized as a fraternal association, called Anabautistas, Menonitas y Hermanos en Cristo – España (AMyHCE). AMyHCE participated in FEREDE, the association of Spanish Protestant churches and also in Mennonite World Conference (MWC). In MWC  AMyHCE was rather unique in having all of its churches, with their various connections with the historic Anabaptist denominations, participate jointly under this single representation.
  
in 2006</th> <th>Congregations
+
Between 2000 and 2020 the following Anabaptist group was active in Spain:
  
in 2009</th> <th>Membership
+
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:auto; text-align:right"
 +
|-
 +
!Denomination
 +
!Congregations<br />in 2000
 +
!Membership<br />in 2000
 +
!Congregations<br />in 2009
 +
!Membership<br />in 2009
 +
!Congregations<br />in 2020
 +
!Membership<br />in 2020
 +
|-
 +
| align= "left" | Anabautistas, Menonitas y Hermanos en Cristo – España (AMyHCE)
 +
| 5
 +
| 152
 +
| 8
 +
| 308
 +
| 8
 +
| 663
 +
|}
  
in 2009</th> </tr> <tr> <td>[[Comunidad Cristiana de los Hermanos Menonitas de España|Asociación de Menonitas y Hermanos en Cristo en España]]</td> <td align="right">5
+
= Bibliography =
 +
Byler, Dionisio. "Spain: Old churches in new Europe." Mennonite World Conference. 19 May 2016. Web. 8 April 2021. https://mwc-cmm.org/courier/stories/spain-old-churches-new-europe.
  
</td> <td align="right">152
+
Gallardo, Jose. ''Freedom for the Captives: How Love is Rebuilding Lives in Spain''. Scottdale, 1988.
  
</td> <td align="right">5
+
Garcia-Villoslada, Ricardo. Director. ''Historia de la Iglesia en Espana, ''vol. 3. Madrid: Biblioteca de autores cristianos, 1975.
 
 
</td> <td align="right">160
 
 
 
</td> <td align="right">7
 
 
 
</td> <td align="right">153
 
 
 
</td> <td align="right">8
 
 
 
</td> <td align="right">308
 
 
 
</td> </tr>  </table> </div>
 
= Bibliography =
 
Gallardo, Jose. <em class="gameo_bibliography">Freedom for the </em><em class="gameo_bibliography">Captives: How Love is Rebuilding Lives in Spain</em>. Scottdale, 1988.
 
  
Garcia-Villoslada, Ricardo. Director. <em class="gameo_bibliography">Historia de la Iglesia en Espana, </em>vol. 3. Madrid: Biblioteca de autores cristianos, 1975.
+
Menendez-Pelayo, Marcelino. ''Historia de los Heterodoxos Españoles, ''2 vols. Madrid: Biblioteca de autores cristianos, 1978.
  
Menendez-Pelayo, Marcelino. <em class="gameo_bibliography">Historia de </em><em class="gameo_bibliography">los Heterodoxos Españoles, </em>2 vols. Madrid: Biblioteca de autores cristianos, 1978.
+
Mennonite World Conference. "2000 Europe Mennonite &amp; Brethren in Christ Churches." Web. 27 February 2011. [broken link].
  
Mennonite World Conference. "2000 Europe Mennonite &amp; Brethren in Christ Churches." Web. 27 February 2011. [http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/2000europe.html http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/2000europe.html].
+
Mennonite World Conference. "Europe." Web. 27 February 2011. [broken link].
  
Mennonite World Conference. "2003 Europe Mennonite &amp; Brethren in Christ Churches." Web. 27 February 2011. [http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/2003europe.html http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/2003europe.html].
+
Mennonite World Conference. "Global Map: Spain." Mennonite World Conference. Web. 8 April 2021. https://mwc-cmm.org/global-map.
  
Mennonite World Conference. "Europe." Web. 27 February 2011. [http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/2006europe.pdf http://www.mwc-cmm.org/Directory/2006europe.pdf].
+
Mennonite World Conference. "World Directory: Europe." Web. 13 June 2010. [broken link].
  
