The fifteen-meeting series conducted by Seventh-day Adventist Hispanic evangelist Victor Schultz will be rebroadcast to 33 countries in January 2001 using a network of four satellites
NET Mexico 2000, a series of evangelistic meetings that ran from October 21 to November 4 in southern Mexico, is the first Seventh-day Adventist satellite program that aims to reach every Spanish-speaking people group. The fifteen-meeting series conducted by Seventh-day Adventist Hispanic evangelist Victor Schultz will be rebroadcast to 33 countries in January 2001 using a network of four satellites.
“It is simply inspiring to see the excitement, the dedication, and the hard work” of Adventist Church members in southern Mexico in preparing for the event, says Schultz. The meetings were held in Merida’s largest covered stadium, which seats 7,000 people. Organizers say that through the meetings “thousands are finding peace, hope, purpose, and the love of Christ.”
The evangelistic series will be rebroadcast to downlink sites in North, Central and South America, Australia, and Europe by Adventist Global Communication Network (AGCN), Three Angels Broadcasting Network (3ABN), and ADSAT, a Brazilian-based Adventist broadcast network.