As they stretched him out to flog him, Paul said to the centurion standing
there, “Is it legal for you to flog a Roman citizen who hasn’t even been found
guilty?” Acts 22:25
The scriptures illustrate responses to persecution in three primary ways. On
the one hand is the command of Jesus to flee when it occurs and on the other,
the stalwart example of those who stayed and endured, persevering through the
challenges. In between is the example of the Apostle Paul (whose life responses
exhibited both extremes also). When arrested in a mob violence scene in Acts 22, he appeals
to his legal rights for protection from a needless beating. In Acts 25, he escapes
almost certain death at the hands of the Jews by appealing to Caesar, again a
right of his citizenship.
Pastor Abdias Tovilla studied law in order to help his indigenous people of
Chiapas in southern Mexico who have been expelled from their homes simply
because of their evangelical faith. He is following the model of the Apostle
Paul who used whatever means possible to stand up to persecution.
You could say Abdias Tovilla practices two vocations—law and grace. Ordained
as a pastor of the National Presbyterian Church of Mexico in 1981, Tovilla
enrolled in the School of Law of the National Autonomous University of Chiapas
the same year. He passed the bar exam in 1988 to become a licensed attorney and
represent persecuted Christians. He resigned his pastorate in 1992 to be the
Executive Secretary and Legal Advisor to the State Committee of Evangelical
Defense for Chiapas (CEDECH), but is still a voting member of the Chiapas
Presbyterian Synod and preaches on many Sundays at the invitation of local
churches.
Abdias Tovilla has a concern for justice—especially for others. Dealing with
injustice is also part of our Christian calling. Pastor Tovilla knows that those
who speak out to denounce injustice are on the very front line of persecution
themselves. He has gained some support from Mexico’s southernmost state Bishop
who has appealed for an end to the violent and prolonged persecution of
evangelical Christians by “traditionalist” Catholics. Bishop Felipe Arizmendi
called for “no more expulsions nor divisions on the basis of religion” and asked
that “there be no more destruction nor house-burnings, nor skirmishes, nor the
shedding of blood due to religious, political, cultural or economic
differences.”
Over the past 30 years, religious intolerance has triggered the forced
expulsion of some 35,000 evangelicals from ancestral lands in Chamula and other
districts. Despite the unrelenting pressure, evangelical Christianity has grown
steadily throughout Chiapas. Today, thirty-five per cent of the state population
adheres to evangelicalism, according to census figures. Since the early 1980s,
Open Doors has been working in Bible distribution, training and community
development with a vision to contribute to reconciliation in the area.
RESPONSE: Today I will speak out against injustice and discrimination of
brothers wherever it occurs.
PRAYER: Thank You, Lord, for brave brothers, like Abdias Tovilla, who
stand for justice and truth.
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