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Former Priest Preaches Three Angels’ Message
By Caron Oswald
Roberto
Alvarez, a Seventh-day Adventist for only six months, preached his
first evangelistic series in October. He was one of four lay members
of the Fresno Hispanic church to participate in simultaneous
meetings. But with 10 years of ministerial experience, preaching was
not new to Alvarez—only the message was. Alvarez is a former
Catholic priest.
“I love preaching,” he says. “As I was preparing and studying the
presentations, I was able to savor them. It was fascinating.”
Pastor Antonio Huerta met Alvarez on a weekday when Alvarez stopped
at the church for a visit. “He inquired about our church and when we
had services,” Huerta recalls. “He wanted to know what we believed.”
Alvarez gladly accepted Huerta’s offer of the book The Great
Controversy and Bible studies. “When he finished reading it he said
‘Yep, this is right.’ He embraced the truths he was learning.” He
also offered his services as a pianist, teaching lessons and playing
when needed.
A Journey of Faith
“Ever since I was little I was always attracted to God,” he says
about his childhood in Guadalajara, Mexico. But instead of seeking
the seminary, he attended the local university, earning a degree in
music. “I felt like going to seminary was for very special
people—not me.”
But his church remained the center of his life. He loved working
with youth and he led music groups, taught catechism classes and
held youth encounters while earning his living as a piano teacher.
He was 40 years old when he finally inquired about attending the
seminary. He was readily accepted and became a priest.
Years later doubts began to grow in Father Alvarez’s mind. “The
process is that you share your doubts with those in a higher
position,” he explains. He went through psychological therapy to
help clarify his questions about himself.
He moved to the United States, his father’s country, to serve as an
interim priest for the Fresno area Catholic churches, holding mass
when needed. But his heart wasn’t in it. And his search continued.
Courageous Decision
His baptism in March 2007 was a culmination of one life and the
beginning of another.
“Before he was baptized, he said, ‘Pastor, I am resigning from my
church, my job and my family’s faith.’ Then I realized how
courageous he was,” Huerta says.
“Of all the churches that I’ve visited, this one is very serious on
the doctrinal sense of the Word of God,” he explains about the
Adventist church. “This church has helped me fill a lot of void that
I had inside of me. In spite of all the education that I’ve had,
I’ve learned a lot more in the few months I’ve been in this church.”
He is already an active church member, teaching an adult Sabbath
School class, volunteering where there is a need and looking forward
to preaching another outreach series.
“I don’t have the words to explain how I feel inside. It is an honor
to be a Seventh-day Adventist. My whole life is more enthusiastic. I
am complete,” says Alvarez.
Courtesy of the Pacific Union Recorder, 2008.
http://www.pacificunionrecorder.com/
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