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WEEK OF PRAYER: Heart for unreached drives missionary’s work in Toronto

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[SLIDESHOW=53695,53696,53697]EDITOR’S NOTE: The annual Week of Prayer for North American Missions, March 1-8, and the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering provide support for missionaries who serve on behalf of Southern Baptists across North America. With a goal of $70 million, this year’s offering theme is “It’s All About the Gospel.” J.D. and Andreina Fasolino are Week of Prayer missionaries for the North American Mission Board. For more information, visit anniearmstrong.com. To read about other 2020 featured missionaries, visit anniearmstrong.com/missionaries-overview.

TORONTO (BP) — Five years ago, there were only two Hispanic Canadian Baptist churches in the entire province of Ontario in Canada. One of those churches was located on the west side of Toronto.

“What we thought was that on the east of Toronto, there was no Hispanic church at all,” said church planting missionary J.D. Fasolino. “There is a large population of Hispanics here. We knew that. We did our research, but it was actually bigger than we thought.”

Toronto has the largest Hispanic population of the major metro areas in Canada, nearly 100,000 people.

Some of them are Christians when they come here, Fasolino explained. Yet, their work schedules and living arrangements often make it difficult for them to remain connected to their faith.

“They feel so separated from what they used to do, going to church and having a relationship with God,” Fasolino said. “So, even those who know God stop their relationship with God.”

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Fasolino, a 2020 Annie Armstrong Easter Offering Week of Prayer missionary, planted a new church in Toronto called Emmanuel Baptist Church East. There, he focuses on reaching the Hispanic population as part of the North American Mission Board’s (NAMB) Send Network.

Of the 5.9 million people in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), roughly 25 percent do not affiliate with any religion. The evangelical presence is between 3 and 4 percent of the population, and the religious makeup of the city includes significant Muslim, Hindu, Jewish and Buddhist populations as well.

“Toronto is definitely one of the most multicultural cities in the world,” said Fasolino. “You can find people from every nation in the world.”

There is a Chinatown, Koreatown, Greektown, Little India, Little Italy and Little Jamaica.

For Fasolino’s part, his church has between 12 and 15 different nationalities represented.

“We have people all the way from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Colombia, Bolivia, Chile, Peru,” Fasolino said. “That not only impacts our area where we are, but our church has an impact on the whole world” as these people share the Gospel with their friends and family back home.

Originally from Venezuela himself, Fasolino immigrated to Canada in 2012 after serving a church in the capital city of Caracas. He and his wife Andreina began evaluating where new churches were needed. They had family and friends in Toronto and knew of the demographic shifts that had been taking place in the last decade.

“Seven years ago, the number of Hispanics wasn’t that high, but people kept coming, especially in Toronto,” Fasolino said. “So, when we started thinking about places that have a big need for the Gospel, we thought about Canada.”

Carlos Daniel Zambrano was glad they did. Zambrano, who now serves as a youth and music ministry leader at Emmanuel Baptist Church East, had difficulty connecting to a local church until his path crossed with Fasolino’s in an apartment building in the Scarborough region of Toronto.

“My mom was in the gym inside the building, and she heard the pastor’s wife (Andreina) playing Christian music in Spanish,” he recalled. “They both got together, and it turned out that they were planting a church where we were planning to move. It’s amazing what God does.”

Now, the church plays a key role in ministering to Hispanic agricultural workers. They have a Bible study with workers at a local indoor mushroom farm that operates 364 days out of the year.

“That’s how we decided to start our Hispanic church because someone needed to look for these people,” Fasolino said. “We started going to this farm, building relationships, studying the Bible and sharing the Gospel ever since day one of our church.”

Through their ministry on the farm and in their community, Emmanuel Baptist Church East has seen more than 40 people come to faith in Christ, and they have sent out a missionary to start another church on the northern side of Toronto.

“I told our people all along that this was going to happen,” Fasolino said. “I knew this was going to happen eventually, but I never thought it was going to be this fast.”

Without the support they receive from the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering, their outreach could not happen so quickly.

“It’s because people give to the offering that we are here, that believers are looking after Hispanics in this city who need to hear the Gospel,” Fasolino said.

The Annie Armstrong Easter Offering provides half of NAMB’s annual budget. Money given to the offering is used on the field for training, support and care for missionaries and for evangelism resources.