Mennonite World Conference. "World Directory: Europe." Web. 13 June 2010. <span class="link-external"><span class="link-external"><span class="link-external">[http://www.mwc-cmm.org/en15/files/Members2009/EuropeSummary.doc http://www.mwc-cmm.org/en15/files/Members2009/EuropeSummary.doc]</span></span></span>.
+
Mennonite World Conference. ''World Directory = Directorio mundial = Répertoire mondial 2012: Mennonite, Brethren in Christ and Related Churches = Iglesias Menonitas, de los Hermanos en Cristo y afines = Églises Mennonites, Frères en Christ et Apparentées''. Kitchener, ON: Mennonite World Conference, 2012: 16.
  
<em class="gameo_bibliography">Mennonite World Handbook Supplement</em>. Strasbourg, France, and Lombard, IL: Mennonite World Conference, 1984: 124.
+
''Mennonite World Handbook Supplement''. Strasbourg, France, and Lombard, IL: Mennonite World Conference, 1984: 124.
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=Vol. 5, pp. 848-849|date=February 2011|a1_last=Zorilla|a1_first=Hugo|a2_last= |a2_first= }}
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{{GAMEO_footer|hp=Vol. 5, pp. 848-849|date=April 2021|a1_last=Zorilla|a1_first=Hugo|a2_last=Byler|a2_first=Dionisio}}
 +
[[Category:Countries]]

Latest revision as of 14:15, 8 April 2021

Spain. World factbook, 2006

1990 Article

Spain is located in southwestern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula. It has an area of 195,364 sq. mi. (504,030 km2) and in 2008 had an estimated population of 46,157,822.

Before 1976 the sporadic presence of Spanish Mennonite Christians was due to contacts by emigrated Spaniards with Mennonite congregations in Switzerland, France, Belgium, and Germany. Once these few Christians returned to Spain, they either associated with the existing Protestant congregations, especially Baptists and Plymouth Brethren, or they remained anonymous.

After the death of the dictator Francisco Franco in 1975, many mission boards began to see that Spain had open doors for them. In 1976 the Mennonite Brethren Board of Missions and Services and the Mennonite Board of Missions (Mennonite Church) sent missionaries to Spain. The Mennonite Board of Missions (MBM) initiated work in Barcelona as an intentional community while the Mennonite Brethren began forming a church in Madrid.

Ten years later, the Mennonite presence in Barcelona had developed a congregation and a senior citizens' home. In Madrid the Mennonite Brethren had one congregation with three meeting places. After 1981 the work of the Christian Community in Quintaladueña, Burgos, helped by MBM, was consolidated with a congregation and a ministry working with prisoners and drug addicts.

There also were some groups who identified in a general way with the Anabaptist testimony. This was the case of the congregations in Fuenlabrada and in Vallecas, Madrid. In general terms, after ten years of Mennonite testimony in Spain a combined membership of 120 persons could be estimated.

2020 Update

The first documented activity of Mennonites in Spain occurred during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) when Mennonite Relief Committee sent several volunteers from the United States to participate in a program to feed child war refugees. The victory by the fascists' faction of National-Catholic ideology effectively terminated Mennonite involvement in Spain at the end of the war.

During the 1970s, it became possible to send missionaries to Spain. After consulting with leaders of the Spanish Protestant churches, Mennonite missionaries decided to cooperate with them instead of establishing yet another denomination in the country. The first missionaries, John and Bonnie Driver, were well received for the freshness of their biblical message with Anabaptist emphases that many young Evangelicals found especially exciting. The Drivers remained in Spain for 10-15 years before returning to South America.

Meanwhile, the first Mennonite Church had come into being in Barcelona. The group that initiated it arrived from Brussels, Belgium, where they had migrated years before and where they had been worshiping with a Mennonite congregation at an American mission. José Luis Suárez gave leadership to this group and was their pastor for many years until his retirement.

