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February 2009 Issue
Called
by God to Reach Miami
by Mickey Noah
 There's
an unglitzy side to Miami you'll never see depicted on CSI Miami.
Sure, there's the flaunted wealth, the big beach-front homes,
the flashy cars, the fast boats, and glamorous life in the fast
lane for the celebrities and superstar athletes who live here.
But Miami is a city of paradoxical extremes. While the city
has been ranked the third richest in the United States, it also
has more citizens about a third of the population
below the federal poverty line than any other U.S. city except
Detroit and El Paso, Texas. Miami is the seventh largest metro
area in the U.S., with over 5.4 million people.
The son of Cuban immigrants, Southern Baptist missionary Al
Fernandez, 50, loves Miami like only a man born and raised there
could. As a native, he actually witnessed the start of the huge
influx of Cubans, Latinos, and other Hispanics into Miami in the
early 1960s.
His parents were already planting churches in the Miami area
when Cubans began flooding into Miami to escape the Marxist dictatorship
of Fidel Castro. Al accepted Christ when he was only six, and
felt called to the ministry at 15.
"But it took me fifteen more years to let go and to allow
God to work in my life," he says. "I've been here all
my life, grew up Southern Baptist, and feel this is the place
God has called me. I feel uniquely gifted to work here."
Al, who earned a B.A. degree at Florida International University,
Miami, and an M.A. at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary,
Fort Worth, Texas, is married to Noemi, also a Cuban by birth.
They have two sons and a daughter.
Director of the Florida Baptist Convention's "Urban Impact
Ministries" in Miami, Fernandez is one of some 5,500 missionaries
in the United States, Canada, and their territories supported
by the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American
Missions. He is among the North American Mission Board
missionaries featured as part of the annual Week of Prayer,
March 1-8, 2009. This year's theme is "Live with Urgency:
Sowing Together for Harvest." The 2009 Annie Armstrong
Easter Offering's goal is $65 million, 100 percent of
which benefits missionaries like Fernandez.
"Urban Impact is a ministry that was established three
years ago," Fernandez says. "We felt there was a need
to establish a stronger Southern Baptist presence in South Florida.
We felt we really needed to have an impact on our churches, pastors,
and associations in a complex urban setting like Miami. We want
to impact Miami with the Gospel of Jesus Christ."
His work depends on a close partnership among three contiguous
associations in Southeast Florida: the Palm Lake Association in
the West Palm Beach area; the Gulf Stream Baptist Association
just north of Miami; and the Miami Baptist Association in Metro
Miami. Fernandez has three distinct areas of responsibility: urban
church planting, urban leadership development, and urban evangelism.
Bi-lingual, Fernandez believes God has uniquely equipped him
to minister in South Florida.
"I grew up in Spanish-speaking churches so I understand
the context. I've also pastored in English-speaking churches.
It's like God has allowed me to be a bridge across the different
cultures and nationalities in Miami. Like the Apostle Paul said,
I believe I am all things to all people."
Miami has the largest Spanish-speaking population in the Western
Hemisphere outside Latin America. Miamians who use Spanish as
their first language make up 67 percent of the population. One
might think that would make Fernandez's job easier. But language
doesn't tell the whole story.
"The No. 1 challenge is Miami's diversity and multi-culturalism,"
he said, stressing that not all Hispanics are alike because they
come to Miami from different nations Cuba, Mexico, Puerto
Rico, Venezuela, etc. "Hispanics from different countries
may all speak Spanish but still have different customs, traditions,
and cultures."
Fernandez said the three Baptist associations include 540 churches,
three hundred in the Miami association alone.
"We need a sense of unity and cooperation within our churches
and associations," he said. And we need each other because
it doesn't matter how large a church is in Miami, no one church
can reach all the people in this environment. We have to work
together."
Another reason for Miami-area churches to come together
especially in today's gloomy economic recession is money
and resources, according to Fernandez.
"South Florida is a very expensive place to live, and
many of our pastors and churches are struggling because it's not
a cheap place to live and minister. Miami is a city of 'haves'
and 'have-nots.' You see the entertainers and the athletes who
live here, yet you've got average people who have to work hard
every day in their jobs just to survive. These dynamics make it
hard to minister here," he said.
Gary Johnson, executive director of the Miami Baptist Association,
says Miami's high property costs also translate into the small
number of Southern Baptist churches who own their own facilities
in the area.
"Only one-third of our churches own their own property
because property is so expensive in Miami," Johnson said.
"A third of our churches are less than ten years old. Many
have to rent from another church, or meet in warehouses or in
store fronts. A big issue is always property either you're
trying to keep it or looking for some."
Johnson said his Miami Baptist Association which will
celebrate its centennial in 2009 is comprised of some three
hundred churches and missions. About one hundred are English-speaking,
one hundred are Spanish, and one hundred speak Creole (Haitian).
The balance is Chinese, Russian, and Portuguese. Seventy percent
do not use English as their first language.
Two-thirds of the local pastors, Johnson says, are bi-vocational,
so churches tend to be small. "The average size church in
Miami-Dade is forty-five members," said Johnson. "Churches
are small, and they don't have a lot of money. It takes all their
money just to pay the rent.
Fernandez believes that Miami's continued growth in Hispanic
population and culture foreshadows the way the United States will
look in the future.
"What you see in Miami today is what you're going to see
in the rest of this nation in the next twenty years. No matter
where you live, it's coming. So whatever we learn here as Southern
Baptists, using Miami as a laboratory, the principles will be
the same and will work elsewhere in the country. For instance,
there's a big interest in urban ministries because cities are
getting bigger and the outskirts are getting smaller.
"We need to realize that the Apostle Paul used a strategy
calling for him to stop in big cities because that's where the
most bang for the buck is, where you get the best results,"
Fernandez said. "I think as Southern Baptists, we need to
change our strategies and understand that in the future, we need
to know how to minister and be effective in these large urban
settings."
But while Fernandez said Southern Baptists have historically
been good at reaching rural to mid-size cities and towns, "Baptists
have not been as effective in the large urban areas," he
added.
When asked how valuable the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering
is to his work, Fernandez said he couldn't even describe how valuable
it is.
"The reality of these ministries is that they cost money.
And one-size ministry does not fit all. We need a lot of resources
to do the work of the Lord in South Florida."
Mickey Noah is a member of First Redeemer
Church in Cummings, Georgia, and is a staff writer with the SBC
North American Mission Board.
For more information on this year's Week of Prayer missionaries
and the ministries of the North American Mission Board, visit
www.anniearmstrong.com.
Copyright
© 2012 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
901 Commerce Street,
Nashville, Tennessee 37203
Tel. 615.244.2355
Email us: sbclife@sbc.net
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