From Chile to
Nicaragua
I lay my hand on Magyolene’s shoulder as she kneels. I am standing beside the Bishop of the
Pentecostal Church of Chile before a congregation of some 1500 brothers and
sisters of the Pentecostal Church of Chile in Curicó. Mayolene’s hair, long, thick, and straight
with an unusual natural red tint, falls down hiding her face, a moment of
privacy in this public confession of faith and dedication, and as the prayers flow over and around her,
I remember.
I remember Magyolene as young college student working diligently
on her thesis project; we searched together for the almost extinct Quele trees
that in Darwin´s descriptions were as as large and majestic as the Redwoods
when he explored the coasts of Chile.
What a thrill when we found a few seedlings sprouting in a circle around
the decayed trunk of an ancient tree cut many years before.
I remember Magyolene as the assistant to the youth leader of
the Curicó Church when the Bishop made the surprising and much commented
decision to join the boys youth group with the girls youth group. A young man was given the task of managing
this much awaited change; Magyolene was selected to temper and balance the
energy and impulsive nature of the leader.
I remember Magyolene down on the forest floor with a group
of fifth graders during one of the environmental education camps at the Shalom
Center introducing them to the ferocious looking beetle with the impressive
name of “mother of the snake” (Madre de
la Culebra in Spanish). They watched
together, marveling and asking questions, until the students had figured out that
it was harmlessly going about the business of laying eggs in different holes
around the base of a tree.
I remember Magyolene accompanying the people of Colbún with
trauma healing and resilience development workshops and activities after the
February 2012 earthquake in Chile, the tranquility of her spirit bringing peace
and hope to the students and teachers in various schools as well as the
intergenerational community of the church.
Tonight, during the worship service in Curicó, Magyolene has been blessed by her home church
to serve as a volunteer through Global Ministries with the Mission Cristiana in
Nicaragua. It is the first time that the
Pentecostal Church of Chile enters into this kind of mission partnership,
sharing its gifts and blessings with others in another country far away. For me, it is also a first; Magyolene is the
first of the members of the Shalom Center staff to take all that she has
learned in environmental education, trauma healing and peace education, conflict
transformation, and spiritual development and offer it, along with her
deep-rooted faith and professional expertise as an agronomy engineer, to the
Lord`s service overseas. The seeds of my
ministry in Chile travel with Magyolene to take root in other soil, to grow in
unique ways, and to join with sister trees as far away as Nicaragua in the
growing of God’s Kingdom of Shalom.
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