Also during the 1970s there was an interesting development occurred in Burgos. A movement of conversions took place among teenagers within the Catholic Church. With a strong component of music and the arts, plus communal life in shared households, this movement shook the whole city. John Driver was among the many people they invited to speak in Burgos, and his approach to the teaching of Jesus caught the imagination of these young Christians. When three “elders” of the movement made a trip to the United States to visit radical Christian communities, they met Dionisio and Connie Byler of Argentina. They invited the Bylers to come to Burgos to continue the teaching ministry they had received from Driver. The Bylers remained in Burgos after 1981 with the support of Mennonite Mission Network. In the mid-1990s, the group that started out as Catholic adopted a Mennonite identity.

North American Brethren in Christ (BIC) missionaries Bruce and Merly Bundy arrived in Madrid in the 1990s, inaugurating another era of Anabaptist influence in the country. Through their efforts and the efforts of others, the BIC in 2016 had two churches in the Madrid area. Juan and Lucy Ferreira from Venezuela began a BIC work in Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, which related to the BIC churches of Madrid.

Another effort developed early in the 21st century when Organización Cristiana Amor Viviente, a Mennonite World Conference member church in Honduras, sent Antonio and Irma Montes to Spain to lead a mission effort. The fruits of their work included two churches in Catalonia and a small group in Madrid.

Since the 1980s these different groups in Spain--widely dispersed in cities that are far from each other--made a point of getting to know each other and of cultivating jointly an Anabaptist or Mennonite identity. Since 1992, this relationship has been rooted in Encuentros Menonitas Españoles (EME – Spanish Mennonite Get-Togethers), which were held every two years. After a few years it organized as a fraternal association, called Anabautistas, Menonitas y Hermanos en Cristo – España (AMyHCE). AMyHCE participated in FEREDE, the association of Spanish Protestant churches and also in Mennonite World Conference (MWC). In MWC AMyHCE was rather unique in having all of its churches, with their various connections with the historic Anabaptist denominations, participate jointly under this single representation.

Between 2000 and 2020 the following Anabaptist group was active in Spain:

Denomination Congregations
in 2000
Membership
in 2000
Congregations
in 2009
Membership
in 2009
Congregations
in 2020
Membership
in 2020
Anabautistas, Menonitas y Hermanos en Cristo – España (AMyHCE) 5 152 8 308 8 663

Bibliography

Byler, Dionisio. "Spain: Old churches in new Europe." Mennonite World Conference. 19 May 2016. Web. 8 April 2021. https://mwc-cmm.org/courier/stories/spain-old-churches-new-europe.

Gallardo, Jose. Freedom for the Captives: How Love is Rebuilding Lives in Spain. Scottdale, 1988.

Garcia-Villoslada, Ricardo. Director. Historia de la Iglesia en Espana, vol. 3. Madrid: Biblioteca de autores cristianos, 1975.

Menendez-Pelayo, Marcelino. Historia de los Heterodoxos Españoles, 2 vols. Madrid: Biblioteca de autores cristianos, 1978.

Mennonite World Conference. "2000 Europe Mennonite & Brethren in Christ Churches." Web. 27 February 2011. [broken link].

Mennonite World Conference. "Europe." Web. 27 February 2011. [broken link].

Mennonite World Conference. "Global Map: Spain." Mennonite World Conference. Web. 8 April 2021. https://mwc-cmm.org/global-map.

Mennonite World Conference. "World Directory: Europe." Web. 13 June 2010. [broken link].

Mennonite World Conference. World Directory = Directorio mundial = Répertoire mondial 2012: Mennonite, Brethren in Christ and Related Churches = Iglesias Menonitas, de los Hermanos en Cristo y afines = Églises Mennonites, Frères en Christ et Apparentées. Kitchener, ON: Mennonite World Conference, 2012: 16.

Mennonite World Handbook Supplement. Strasbourg, France, and Lombard, IL: Mennonite World Conference, 1984: 124.


Author(s) Hugo Zorilla
Dionisio Byler
Date Published April 2021

Cite This Article

MLA style

Zorilla, Hugo and Dionisio Byler. "Spain." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. April 2021. Web. 18 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Spain&oldid=171167.

APA style

Zorilla, Hugo and Dionisio Byler. (April 2021). Spain. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 18 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Spain&oldid=171167.




Hpbuttns.png

Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, pp. 848-849. All rights reserved.


©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.