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Church Plant Success Spawns Legal Headache

LA CORUÑA, SPAIN (June 6, 2005) - An Evangelical Covenant Church plant that was started in 1999 has experienced attendance growth, but in the process has encountered potential legal troubles that could prove financially draining, says missionary Roberto Reed.

With more than 100 people regularly attending worship, Vida Nueva (New Life) is one of the largest evangelical churches in the city, Reed says, and new visitors attend each week. The church began with several people who expressed a desire to form a church, and the group became an official church in 2003.

Vida Nueva Worship The congregation has a thriving youth group of more than 25 individuals, Reed says. Fourteen of the youth came to Christ during the youth Alpha course, which the church helped to pioneer last summer.

However, a neighbor who operates a video recording studio complained about noise coming from the church. The mayor's office ordered the church to soundproof its walls, which Reed says will cost about $40,000.

The church hopes to raise the money to either add the soundproofing to the existing building or purchase land on which to construct a new building. "There is a group of 50 or so construction workers wanting to come in February of 2006, but they need to know by July 31 whether we have property or not," Reed says.

The church also is involved in legal maneuvers to persuade the government not to destroy the homes of several gypsy families in a shanty town portion of the city. The families have been squatters in the area for more than 20 years. One of the families threatened with the loss of their home attends the church and hosts a cell group. The couple became Christians through the church ministry, especially through a friendship with Roberto's wife, Nancy.

The gypsy culture has been stifled by a lack of education as well as its own practices, Reed says. "Many of the gypsy men do not know how to read," he says. "When a gypsy woman becomes a widow, she lives in mourning for the rest of her life, wearing black and not listening to music again. When a gypsy girl turns 12, the family will take her out of school to 'protect her virginity.'"

Reed says he hopes the church will be able to work with Habitat for Humanity to build homes for these residents. "We desire to see a global plan reached to address not only the spiritual needs of these people, but also the physical and social needs, which include hygiene, job training and creation, and education." Reed adds.

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