Taken
from: Charisma
Magazine
Not Your Grandmother’s
Pastor
With his tattoos and
earring, New York City preacher Rick Del Rio has redefined
what it means to be Pentecostal.
By Peter K. Johnson
April Issue, 2004

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Navigating
his classic Harley Davidson motorcycle along congested
streets in the East Village of Lower Manhattan, Rick
Del Rio, senior pastor of Abounding Grace Ministries,
doesn't look like your grandmother's pastor. At 51, he
sports a gold earring, goatee, black leather vest, and
tattoos on each arm and doesn't apologize for any of them.
The tattoos are a living sermon, proclaiming "Jesus
Christ Is Lord" and “The Lion of Judah Has
Conquered."
"We deal with people nobody wants, so we kind of
look like them," Del Rio says. "Like Paul, I
am all things to all men so that by all means I might
save some."
His brand of in-your-face evangelism
fits his turf - a concrete jungle of exotic humanity.
Punks, anarchists, Satanists, vampires, bikers, gays,
drug addicts, alcoholics, the homeless and seniors rub
shoulders with artists and musicians, 20-something professionals
and families from low-income public housing. The Hells
Angels motorcycle gang is headquartered nearby.
Founded in 1982, Abounding Grace
shares space in the First Ukrainian Assembly of God on
East Seventh Street near the Bowery, Manhattan's Skid
Row. The multiracial church is a flagship for creative
inner-city evangelism programs that work. Every year the
ministry touches thousands of lives.
Says Del Rio: "Our church is a clinic where the sick
and broken can come."
Jesus Loves New York
|
The
street is his parish: Rick Del Rio says his church
in New York reaches "people nobody wants."
|
Del Rio's vision for the inner city
dates back to his youth. Raised in Brooklyn, he attended
a strict, Spanish Pentecostal church where all-night prayer
meetings and evangelism were routine. "I would go
out with the youth and at 7 to 8 years old would pass
out tracts on the subway stations and in trains,"
he recalls. "The Lord used that to stir me up and
get a ministry going that would take Jesus to the streets
where the people were."
However, at age 11 he strayed from the faith and rebelled
against religion because of the gossip and backbiting
he witnessed among Christians. When he was 16 he repented
and asked God to forgive his sins.
"My understanding was that God was there, but I really
didn't know Him personally until someone began to tell
me about a relationship I could have with Jesus,"
he says.
He entered the ministry through the back door. After graduating
from Zion Bible Institute in Barrington, Rhode Island,
in 1973, Del Rio founded a construction company in Staten
Island, New York.
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| Rick Del Rio's Abounding Grace Ministries
has been reaching New York since 1982. In the early
years, Del Rio (above and at bottom picture with son
Jon) used a truck to stage meetings in city neighborhoods
and parks. |
Not wanting to do "the basic
preacher thing," Del Rio instead traveled the layman's
route and became active in his local church as well as
Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship International. In
1981 the Holy Spirit impressed him to get serious about
reaching the lost.
The prompting led him to ask the New
York police to identify the worst crime spots in the Lower
East Side. He took their advice and hit the streets with
his wife, Arlene, and their three sons. They bought a
beat-up Ryder rental truck and outfitted it with a sound
system, pull-down stage, and large hand-painted sign that
read "Jesus Loves You New York."
"The kids would pass out tracts and T-shirts, and
I would play music and speak from the truck," he
says. Del Rio funded the fledgling ministry from his business
income and enlisted a team of like-minded Christians to
help him. "We were not a glamorous ministry, so we
didn't have any support-but that didn't bother us,"
he says. A year later he gave the business to an employee.
"I walked away from the whole thing and just decided
to trust the Lord," he says. "And it's been
a walk off faith ever since."
A Street Team Is Born
|
Top Pictures: Del
Rio's evangelism teams use street preaching and
dance to draw city crowds.
Bottom Picture: Hands-on ministry always follows.
|
Abounding Grace Ministries became
an official church in 1992. The first service, held in
a basement apartment on Sixth Street, attracted 20 worshipers.
Four years later Del Rio and his family moved into the
same building, where he still lives today. The ministry
moved to its current location on Seventh Street in 1998.
Del Rio shuns ego-massaging. He shares the ministry with
his wife, sons Jeremy and Jonathan, and associate pastors
Joe Maldonado and Rick Jaruczyk.
"My heart is to make everyone
around me better than me," he says. "The glory
I get is that my sons can preach better and my spiritual
sons do better than me."
