Evangelist Andrew Palau joins effort to share the Gospel through Spanish-speaking Festival in Key Border Town of Dominican Republic
Luis Palau Association News Release – For Immediate Release
For more information, contact: Jay Fordice, 503.614.1500, jay.fordice@palau.org
DAJABÓN, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC (ANS – Feb. 8, 2016)
-- As part of a collaborative effort with half a dozen partner
evangelists, Andrew Palau shared the Good News of Jesus Christ with
thousands in Dajabón, a western city in the Dominican Republic on the
border of Haiti. The festival was part of a larger campaign to the
border region called “Buena Vida!” and included a second evangelistic
festival in neighboring Ouanaminthe, Haiti.
Each
day, several thousand people packed into La Calle de Ancha (the broad
road), a main street in the city which was closed down to make room for
the evangelistic event. Music, drama performances, action sports
demonstrations, and other activities for families and children were some
of the highlights of the festival each day. Popular local musicians,
along with ministry partner Dave Lubben, prepared the crowd each evening
for the message.
The
first night of the festival in Dajabón included a message by evangelist
Alan Greene of Lifelight Ministries. Palau shared the second night and
played a short video greeting from his father, evangelist Luis Palau,
who is well known in the region as a result of years of his radio
ministry and outreaches. Each evening, there was a spirit of rejoicing
across the crowd as festival-goers were invited to give their lives to
Christ. By the end of the second evening, approximately 2,500 people had
made public commitments to follow Jesus for the first time.
Palau
also partnered with several other evangelists, including Greene, Reid
Saunders, Harry Thomas, Bob Lenz, Josh Brewer, John Andrus, and Vic
Murphy—all of whom are members of the “Next Generation Alliance,” the
Luis Palau Association’s coalition of evangelists—to help lead
outreaches in prisons, local schools, in medical clinics, and several
local churches. Hundreds of decisions were recorded through those events
as well.
“It
was a great privilege to serve the churches, pastors, and the body of
Christ in a town that—as is true of many border towns—has the unique
pressures that come along with being a major connecting point to a
neighboring country,” Palau said. “There is a tendency in these places
for there to be less input or assistance as they dream of how the Gospel
might impact their city. I’m so grateful for Reid Saunders and his team
for their investment into this region.”
Following
the conclusion of the festival on Wednesday, the stage equipment was
quickly transported across the river to Ouanaminthe, Haiti, where Bob
Lenz and Reid Saunders worked with churches and ministry leaders in the
area to hold a second evangelistic festival on February 6-7 for the
Haitian community.
Dajabón
and Ouanaminthe face each other on the northern edge of the 230 mile
border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Cultural and racial
tensions on the border have intensified in recent years due to
immigration and deportation disputes, including as recently as 2015 when
the Dominican government tightened immigration policy between the two
countries. Acting as a powerful statement by the church, this campaign
helped both communities set aside their differences and share a message
of hope and love in the midst of difficult days.
The Luis Palau Association (http://palau.org)
has a long history of outreach in the Caribbean, including the annual
“Fun in the Son” festival which alternates between Haiti and Jamaica
every other year. In July, Palau will return to the Caribbean for Fun in
the Son Jamaica.
Photo
captions: 1) Andrew Palau shared the Good News in the Dominican
Republic. (John Andrus 2016). 2) In addition to the festival, Andrew
Palau and a team of evangelists with the Next Generation Alliance also
led outreaches in schools, prisons, and at medical clinics. (John Andrus
2016) 3) The crowd at the festival packed into a main street of the
city, which was closed down to make room for the evangelistic event.
(John Andrus 2016)
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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