Cuban Presbyterians see Presbyterian Mission at Holguín as key to growth
September 30 2018
It’s Friday night in Holguín and the streets of this city in northeastern Cuba are filled with noisy revelers — just like bustling metropolises everywhere. Music is in the air, motorcyclists roar up and down the street, people laugh and talk.
But in the front room of a small house, about 40 Presbyterians, several with small children sitting on their laps, are at worship. The Presbyterian Mission at Holguín of the Presbyterian Reformed Church in Cuba (IPRC) regularly worships on Sunday mornings, but the Rev. Edelberto Valdes, IPRC general secretary, and the Rev. Ary Fernandez, the denomination’s moderator, have come for a rare visit, so Friday night it is.
The liturgy is familiar to any Presbyterian anywhere. Some of the hymns are accompanied by recorded music coming from the left front corner of the room. Others are sung a cappella, led by the energetic Valdes. The service is frequently interrupted when the racket from the street comes booming through the open shutters on this warm evening. But these worshipers are single-minded and intent.
As with many of the Presbyterian missions in the relatively remote eastern regions of the island, this little band of believers rarely sees an ordained pastor, and so the people have saved up much activity for which they need Fernandez and Valdes.
First there is a baptism. Xiomara Alonso, a bubbly woman probably in her 60s, has been waiting quite some time for a pastor to come to the Presbyterian Mission at Holguín so she can be baptized. Then she and five other newcomers to the mission are received as “members” (though the mission is not a formal IPRC congregation).
And there is the celebration of the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper — a rare occurrence here. Fernandez and Valdes have never visited this mission because of the time and expense it takes to get here. Some pastoral service is provided by a Quaker clergywoman in town who works closely with the Evangelical (Presbyterian-Protestant) Theological Seminary in Matanzas — a 14-hour drive away — to provide extension courses in Holguín.
After worship, Valdes and Fernandez talk with the mission’s members about their diaconal ministries in Holguín and how the IPR can be more supportive. All of the Presbyterian missions in eastern Cuba are responding to a litany of social problems: alcoholism, domestic violence, teen pregnancy and unemployment.
The IPRC, which currently consists of three presbyteries — Havana, Matanzas and El Centro — would like to create a fourth presbytery in the eastern part of the island to provide more support to the churches and missions out here. This little building, with its pink walls and worn ceramic tile floor, would be an ideal place to locate the new presbytery. Quiet conversations are going on to make that happen.
In the meantime, the Presbyterian Mission at Holguín is a vibrant, if small, community of believers. A former Salvation Army captain, a young man named Roberto, has assumed some leadership here. “The Presbyterian Church is much better for us than the Salvation Army,” he says. “The Presbyterians minister to the whole person, and that is important in our community.”
Jerry Van Marter, Former Director of Communications, Office of the General Assembly
Today’s Focus: Presbyterian Mission at Holguín
Let us join in prayer for:
PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Richard Wisniewski, PPC
Janna Wofford, APCU
Let us pray:
We are grateful, Lord God, for the ways in which the IPRC is contributing to the vitality of the Presbyterian Church of Holguín. We ask that you continue to bless them and uphold them in their fellowship and ministry. Amen.
Revised Common Lectionary Readings for Sunday, September 30, 2018, the Twenty-Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year B)
First Reading Esther 7:1-6, 9-10, 9:20-22
Psalm 124:1-8
Second Reading James 5:13-20
Gospel Mark 9:38-50