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An exodus from Venezuela & new ministry in Chile
IMB Staff
November 01, 2018
3 MIN READ TIME

An exodus from Venezuela & new ministry in Chile

An exodus from Venezuela & new ministry in Chile
IMB Staff
November 01, 2018

Insecure and unstable describe life in Venezuela. The country is running out of food. It has recorded more murders – 28,000 in 2017 – than countries at war. Venezuela’s population of 30 million people is decreasing, with more than 4 million emigrations in the past 10 years.

IMB photo

Sisters Maria and Elisabeth were medical students in Venezuela when unrest overcame their country, prompting the beginning of a family exodus to Chile.

This is one family – parents and two daughters – who never intended to leave, yet theirs is a story of a God-ordained exodus from their home country.

Maria* and her older sister Elisabeth* were both in medical school in Venezuela. Maria and a friend were robbed while waiting for the bus to take them to classes. Later, she witnessed a mobbing. Then, a friend was killed during a peaceful march.

All of this happened within a week. Maria knew she needed to leave. So, she moved to Chile.

Maria’s parents, Aristotle* and Lily*, ministered in a low-income area of Venezuela for 18 years. When they began their ministry, most of their congregation had low expectations of life and little hope for a good job.

Through Aristotle and Lily’s faithful service, the congregation now has a God-centered view of life. God used this couple to change countless lives while their country slowly started to implode.

Aristotle and Lily’s home was being watched by a local gang. The constant insecurity around them prompted many friends and church members to search for a better life in other countries. Yet Aristotle and Lily intended to stay – until God led them to go.

“God showed us bit by bit that we were to leave Venezuela,” Lily said.

God opened doors for Aristotle in Chile. The day after he arrived in Chile, he visited the church his daughter Maria attended. Within a month, the church asked if he would be their pastor.

After Elisabeth graduates from medical school in Venezuela, she and her mother plan to join Aristotle and Maria.

Gifts through the Cooperative Program and the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering support Southern Baptists who work alongside national believers such as Aristotle and Lily to share the hope of Jesus Christ with people in places of unrest and conflict. To learn more about the Americas, click here.

*Names changed.

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Reported by the communications staff of the International Mission Board. Reprinted from Baptist Press, baptistpress.com, news service of the Southern Baptist Convention.)