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New Believer Jailed in Mexico for Receiving Christ

Jeff M. Sellers

Compass Direct News

Village officials in Chiapas punish convert for leaving 'traditionalist Catholic' religion

SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico – Juan Mendez Mendez became a Christian in a village outside of this city in Chiapas state on April 7, and two days later local authorities put him in jail – for leaving their religious blend of Roman Catholicism and native custom.

A catechist or doctrinal instructor in the “traditionalist Catholic” church in the village of Pasté (pahs-TEH), the 25-year-old Mendez was released on Tuesday (April 10) after spending the night in jail. The previous Easter Sunday, political bosses in the Tzotzil Maya village noticed him missing from a church festival involving what Mendez considered to be idolatrous rites; they summoned him that evening.

“They said, ‘What do you mean that you’ve accepted Christ – you mean you don’t believe in our gods [Catholic saints]?’” Mendez told Compass. “And I said, ‘Well, those were just apostles, and now I belong to Christ.’”

The town leaders threatened to jail Mendez, and the following day they summoned him again after consulting with villagers, including other catechists. Mendez verified to them that he had heard the gospel in another community and now wanted to become part of an Alas de Aguila (Eagle’s Wings) church in Pasté, he said.

The officials threatened to strip him and throw cold water on him in jail, Mendez said. “You know what else we’re going to do?” one of them told the father of three pre-school children. “We’re going to beat you. We’re going to hit you.”

Mendez said he replied, “‘You know, if you’re going to beat me, then here I am. Here I am, if you’re going to beat me.’ But another said, ‘No, we’re not going to beat him.’”

After questioning Pasté Alas de Aguila pastor Jose Gomez Hernandez – confirming that Mendez planned to attend his church, though he had not yet had the opportunity to do so – village officials decided to jail the new Christian last Monday night (April 9).

Members of the Alas de Aguila church were allowed to visit him. He said he told one of them, “If I have to be a prisoner, I have no other alternative but to continue pressing forward.” He added that his wife, who put her trust in Christ along with Mendez, “despite this situation has been very happy, and in her faith she wants to press forward also.”

Mendez was not hurt while in jail from 5 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. and was released without further threats, he said, though another Alas de Aguila pastor, Antonio Vasquez, said “there is certainly a threat.”

“What is further painful to me,” Pastor Vasquez told Compass, “is that the brethren in our church continue to contribute to and participate in the pagan festivals, because if they don’t the local authorities will take all these people to jail.”

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Most Recent User Comments
Archbishop 10K
4/21/2007 11:21 PM
And my apologies for yet another comment, but Mexico has had its fair share of anti-Catholic persecution from the government; see the Cristero War of 1926-1929 for a REAL story of hatred against Mexican Christians. I believe it wasn't until 1990 that priests and nuns were allowed by law to go out in public in their clericals/habits, and unless I'm mistaken, to this day, the clergy can't vote.
Archbishop 10K
4/21/2007 7:15 PM
Roman Catholicism + native custom does not equal "traditionalist Catholicism", though. Traditionalist Catholicism is a specific type of conservative Catholic Christianity, often characterized by attending the Tridentine Latin Mass, reading pre-Vatican II Bibles, catechisms or devotional materials, and adhering to pre-Vatican II standards of doctrine.

The article should have referred to exactly whatever this village in question's religion is, whether it's Santeria, Vodun, or whatever.
djconklin
4/21/2007 2:04 PM
In the paragraph before the use of the phrase "traditionalist Catholic" they explain that it is a mix of "Roman Catholicism and native custom."
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