Please login to continue
Forgot your password?
Recover it here.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up Now!
Register for a Free Account
Name
Email
Choose Password
Confirm Password

Thank you!

A Path We All Must Walk

For some people the cemetery is a place of sadness. For others, it is a place of hope.

Dark is the path that leads past the little Nahuatl village to the cemetery. “It’s a path we all must walk,” said the father of a little boy crushed to death under a truck when a jack slipped. He shrugged, and walked on.

A shadowy path

Word of the boy's death reached missionaries Peter and Liesl Hypki on a Saturday. They also heard why it happened: magia negra, the villagers said without a hint of doubt: black magic. Two days later, the boy's coffin was at the head of the procession ambling down the shadowy path.

The moment the coffin began to be lowered into the grave, his father turned his back on the boy and faced east. His family followed his example, and then the whole crowd turned away. They had to; the Nahuatl people believe that if you do not, the deceased person will take your soul.

“To me, it’s the saddest part,” Peter said. “The imagery is stark.”

A path we walk with hope

It also reminds Peter of another Son who died. Of Christ, rejected, dying to conquer death and bring us eternal, abundant life, and to give us hope.

This is why Peter and Liesl, and their co-workers, Rachel Chapman and Katie Moore, are there. To share this hope. In order to share God's message clearly, they must understand how the Nahuatl people think – this is the grid through which the people will understand everything that is said about God.

The walk to the cemetery is indeed a path we all must walk. But, Peter added, "For those who know Christ, it is a path we walk with hope.”

Tags: Latin America, Mexico, Mission News, Prayer Nahuatl People,
POSTED ON Jul 20, 2014 by Ian Fallis