Maldonado, 51, joined the ministry in 1996 when Del Rio
recruited him from Tampa, Florida, where he pastored a
church of 400 members. He had pioneered a church once
in Lower Manhattan and had served on the pastoral staff
of The Brooklyn Tabernacle. Del Rio made an appeal to
Maldonado that spoke to the Tampa resident's past.
"In the neighborhood where you were born and raised
there are people dying and going to hell," Del Rio
had pleaded. "And what are you going to tell Jesus?"
Maldonado knows the East Village
well. Before God changed his life, he was a hopeless drug
addict and president of a violent street gang.
"Rick and I go back 30 years,"
he recalls. "We respect each other. We love each
other. I know who he is in Christ, and I know his gift
and his calling, and he knows my gift and my calling.
"We're a team, so nobody gets
the accolades. The only person who gets that is Jesus
Christ and He alone. We hide in the shadow of the cross."
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Top Picture: The
fellowship of the broken: Rick Del Rio's team enjoys
unusual unity. He is shown here praying with disciples
and leaders of Abounding Grace Ministries.
Bottom Picture: Del Rio lives modestly, earning
$600 a week and living in an apartment provided
by the church. And he doesn't have to spend much
on tailored suits. |
Jaruczyk guides worship and music
programs for the ministry. He was recruited from the staff
of The Brooklyn Tabernacle and hasn't looked back since.
"We have a special relationship," he says about
his two brothers in Christ. "There's no competition."
The ministerial staff shares a rare unity. "I've
worked very hard at not being insecure," Del Rio
says. "I've found my identity in Christ so that I
don't have to worry about whether this one is going to
take over or that one is going to take over."
The congregation of Abounding Grace numbers about 400.
Programs include a Christian coffeehouse, youth outreaches,
evangelistic events, block parties, after-school learning
programs, creative arts and a 90-acre camp-Grace Ranch-in
the Catskill Mountains.
The annual budget for the church and 11 staffers is $550,000.
Nobody gets rich. Only two years ago the staff started
receiving medical benefits. Del Rio earns a modest $600
a week and is provided an apartment.
Seeking Cochise
Evangelizing in the inner city is a spiritual adventure.
A gang of bikers called Satan's Sinners hassled Del Rio
and his outreach team while they were setting up sound
equipment for a week of street meetings. When 10 members
of the gang passed through the team scowling and cursing,
Del Rio sensed he should reach out to the bikers.
Obeying God, he says, Del Rio jogged up to the last gang
member and tapped him on the shoulder.
"My name is Pastor Rick-what's your name?" he
stammered. The young tough turned his head and flashed
an angry glance at Del Rio.
"I want to talk to you guys," Del Rio said.
"I'll be around here." Ignoring him, the gang
members kept walking.
During daily chapel services the outreach team prayed
earnestly for the gang. On the last day of the meetings,
Del Rio stood on the stage of the outreach truck and led
the crowd in a Spanish chorus "Manda fuego, Senor"
("Send the Fire, Lord"). Immediately after he
finished the song, a bright orange flame shot 40 feet
into the air and engulfed a cluster of jerry-built shanties
in a nearby vacant lot.
Fire trucks appeared within minutes. Del Rio rushed to
the scene and learned that the fire was destroying the
headquarters of the Satan's Sinners. Gang members scuffled
with the firefighters and police officers.
Meanwhile, Del Rio befriended Tito, one of the gang members,
and attempted to meet the gang's president, Cochise. Del
Rio eventually would-after several tries- meet Cochise,
who would tell him that since the day of the fire Tito
had been murdered and his body left in a Brooklyn park.
Del Rio also would learn that many years before Cochise
had given his heart to Jesus while serving prison time.
Several months after the two men met, Cochise and a cohort
were arrested for stabbing two young women and throwing
them into the East River. Miraculously, the women survived.
Cochise was sentenced for the crime.
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| Now he's saved: Edgar
Nieves belonged to the Latin Kings gang. |
While in jail at Rikers Island, Cochise
repented and was filled with the Holy Spirit. Currently
he is serving 10 to 30 years in prison and is certified
by Chuck Colson's Prison Fellowship as a chaplain.
During another street meeting, Del Rio shared Christ with
a prostitute while her pimp hovered nearby, a pistol stashed
in his jacket. "Aren't you tired of having your pimp
push you around?" he asked her.
Spotting the weapon, a Christian friend prayed for Del
Rio's safety. Del Rio, ignorant of the danger, confronted
the man, who left without causing trouble.
Because of Del Rio's connections in the streets, the police
call him regularly to help defuse potentially explosive
situations. He once coaxed 12 gang members to his apartment
to prevent a retaliatory gang war after one of their friends
was murdered. His wife made hot chocolate and sandwiches
before they arrived.
