Part 2
by Javier Márquez
(The first part of this article is available here.)
We continue the story of our visit to Comunidad Anabautista de Medellín (Anabaptist Community of Medellín), whose pastors Carlos Sánchez and Nidia Montoya carry out a ministry with more than 40 families in Medellín. It has been growing little by little through discipling and baptizing members of the community, who now also work extending the Kingdom of God in their families.
We headed towards sectors at the other end of the city of Medellín, where three exceptional people awaited us.
Andrea is a woman who for many years was a commander and nurse in the FARC-EP guerrilla group, an armed group that entered a peace process signed in 2016 with the Colombian government. She met Carlos and Nidia in civilian life and since then has begun a life of discipleship after leaving her previous one as a militiaman. She was recently baptized and is now part of Comunidad Anabautista de Medellín.
This time she invited us to her house, where her relatives and colleagues who had also fought with the guerrillas, and who had now been involved in the peace process for years, were also waiting for us.
We shared the word with them, we read about what the Bible says about peacemakers, and we prayed together, but above all it was a time of great listening: we heard their story, the reasons that led them to the guerrillas and the reasons they had for betting for a life in peace despite the immense danger they faced, and the great difficulties to survive. Andrea leads with love as part of Comunidad Anabautista de Medellín.
We also visited Karen Serna and her mother María Victoria Tirado in the Acevedo sector. To get there we took the metro and then a bus. Upon arrival to the area, there is a bridge, and under the bridge is a small theater used by groups to sell drugs. Past this bridge and down the stairs, there is a small stream running through the block. In this small community there is a group of girls whom the Anabaptist Community of Medellín has been accompanying for several years.
The community seeks to accompany these girls in their growth, advising them, trying to protect them from prostitution networks that tend to be very attractive in contexts of great need, and encouraging them to dream of studying a professional career and make the best possible decisions for their lives. Nidia especially accompanies them in this process. She is a psychologist and has also been working with children and adolescents for many years, so she is the face of Comunidad Anabautista to the young women of the community.
Among these young women is Karen, who is the oldest. She studies and works every day selling hot dogs near the university until two in the morning. Despite being only 21 years old, she is an example and leader to the rest of the girls. Carlos and Nidia met her many years ago when she was young, and ministered to her in the way she now replicates with her friends. She is a living testimony that Comunidad Anabautista de Medellín forms leaders in the community.
On Tuesday night, we met at Carlos and Nidia’s house for dinner with people from the community. We sang together, read the word, prayed, and had dinner. It was a special night because, for the first time, Comunidad Anabautista de Medellín fellowshipped with the Mosaic Conference team.
Before leaving Medellín we all prayed for Nidia and Carlos. We shared a time of communion where we all expressed our emotions and thoughts after three days of travel together. We felt like we had put on the sandals of Jesus, and our hearts were touched during each of the visits. In the conversations, we also managed to better understand the many needs and challenges of the church. The most immediate need is for a place to meet with all families, not only to officiate services, but also to have a meeting place for everyone in the community.
Carlos and Nidia opened the doors of their beautiful home in Medellín to us, shared their food, and set aside their time for Mosaic. It was a time in which we strengthened ties, deepened friendships, and began to share the challenges of this incredible community.
Javier Márquez
Javier Márquez is an Anabaptist Colombian pacifist and poet and a writer for the MCUSA publication MenoTicias.