The history of Madrid Spain is rich in diversity. According to infoplease.com, “Spain, originally inhabited by Celts, Iberians, and Basques, became a part of the Roman Empire in 206 B.C” (paragraph 1). Bibliotecapleyades.net states “Some Basques, especially in Spain, are strongly, even violently, nationalist” (paragraph 37). Basques typically spoke a language that was not only non-Romance …show more content…
According to cmalliance.org (n.d.), “less than 1 percent of its population is evangelical” (paragraph 1). To boast the need for evangelism in Spain, the C&MA workers entered Spain in 1978. “Today, the Evangelical Christian and Missionary Alliance of Spain consists of 7 organized churches, 7 unorganized groups, and 1,530 inclusive members” (cmalliance.org, paragraph 4). One of the few things the Evangelical Christian and Missionary Alliance of Spain does is friendship evangelism. They do this through “summer English Camps, cell groups, and a variety of family-oriented ministries” (cmalliance.org, paragraph 6). They also, “develop and mentor leaders through both formal and non-formal ministries, work with the Spain National Church in supporting our Bible Institute, coordinate church planting ministries, work with the Alliance World Fellowship leaders in Latin America and Europe to promote Latino missionary efforts in Spain and Western Europe, and rescue women caught in the scourge of human slavery via sex-trafficking” (cmalliance.org, paragraph 7-10). This group lead to an evangelic breakthrough in