"I prayed with them and let them vent," he says.
"I didn't say, 'Don't curse,' and I got to build
relationships. We defused the situation."
Glamour Not Included
The Del Rios open their home to the needy. People are
always coming or going. At one time, in addition to their,
own children and three dogs, they had seven young people
living with them.
Some slept on sofa beds in the living room and others
on bunk beds in closets. Mei Ling Garcia and her sister
joined the Del Rio family when the girls' mother was terminally
ill. "He is the coolest pastor I know," Garcia
says. "I love him to death."
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Top Picture: After
the terrorist attacks on New York in 2001, Rick
Del Rio was one of the first Christians to respond.
Bottom Picture: Del Rio speaks at a 9/11 memorial
service.
|
Once, when leaving his apartment for
a street meeting, Del Rio and a youth team passed a shirtless
man without legs slumped in a wheelchair. The man was
filthy and sweaty. "He looked so nasty," Del
Rio says. "He had maggots on his knees and open sores
on his stumps. "The Lord quickened my heart,"
Del Rio says. Carrying the man to his home, they bathed
him, cleaned his sores and gave him fresh clothing. "We
put him down on an air mattress, and he slept for 20 hours,"
Del Rio says. "There's no glamour. You just do it."
Abounding Grace has helped turn around numerous lives.
Before accepting Christ as Savior more than four years
ago, Edgar Nieves, now 20, was a member of the notorious
Latin Kings gang. He sold drugs, carried a pistol and
shot people.
The gang was a way for him to escape from a dysfunctional
family. His mother was a heavy-duty drug addict, and since
age 9 Nieves had endured a merry-go round of foster homes.
"My whole life was twisted around," he says.
Del Rio reached out to him on many occasions. "I
deeply respected him," Nieves says. "He had
a great love for the people no matter how I was dressed.
He always came down with his Harley and always asked how
come I don't go to church. He was just real."
While Nieves was assigned to a court-mandated program,
he was invited to and attended a church service in a park
by the East River, where he cried out to God for mercy
and deliverance. Soon after, Del Rio invited him to live
at the church. Today he is a youth leader and an outreach
coordinator.
"I love the Lord so much," he says. "I
just want to live my life for ministry."
But the story continues. Nieves' mother, Marilyn Martinez,
gave her heart to Christ recently and attends the church
now.
"My son introduced me to Abounding Grace," she
says. "I started looking for God, and I found Him
here. This is like a little house of miracles. I'm not
doing drugs anymore. It's wonderful to serve Jesus."
The Future Is Evangelism
|
| Del Rio's son Jeremy
shares the pulpit. |
Despite
his free-spirited personality, Del Rio doesn't consider
himself a Lone Ranger minister. "I've never been
out there as a loner," he says. "Besides my
wife and sons, I'm accountable to my associate pastors
and other pastors in the city. They all hold my feet to
the fire."
In May 2003 he joined the Assemblies of God (AG) as an
ordained minister. "I never thought the A G wanted
me because my style is very different," he says.
He admits to shying away from denominations because he
needed the freedom to do what God called him to do. Nonetheless,
he says he respects the AG ''as an organization more so
because I've gotten to know the people. It's more relational
now."
Like any other pastor, Del Rio is not immune to discouragement.
He had to learn to live as if ministry were no option.
"It's my life, so that helps
against discouragement," he says. "I just want
to be pure, with no agenda other than what Jesus wanted
in dealing with His kids."
It hurts him when people turn away from God. "It's
disappointing when someone leaves the Lord," he adds.
Others have ripped him off or bad-mouthed him in the neighborhood.
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Left Picture: Abounding
Grace, which started with 20 people, now attracts
a large crowd on Sundays.
Right Picture: Pastors Rick Del Rio (r.) and Joe
Maldonado.
|
"I've had people I've invested
my life into curse me out in front of the church, screaming
because I corrected them," he says. "And then
when they come to their senses, they will call me and
apologize. I just take them back and forgive them. I have
made it a practice that we don't take abuse personally."
How does Del Rio cope? What keeps
him steady?
"You have to practice talking to the Lord all day
long," he says. "You have to take time to be
in the Word. But a personality like mine that's always
doing-that's my biggest struggle. I don't love people
just because I'm a nice guy. I know that it is God who
has empowered and enabled and given me that grace."
For Del Rio, the future means more evangelism. He'll continue
taking the hope and compassion of Jesus to more people
in Lower Manhattan. Although he doesn't expect to leave
the planet anytime soon, Del Rio wants his gravestone
to read, "He poured his life into those whom Jesus
loved." |