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Mexican faith leader jailed for sex abuse; flock stays loyal

The leader of a multinational, Mexico-based Christian church is imprisoned in California after pleading guilty to sexually abusing minors

Via AP news wire
Sunday 18 September 2022 10:02 EDT

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Their spiritual leader is behind bars in California after pleading guilty to sexually abusing minors. Yet legions of followers of NaasĆ³n JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a in his home base in Mexico remain fervently loyal to him, viewing his imprisonment as a challenge that will strengthen their church, La Luz del Mundo (The Light of the World), rather than weaken it.

His continued hold on his flock was evident recently at the Christian churchā€™s main temple in Guadalajara, as thousands gathered to pray for their absent leader during their Holy Supper, the most sacred festivity for La Luz del Mundo. To gasps of surprise, JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a addressed the congregation by telephone from his Los Angeles prison, where he is serving a 16-year sentence.

ā€œI do not see the bars that separate me from you,ā€ he told his followers. ā€œI see your beautiful faces ... because you are the children of God.ā€

Even outside the temple, the sound of his voice stirred emotions among dozens of devotees guarding entries to the sanctuary. Nearly all closed their eyes. Many lifted their fists. Some knelt and wept.

Near the end of the call, JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a asked his followers to raise their hands and their voices to God and repeat after him: ā€œI promise you, Lord, that whatever the suffering, I will never abandon you.ā€

It seems clear that many members of the church, founded in Mexico in 1926 and now active in many countries, arenā€™t ready to abandon JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a as their ā€œapostleā€ ā€” the term used for the churchā€™s leader. Many believe he was sent by God to preach to them and are convinced he is innocent, despite his guilty plea.

ā€œThe apostle always shows determination to move forward,ā€ said Phares Ruiz, who traveled from El Salvador to attend the Holy Supper. ā€œHeā€™s firm in his convictions, and the church is firm as well in its purpose of moving forward.ā€

Ruiz told The Associated Press that his family has belonged to La Luz del Mundo for three generations.

JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a, 53, was arrested in 2019 in California. He initially faced more than 20 charges, but most were dismissed after a plea deal with prosecutors. The church contended that prosecutors withheld or doctored evidence, and said JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a pleaded guilty because he didnā€™t think he could get a fair trial.

ā€œThe Apostle of Jesus Christ has had no choice but to accept with much pain that the agreement presented is the best way forward to protect the church and his family,ā€ the church said.

The home base of the church is the Guadalajara neighborhood of Hermosa Provincia, Spanish for ā€œbeautiful province.ā€ Jericho, Bethlehem and Nazareth are among the names of roads converging on the white temple that locals call ā€œthe cake,ā€ for its white tiers that diminish in size as they rise upward.

Congregation members in the neighborhood call each other ā€œbrotherā€ and ā€œsisterā€ and take pride in helping one another. The churchā€™s media relations office claims there is no crime in the area.

The neighborhood has cafeterias, clinics, a recreation center and a store that sells Bibles and religious-themed games for children. From the walls hang photographs of JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a, smiling and wearing a tuxedo. Spanning the main street is a sculpture spelling ā€œinnocentā€ in Spanish.

Sara Pozos, 49, is among many in the neighborhood who believe their leader's imprisonment has strengthened the church.

ā€œI think it changed for the better in the sense that now we feel more united, and we feel more empowered,ā€ she said.

ā€œIt has been a very difficult issue, of course, for him and for us,ā€ she added. ā€œWe all suffer something in life, but one learns to know those moments where you see that God is doing something to help you, to get ahead, not to let you fall.ā€

Another neighborhood resident, Sailem Castillo, also said she was upbeat despite JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­aā€™s imprisonment.

ā€œFor us everything is very nice, everything continues to work,ā€ she said. ā€œMinisters, pastors and deacons have their same duties. They bless the bread, the wine, and do other things as if he were here, although physically he is not.ā€

The jailed leader is the grandson of La Luz del Mundoā€™s founder: Eusebio JoaquĆ­n GonzĆ”lez, a member of the military who began preaching in 1926. He's known to church members as AarĆ³n ā€” a result, he said, of God asking him to change his name.

AarĆ³n's wife was the church's first member. Today it claims a membership of more than 5 million in some 50 nations.

La Luz del Mundo is sometimes described as evangelical, but its members do not embrace this term. The churchā€™s doctrine is learned from the cradle. Parents give biblical names to their children and take them to the temple at 40 days old to promise they will guide them to follow their path.

Most teachings translate into something quotidian. During services, the women sit to the right and men to the left. In some cities, people tithe more than 10% of their monthly income to the church. Biblical verses are cited to explain behavior.

Castillo, a recently married woman of 25, told AP the church advises members how ā€œto lead a decent life,ā€ in which women may not drink alcohol or go out on frequent dates. Like other women in Hermosa Provincia, she wears dresses and skirts that are not form-fitting, eschews makeup and earrings and wears her hair long.

The religion is ā€very demanding,ā€ said Arlene M. SĆ”nchez-Walsh, a professor of religious studies at Azusa Pacific University, a Christian institution near Los Angeles.

ā€œIt is not sufficient to say ā€˜I have convertedā€™ or ā€œI have baptizedā€™ā€ she said. ā€œYou have to follow certain steps to prove your loyalty.ā€

For some young people, these steps include memorizing songs honoring the apostle, reading the Bible before bed and not marrying someone from outside the church.

ā€œAll this goes to show that although you are part of this world, you have accepted a very particular way of life because you are Christian,ā€ SĆ”nchez-Walsh said.

Those born in the community are baptized at 14 because, according to the church, that lets them decide whether to reaffirm or leave the faith. Nevertheless, there are former members who say their ceremony was not optional.

Ahead of the baptism, in a ritual known as ā€œthe revivals,ā€ children undergo days of prayer and fasting inside a temple. The revival consists of repeating ā€œGlory to Christā€ nonstop until the youths are heard speaking in tongues to testify that the Holy Spirit has entered them.

For Raquel Haifa, 43, fulfilling the revivals was a traumatizing experience that she considers abusive, because minors are not able to decline to take part.

ā€œI did cry, because I was saying, ā€˜God, deliver me from this, make this time pass quickly,ā€™ā€ Haifa said from Texas.

Currently, journalists are not allowed to attend services or take photographs inside the churchā€™s temples. Since JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­aā€™s arrest, La Luz del Mundo's media relations team says it cannot make official statements on his case because litigation is ongoing.

On Sept. 8 a lawsuit was filed in California against JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a and four church members alleged to be complicit in the sex abuse. The suit was filed by five women who ā€” under the pseudonym Jane Doe ā€” were identified as victims in the original criminal charges against him.

It accuses JoaquĆ­n GarcĆ­a of conditioning victims, under the guise of religion, to serve him above all else, ultimately resulting in the sexual abuse over the course of several years.

The case has been difficult for some former members who have distanced themselves from the church.

Speaking on a podcast called ā€œI Left a Sect,ā€ Lo-ami Salazar said Hermosa Provincia used to be her ā€œhappy place.ā€

ā€œKnowing that these abuses took place there, in my happy place, in my safe place, is horrible,ā€ she said.

___

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APā€™s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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